European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
-
The aim of the study was to assess the immediate and long-term effect of a helicopter emergency physician giving advanced life support on-scene compared with conventional load and go principle in urban and rural settings in treating blunt trauma patients. ⋯ The physicians treated the patients more aggressively, but it did not delay the arrival at the hospital. A beneficial effect of this aggressive treatment or direct transport to a university hospital could not be seen in the immediate physiological parameters or later health-related quality of life. The physician-staffed helicopter emergency medical service was not beneficial to blunt trauma patients in this setting.
-
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.
-
Controlled Clinical Trial
Avoiding prolonged waiting time during busy periods in the emergency department: Is there a role for the senior emergency physician in triage?
Patient satisfaction at emergency departments can be improved by reductions in waiting time. Traditional methods require registration and triage before seeing the doctor with senior emergency physicians mainly engaged in treating serious cases. We examine a radical change in workflow pattern on waiting time by placing a senior emergency physician with the triage nurse and examining the impact of treating simple cases upfront with discharge on the waiting times for stretcher cases. ⋯ Placing a senior emergency physician with the triage nurse reduced waiting times for walk-in cases. One third of attendances were treated and discharged quickly, allowing the consulting room and PACS 1/PACS 2 doctors to act more efficiently.
-
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.