Can J Emerg Med
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Feasibility and efficacy of a hospital-based violence intervention program on reducing repeat violent injury in youth: a randomized control trial.
To determine feasibility and efficacy of an Emergency Department Violence Intervention Program (EDVIP) to reduce violence related injuries in youth. ⋯ This program is feasible for ED implementation and for completion of a future RCT to measure effectiveness.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The use of a self-check-in kiosk for early patient identification and queuing in the emergency department.
Delays in triage processes in the emergency department (ED) can compromise patient safety. The aim of this study was to provide proof-of-concept that a self-check-in kiosk could decrease the time needed to identify ambulatory patients arriving in the ED. We compared the use of a novel automated self-check-in kiosk to identify patients on ED arrival to routine nurse-initiated patient identification. ⋯ A self-check-in kiosk significantly reduced the time-to-first-identification for ambulatory patients arriving in the ED.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Point-of-care ultrasound before attempting clean-catch urine collection in infants: a randomized controlled trial.
A new non-invasive bladder stimulation technique has been described to obtain clean-catch urine specimens in infants. This study aimed to evaluate if point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) guided feeding protocol to measure bladder volume prior to stimulation techniques improves clean-catch urine collection success. ⋯ NCT02751671.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A Web-based module and online video for pain management education for caregivers of children with fractures: A randomized controlled trial.
IntroductionOver 80% of children experience compromise in functioning following a fracture. Digital media may improve caregiver knowledge of managing fracture pain at home.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The effect of an infographic promotion on research dissemination and readership: A randomized controlled trial.
Journals use social media to increase the awareness of their publications. Infographics show research findings in a concise and visually appealing manner, well suited for dissemination on social media platforms. We hypothesized that infographic abstracts promoted on social media would increase the dissemination and online readership of the parent research articles. ⋯ The promotion of CJEM articles using infographics on social media and the CanadiEM.org website increased Altmetric scores and abstract views. Infographics may have a role in increasing awareness of medical literature.