Articles: emergency-medicine.
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Performance of surgery for trauma is an important part of residency training, yet what constitutes an adequate exposure to trauma surgery is ill defined. A retrospective review of records at a metropolitan receiving hospital was carried out for the academic year 1981-1982. Of the 50,902 patients treated in the Emergency Room more than one third were seen by a surgical resident. ⋯ An adequate education in trauma must be based on a large experience in the nonoperative resuscitation, diagnosis, and treatment of trauma victims. Nevertheless, the number of cases performed as operating surgeon provides a useful means of evaluation experience in trauma. Thirty cases are suggested as an appropriate level of exposure to the surgery of trauma, yet only one third of applicants to the American Board of Surgery attained this level.
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The mental status examination (MSE) is an integral and universal tool of medicine. We studied the form and content of the MSE performed by emergency physicians. An 11-item questionnaire was developed to determine the indications, amount of time necessary to evaluate mental status, the content of MSEs utilized, and the ideal characteristics of a short, standardized MSE. ⋯ Almost all of the physicians (82%) perceived a need for, and would use, a short standardized MSE that would take less than five minutes to perform. Results from the validation group confirmed the accuracy of the survey technique used. Our study demonstrated a perceived need for a short, standardized MSE in emergency medicine.