European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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Propofol is widely used today outside the operating room to facilitate painful procedures. The objective of this retrospective study was to evaluate the frequency and type of complications related to a propofol-based procedural sedation protocol used in a French emergency department. ⋯ Nearly all of the adverse events in our series were minor. In the French medical system, the use of propofol outside the operating room by non-anesthesiologist physicians for procedural sedation appears safe.
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Physiological derangement, as measured by paediatric early warning score (PEWS) is used to identify children with critical illness at an early point to identify and intervene in children at risk. PEWS has shown some utility as a track and trigger system in hospital and also as a predictor of adverse outcome both in and out of hospital. This study examines the relationship between prehospital observations, aggregated into an eight-point PEWS (Scotland), and hospital admission. ⋯ These data show that a single prehospital PEWS Scotland was a poor predictor of hospital admission for unselected patients in a prehospital population. The decision to admit a child to hospital is not solely based on the physiological derangement of vital signs, and hence physiological-based scoring systems such as PEWS Scotland cannot be used as the sole criteria for hospital admission, from an undifferentiated prehospital population.