Articles: patients.
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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Jul 2002
Mortality risk factors of a pediatric population with fulminant hepatic failure undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation in a pediatric intensive care unit.
To determine risk factors of mortality in the preoperative, perioperative, and immediate postoperative period of a pediatric population that has undergone orthotopic liver transplantation for fulminant hepatic failure in a pediatric intensive care unit. DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records. SETTING: A pediatric intensive care unit in a children's hospital. PATIENTS: Sixty patients with fulminant hepatic failure who fulfilled King's College criteria for liver transplantation. INTERVENTION: Orthotopic liver transplantation was performed according to standard techniques. Before transplantation, patients were admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit when intensive care was required, and patients were always admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit after the operation. Measurements: A total of 20 variables were studied via univariate and multivariate analysis; statistical significance was accepted when p =.05. MAIN ⋯ Hepatitis A virus is the major cause of fulminant liver failure in Argentina, but non-A non-B non-C hepatitis is an independent risk factor of mortality. Reduced-size graft, longer ischemia time, ventilatory support before orthotopic liver transplantation, neurologic complications, and acute rejection after transplantation are independent predictive factors of mortality. Better sanitary conditions and universal immunization for hepatitis A virus should reduce hepatitis A virus and hepatitis A virus-induced fulminant hepatic failure.
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Economically disadvantaged children receive less preventive asthma care and more inpatient care. Studies have not evaluated the association of insurance status on children with severe exacerbations. We evaluated differences in severity of illness, resource use, and outcome associated with Medicaid insurance among children receiving intensive care for asthma. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Fourteen American pediatric intensive care units participating in the Pediatric Intensive Care Evaluations database. Methods: Patients with a primary diagnosis of asthma treated from May 1995 to February 2000 were identified. Demographic information and clinical data were evaluated to determine whether there was an association between Medicaid insurance, severity of illness, and length of stay. ⋯ Asthmatic children receiving Medicaid had longer pediatric intensive care unit and hospital stays and an increased risk of mechanical ventilation compared with asthmatic children with commercial or health maintenance organization insurance. Further studies are needed to evaluate differences in outcome and resource utilization for economically disadvantaged asthmatic children.
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The National All Schedules Prescription Electronic Reporting Act, or NASPER, is a bill proposed by the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians to provide and improve patient access with quality care, and protect patients and physicians from deleterious effects of controlled substance misuse, abuse and trafficking. Controlled prescription drugs, including narcotic analgesics, anxiolytics, anti-depressants, stimulants, and sedative-hypnotics play a significant and legitimate role in interventional pain management practices in managing chronic pain and related disorders. Based on the 1997 household survey on drug abuse it is estimated that 76.9 million Americans had used an illicit drug at least once in their life. ⋯ The most commonly abused drugs include oxycodone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, morphine, codeine, clonazepam, alprazolam, lorazepam, diazepam and carisoprodol. The diversion of prescription controlled substances to illicit channels is a public health and safety issue. This review describes the role of controlled substances in chronic pain management, prevalence and economic impact of controlled substance abuse, prescription accountability, effectiveness of prescription monitoring programs, and rationale for national controlled substance electronic reporting system.
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Research has demonstrated that experienced emergency physicians can identify a subgroup of patients with shoulder dislocation for whom pre-reduction radiographs do not alter patient management. Based on that research, a treatment guideline for the selective elimination of pre-reduction radiographs in clinically evident cases of anterior shoulder dislocation was developed and implemented. The primary objective of this study was to prospectively determine whether the treatment guideline safely eliminates unnecessary radiographs. ⋯ Experienced emergency physicians are frequently certain of the diagnosis of anterior shoulder dislocation on clinical grounds alone and can comfortably and safely use this guideline for the selective elimination of pre-reduction radiographs. Compliance with the guideline substantially decreases pre-reduction radiographs. Validation of the guideline in other settings is warranted.
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The underuse of analgesics, or "oligoanalgesia," is common in emergency departments (EDs). To improve care we must understand our patients' pain experiences as well as our clinical practice patterns. To this end, we examined pain etiology, pain management practices and patient satisfaction in 2 urban EDs. ⋯ In the 2 EDs studied, we found high levels of pain severity for our patients, as well as low levels of analgesic use. When used, analgesic administration was often delayed. Despite these findings, patient satisfaction remained high. Despite recent efforts to improve pain management practice; oligoanalgesia remains a problem for our specialty.