Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
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Emergency department (ED) patients with unexplained syncope are at risk of experiencing an adverse event within 30 days. Our objective was to systematically review the accuracy of multivariate risk stratification scores for identifying adult syncope patients at high and low risk of an adverse event over the next 30 days. ⋯ Many risk stratification scores are not validated or not sufficiently accurate for clinical use. The CSRS is an accurate validated prediction score for ED patients with unexplained syncope. Its impact on clinical decision making, admission rates, cost, or outcomes of care is not known.
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In 2010 Largent, Wendler, and Emanuel proposed the "consent substitute model" for emergency research with incapacitated participants. The model provides a means to enroll participants in emergency research without consent, if five conditions are met: 1) the research addresses the patients' urgent medical needs, 2) the risk-benefit ratio is favorable, 3) there are no known conflicts with patients' values or interests, 4) cumulative net risk is minimal, and 5) consent is given as soon as possible. ⋯ These differences may have stymied international collaboration in emergency research. We recommend that the two international documents used most, the International Council for Harmonization's Guideline for Good Clinical Practice and the World Medical Association's Declaration of Helsinki, are revised to include more specific provisions on emergency medical research.
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Observational Study
Prehospital Factors Associated with Cervical Spine Injury in Pediatric Blunt Trauma Patients.
The risk for cervical spine injury (CSI) must be assessed in children who sustain blunt trauma. The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) retrospectively derived CSI model identifies CSI risk in children based on emergency department (ED) provider observations. The objective of this pilot study was to determine the univariate association of emergency medical services (EMS) provider-observed historical, mechanistic, and physical examination factors with CSI in injured children. Secondarily, we assessed the performance of the previously identified eight PECARN CSI risk factors (PECARN model) based exclusively on EMS provider observation. ⋯ EMS providers can identify risk factors associated with CSI in injured children who experience blunt trauma. These risk factors may be considered for inclusion in a pediatric CSI decision rule specific to the prehospital setting.
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Patients with COVID-19 can present to the emergency department (ED) at any point during the spectrum of illness, making it difficult to predict what level of care the patient will ultimately require. Admission to a ward bed, which is subsequently upgraded within hours to an intensive care unit (ICU) bed, represents an inability to appropriately predict the patient's course of illness. Predicting which patients will require ICU care within 24 hours would allow admissions to be managed more appropriately. ⋯ Although our model did not perform well enough to stand alone as a decision guide, it highlights certain clinical features that are associated with increased risk of decompensation.