Articles: emergency-medicine.
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Multicenter Study
Testing the validity of three acute care assessment tools for assessing residents' performance during in situ simulation: the ACAT-SimSit study.
The assessment of technical and nontechnical skills in emergency medicine requires reliable and usable tools. Three Acute Care Assessment Tools (ACATs) have been developed to assess medical learners in their management of cardiac arrest (ACAT-CA), coma (ACAT-coma) and acute respiratory failure (ACAT-ARF). ⋯ This study reported that the three ACATs showed good external validity and usability.
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Editorial Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Randomized trial comparing low- vs high-dose IV dexamethasone for patients with moderate to severe migraine.
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Large Language Models (LLMs) represent a transformative advancement in the preparation of medical scientific manuscripts, offering significant benefits such as reducing drafting time, enhancing linguistic precision, and aiding non-native English speakers. These models, which generate text by learning from extensive datasets, can streamline the publication process and maintain consistency across collaborative projects. ⋯ Ethical concerns about accuracy, authorship, and transparency need to be carefully considered. The American Journal of Emergency Medicine has adopted a policy permitting LLM use with full disclosure and author responsibility, emphasizing the need for ongoing policy evolution in response to technological advancements.