Articles: hospital-emergency-service.
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This prospective cohort enrolled all patients above 16 years of age presenting to the in the emergency department (ED) for a reported syncope was designed to test the accuracy of a point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) integrated approach in risk stratification. The emergency physician responsible for the patient care was asked to classify the syncope risk after the initial clinical assessment and after performing POCUS evaluation. All risk group definitions were based on the 2018 European Society of Cardiology guidelines. ⋯ Positive and negative likelihood ratios were 1.73 (95% CI 0.87-3.44) and 0.84 (95% CI 0.62-1.12) for the clinical evaluation, and 5.93 (95% CI 2.83-12.5) and 0.63 (95% CI 0.45-0.9) for the POCUS-integrated evaluation. The POCUS-integrated approach would reduce the diagnostic error of the clinical evaluation by 4.5 cases/100 patients. This cohort study suggested that the integration of the clinical assessment with POCUS results in patients presenting to the ED for non-high-risk syncope may increase the accuracy of predicting the risk of SFSR outcomes and the usefulness of the clinical assessment alone.
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Acta clinica Croatica · Jun 2022
EFFECT OF THE INTRODUCTION OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE SPECIALISTS ON THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT PERFORMANCE INDICATORS: A RETROSPECTIVE DATA ANALYSIS.
Patient management in the emergency department (ED) is evaluated by performance indicators, such as wait times (time to be seen by a physician), length of stay (LOS) and the number of diagnostic tests per patient. To improve the quality of care, dedicated emergency medicine (EM) specialists are employed to work in the ED. The aim of this study is to evaluate three performance indicators of patient management in the ED compared by specialty, internal medicine (IM) versus EM. ⋯ There was a significant reduction in LOS in the ED when comparing only IM specialists to IM specialists with two EM specialists (p<0.001). The IM physicians on average do more tests than EM specialists, which was statistically significant (p<0.05). There was a significant improvement in efficiency in the ED with the introduction of EM specialists which was manifested by shorter patient wait times and shorter length of stay in the Emergency Department and fewer diagnostic test orders.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) remains a major public health problem. Even in high-income countries, survival rates have plateaued in the range of ten percent, stimulating an ongoing interest in developing novel approaches to resuscitation. ⋯ In this narrative review we summarize and interpret recent developments in knowledge of EMS-witnessed OHCA regarding prevalence, demographics, location, circumstances, survival outcomes and clinical profile. We examine the possibility of informing novel resuscitation approaches and enhancing mechanistic knowledge by studying EMS-witnessed OHCA, with the goal of improving overall survival from OHCA.