Clinical pediatrics
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Clinical pediatrics · Dec 2001
Use of propofol sedation in a pediatric emergency department: a prospective study.
The purpose of this study was to determine the efficacy and safety of propofol sedation for pediatric procedures in the emergency department. For patients needing painful procedures, propofol was administered intravenously. Vital signs, complications, and time to recovery were recorded. ⋯ Most had decreases in blood pressure. Mean recovery time was 18 minutes. Satisfaction with sedation was rated "excellent." Propofol was an effective sedation with minimal complications in the emergency department setting.
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Clinical pediatrics · Dec 2001
Restructuring an academic pediatric inpatient service using concepts developed by hospitalists.
In an effort to increase continuity of inpatient care by attending physicians, decrease use of hospital resources, and improve medical education without compromising quality of care, an inpatient pediatric ward service was restructured by using concepts developed by hospitalists. This reorganization reduced the number of yearly inpatient attendings, added a consistent 14-day call schedule, and eliminated attending outpatient responsibilities during their ward service. The restructured ward service attending acted as the attending of record for all general and specialty patients, excluding hematology/oncology, with the subspecialists fulfilling a consultant role. ⋯ There was decreased resource utilization for laboratory and radiology tests (p<0.01) on the restructured service. Readmission rates were not significantly changed, and satisfaction among attendings, housestaff, students, and patients was uniformly high in both groups. A reorganized academic pediatric medical service, which allows specific attendings to focus on inpatient care and teaching, can decrease hospital resource utilization without compromising the quality of patient care or medical education.