Articles: emergency-department.
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Our aim was to study the outcomes and predictors of in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) among adult patients at a tertiary care centre in Pakistan. ⋯ Outcome of CPR following in-hospital cardiac arrest in our setting is better than described in other series. Non-intubated status before arrest, cardiac arrest in the emergency department and shorter duration of CPR were independent predictors of good outcome.
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This clinical policy focuses on critical issues concerning the management of adult patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with acute symptomatic carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning. The subcommittee reviewed the medical literature relevant to the questions posed. ⋯ Level A recommendations represent patient management principles that reflect a high degree of clinical certainty; Level B recommendations represent patient management principles that reflect moderate clinical certainty; and Level C recommendations represent other patient management strategies that are based on preliminary, inconclusive, or conflicting evidence, or based on committee consensus. This clinical policy is intended for physicians working in hospital-based EDs.
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To assess among seriously injured accident victims whether change of the Triage Revised Trauma Score (T-RTS) between first assessment and arrival at the hospital independently predicts mortality. ⋯ Intubation and a deteriorating T-RTS between the time of the accident and patient's arrival at the hospital are powerful independent predictors of mortality after hospitalisation. Together with advanced age, a deteriorating T-RTS should be the main aspect guiding the preclinical procedures.
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There has been no previous study into the state of emergency medicine in Azerbaijan. As a legacy of the Soviet Semashko system, the "specialty" model of emergency medicine and integrated emergency departments do not exist here. Instead, pre-hospital emergency care is delivered by ambulance physicians and in-hospital care by individual departments, often in specialty hospitals. Emergency care is therefore fragmented, highly specialized and inefficient. ⋯ The emergency medical system surveyed in Azerbaijan is inefficiently organized, under-financed, poorly equipped and lacks adequately trained staff. Reforms need to be directed towards achieving international standards, while adapting new models for service delivery into the existing framework and improving system capacity as highlighted by this baseline assessment.
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WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ON THIS TOPIC: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that HIV screening be incorporated into routine care unless patients opt out, but most emergency departments (EDs) have not adopted routine screening. WHAT QUESTION THIS STUDY ADDRESSED: Will patients accept routine HIV testing in the ED without separate written consent or traditional pre- and posttest counseling? WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE: In this survey, 81% were willing to receive free HIV testing in the ED, but many required explanation of opt-out testing. ⋯ Nevertheless, screening is unlikely to be adopted in busy EDs unless payment and workload issues can be resolved. The yield of routine ED screening may be low in most settings.