Journal of emergencies, trauma, and shock
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J Emerg Trauma Shock · Jul 2017
The 2017 International Joint Working Group White Paper by INDUSEM, the Emergency Medicine Association and the Academic College of Emergency Experts on Establishing Standardized Regulations, Operational Mechanisms, and Accreditation Pathways for Education and Care Provided by the Prehospital Emergency Medical Service Systems in India.
The government of India has done remarkable work on commissioning a government funded prehospital emergency ambulance service in India. This has both public health implications and an economic impact on the nation. ⋯ This paper provides an independent expert opinion and a proposed framework for general operations and administration of a standardized, national prehospital emergency medical systems program. Program implementation, operational details, and regulations will require close collaboration between key stakeholders, including local, regional, and national governmental agencies of India.
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J Emerg Trauma Shock · Jul 2017
Correlation of Venous Lactate and Time of Death in Emergency Department Patients with Noncritical Lactate Levels and Mortality from Trauma.
Serum venous lactate (LAC) levels help guide emergency department (ED) resuscitation of patients with major trauma. Critical LAC level (CLAC, ≥4.0 mmol/L) is associated with increased disease severity and higher mortality in injured patients. The characteristics of injured patients with non-CLAC (NCLAC) (<4.0 mmol/L) and death have not been previously described. ⋯ In trauma patients with NCLAC who died during the index hospitalization, the median survival time was 5.6 days, approximately one-third of patients died within the first 24 h. These findings indicate that relying on a triage NCLAC level alone may result in underestimating injury severity and subsequent morbidity and mortality.
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J Emerg Trauma Shock · Jul 2017
Studying the Variability in Patient Inflow and Staffing Trends on Sundays versus Other Days in the Academic Emergency Department.
Resource limitation, staff deficiency, and variability in patient inflow contribute to emergency department (ED) overcrowding, associated with delayed care, poor care, and poor patient outcomes. This study seeks to describe and analyze patient inflow variability and staffing trends on Sundays versus other days in a tertiary academic ED from South India. ⋯ There were deficiencies in all categories of ED staff on all days, and this was pronounced on Sundays due to significantly higher patient inflow. Inadequate ED staffing, especially due to a significant dearth of tier-1 physicians is a pointer toward quality compromise in developing EDs. Authors recommend adequate staff deployment in developing EDs for optimum quality care. This should be implemented such that staffing is based on expected patient inflow so that a PPH-per-provider goal of 2.5 is targeted across all shifts.