European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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To determine the proportion of patients making inappropriate use of medical care at hospital emergency rooms. To identify the factors that influence appropriateness of use and the probability of subsequent hospital admission. ⋯ According to a self-constructed index measuring appropriateness of emergency service use, about half of the patients' visits would have to be classified as inappropriate. Age, chronic illness and the time of day of the emergency service attendance were significantly associated with appropriateness of use. The probability of a hospital admission following the emergency treatment increased with patients' age and the physician's evaluation of treatment urgency. Remarkably, and contrary to the results of international studies, the patient's ethnicity played no significant role with respect to the appropriateness of use of emergency outpatient services or the likelihood of subsequent hospital admission.
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We describe a modified triage system used in managing a smoke inhalation mass casualty incident that we recently encountered at our community hospital. ⋯ These modified triage criteria, with selective use of fibre-optic examinations, chest radiography and arterial blood gas analyses with carboxyhaemoglobin levels, are useful in smoke inhalation mass casualty incidents without dermal burns. Systemic injury and poisoning by toxic fumes often coexist with airway burns and should not be overlooked. Lastly, disaster planning and frequent drills at both local and national levels will optimize the response to future mass casualty incidents.
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We set out to study emergency department patient characteristics at a busy level-2 trauma center, to gain insight into the practise of emergency medicine, which is not yet recognized as a specialty in the Netherlands. ⋯ The acuity of self-referred patients seen by the emergency physicians is low, with little diagnostic testing and few interventions and resuscitations, even in a busy center. This has both training and practise implications and it may be inappropriate to take an emergency medicine practise model or curriculum from another country based on its emergency department population.
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Prompt and correct treatment of broad complex tachycardias in the emergency department can often be life-saving to the patient and satisfying for the emergency physician. They, however, are often a diagnostic challenge. Here, we present a case of posterior fascicular ventricular tachycardia, an idiopathic form of ventricular tachycardia that occurs in patients without coronary artery disease and verapamil sensitive. The differential diagnoses of posterior fascicular ventricular tachycardia and supraventricular tachycardia with aberrancy will also be discussed.