Articles: hospital-emergency-service.
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Observational Study
The effect of emergency department history on health literacy level and role of digital literacy: An observational study.
In this research, it was aimed to evaluate the effect of emergency department history on health literacy level and the role of digital literacy. A total of 454 participants were subjected to survey including health literacy scale, the digital literacy scale, and the demographic information form. Participants were divided into 2 groups as emergency medicine service (EMS) history (n = 269) and no EMS history (n = 185) groups. ⋯ Digital literacy had significant and positive effect on health literacy for all participants (OR = 0.126; P < .01), no EMS history (OR = 0.059; P < .01) and EMS history group (OR = 0.191; P < .01). People's health literacy skills are positively impacted if they have ever received medical attention from EMS units, regardless of the reason. Furthermore, among those who have used emergency medical services in the past, the impact of digital literacy on health literacy is statistically substantially larger.
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Ethnic inequalities in acute health acute care are not well researched. We examined how attendee ethnicity influenced outcomes of emergency care in unselected patients presenting with a gastrointestinal (GI) disorder. ⋯ Significant differences in usage patterns and disparities in acute care outcomes for patients of different ethnicities with GI disorders were observed in this study. These differences persisted after adjustment both for confounders and for measures of deprivation and illness acuity and indicate that minority ethnic individuals are less likely to be investigated or admitted to hospital than White patients.
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The aim of this review was to identify factors associated with multiple visits to emergency department (ED) services for mental health care in adolescents. ⋯ The review identified a substantial evidence base but due to the variability in study design and measurement of both risk factors and outcomes, no consistent risk factors emerged. More research is needed, particularly outside North America, using robust methods and high quality routinely collected data.
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Critical care clinics · Jul 2024
ReviewCritical Care Delivery in the Emergency Department: Bringing the Intensive Care Unit to the Patient.
Boarding of critically ill patients in the Emergency Department (ED) has increased over the past 20 years, leading hospital systems to explore ED-focused models of critical care delivery. ED-critical care delivery models vary between health systems due to differences in hospital resources and the needs of the critically ill patients boarding in the ED. Three published systems include an ED critical care intensivist consultation model, a hybrid model, and an ED-intensive care unit model. Paraphrasing the Greek philosopher, Plato, "necessity is the mother of invention." This proverb rings true as EDs are facing an increasing challenge of caring for boarding patients, especially those who are critically ill.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Effect of the Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (MISSION) Act Scribes Trial on Emergency Department Provider Productivity and Patient Throughput Times.
To help improve access to care, section 507 of the VA MISSION (Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks) Act of 2018 mandated a 2-year trial of medical scribes in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). ⋯ Scribes were associated with decreased provider productivity and increased patient throughput time in VHA EDs. Although scribes may have contributed to improvements in other dimensions of quality, further examination of the ways in which scribes were used is advisable before widespread adoption in VHA EDs.