Emergencias
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Practice Guideline
Hepatitis C virus detection in hospital emergency departments.
The prevalence of active hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is higher in hospital emergency departments (EDs) than in the general population. Numerous patients who seek emergency care are unaware that they have detectable viremia, yet they fall outside established ED protocols for HCV screening. Often they belong to groups with difficult access to health care who use the ED as their point of entry to the system. ⋯ Experts from the Spanish Society of Emergency Medicine (SEMES), the Spanish Association for Study of the Liver (AEEH), and the Spanish Society of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology (SEIMC) met to establish criteria to guide health care professionals' decisions. The experts' review of the literature and discussion in consensus-building meetings resulted in evidence-based recommendations that consider the following aspects: 1) the population to target for HCV screening in the ED, 2) how to inform patients of the process, 3) how to carry out HCV screening, 4) how to order an HCV test, and 5) additional issues such as bundling HCV with other viral tests for comprehensive diagnosis, recording results in medical records, and implementing ways to retain and follow all patients with positive results. This consensus report provides guidelines and tools to facilitate emergency physicians' work and ensure effective detection of HCV infections and subsequent incorporation of patients into the health care system.
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Letter Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Effectiveness and safety of vernakalant vs flecainide for cardioversion of atrial fibrillation in the emergency department: the VERITA study.
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Letter Review Case Reports
Thyrotoxic periodic paralysis: a case report and review of relevant pathophysiology.
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Observational Study
Sepsis 3-hour bundle compliance and prognosis in emergency department patients aged 65 years or older.
To analyze 3-hour bundle compliance in for patients aged 65 years or older with sepsis treated in our emergency department (ED) and to explore the association between compliance and mortality. ⋯ Three-hour sepsis bundle compliance in the ED was associated with longer survival in patients aged 65 years or older.
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Historical Article
SEMES' long road to specialty status for emergency medicine in Spain.
July 2 of this year saw the publication of Spanish Royal Decree 610/2024, which establishes emergency medicine as an official specialization. This event represents the culmination of a long-running effort to improve the care of patients in the emergency and urgent care system and throughout the national health service. This article offers a brief account of some of the legal, administrative, and political steps the Spanish Society of Emergency Medicine(SEMES) took to achieve this goal over the course of nearly 40 years. ⋯ Competences in these areas have been shown to fall short in Spain. The article provides examples of some of the bright lights and dim shadows in our rule of law. Nonetheless, the long road traveled has also shown us how skills and knowledge are developed in adverse circumstances and crises, provided there is vocation for public service.