The American journal of emergency medicine
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Comment Letter Meta Analysis
Comment on "Effectiveness and safety of tranexamic acid in pediatric trauma: A systematic review and meta-analysis".
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Unintended beneficial effects of COVID-19 on influenza-associated emergency department use in Korea.
Non-pharmaceutical interventions, including hand hygiene, wearing masks, and cough etiquette, and public health measures such as social distancing, used to prevent the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), could reduce the incidence rate of respiratory viral infections such as influenza. We evaluated the effect of COVID-19 on the incidence of influenza in Korea. ⋯ The implementation of non-pharmaceutical interventions and public health measures for the COVID-19 epidemic effectively reduced the transmission of influenza and associated ED use in Korea. Implementing appropriate public health measures could reduce outbreaks and lessen the burden of influenza during future influenza epidemics.
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Health care disparities have been shown to negatively affect non-White people sustaining traumas, leading to increased morbidity and mortality. One possible explanation could be delays in emergent medical care. This study aims to assess if a disparity between races exists amongst acutely head-injured geriatric patients, as evidenced by the time it takes from emergency department (ED) presentation to performance of head computerized tomography (CT) imaging. ⋯ Geriatric Black patients who sustained head trauma were found to have a longer time from ED presentation to performance of head CT than their non-Black counterparts.
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Judicious opioid use is important for balancing patient comfort and safety. Although opioid use is well studied in adult populations, pediatric opioid prescription practices are less understood and there are very few guidelines regarding its usage. The purpose of this study was to investigate pediatric opioid prescription trends by emergency medicine physicians over the last ten years, including assessing proxies for the adequacy of pain control and risk of any opioid-related adverse events including overdose. ⋯ A major shift has occurred in the last ten years, as emergency medicine physicians now favor non-opioid pain management regimens over opioids for the majority of pediatric fracture patients. There was no increase in the rate of inadequate pain control requiring a return to the ED, even as opioid prescription rates declined during the study period.
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We aimed to compare the prognostic value of a quantitative CT severity score with several laboratory parameters, particularly C-reactive protein, Procalcitonin, Neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio, D-dimer, ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase, lactate, troponin and B-type Natriuretic Peptide in predicting in-hospital mortality. ⋯ In summary, CT severity score outperformed several biomarkers as a prognostic tool for covid related mortality. In COVID-19 patients requiring lung imaging, such as patients requiring ICU admission, patients with abnormal vital signs and those requiring mechanical ventilation, the results suggest obtaining and calculating the CT severity score to use it as a prognostic tool. If a CT was not performed, the results suggest using LDH, CRP or NLR if already done as prognostic tools in COVID-19 as these biomarkers were also found to be prognostic in COVID-19 patients.