Articles: emergency-services.
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This paper reports the first study of Australian emergency physicians which concentrates on their relationship with general practitioners. A self-administered questionnaire was mailed to every known fellow and senior trainee of the Australasian College of Emergency Medicine working in Victoria, Australia. Good response rates were achieved (97% from fellows, 78% from trainees). ⋯ The outcome for patients attending emergency departments with referral letters warrants study. If a good referral letter is seen to be of value in terms of more accurate diagnosis, quicker patient processing, less investigations and better responses, then general practitioners will be encouraged to write better letters. The results of this study offer a useful definition of inappropriate referral to the emergency department and it may now be possible to investigate any link between poor referral letters and inappropriate referrals.
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This literature review was written as part of a pilot study into staff perceptions of inappropriate attendance at accident and emergency (A&E) departments. The pilot study was carried out in the final year of the BSc Nursing Studies course at Birmingham Polytechnic. ⋯ The review covers quite a span of years, the oldest piece of literature under review dating back to 1849. Some 143 years show that indeed this particular problem is not necessarily a modern one but one that has its origins in another century.
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Comparative Study
Tissue and organ procurement in the emergency department setting.
A retrospective chart review of all emergency department (ED) deaths in patients younger than 65 years in seven area hospitals was performed for the calendar year of 1990. The number and percentage of families approached and consenting to tissue donation among the various EDs was compared and reasons for not approaching families were evaluated for their validity. Procurement rates between the years 1990 and 1991 were compared for two area hospitals, which made a specified (nonmedical) service responsible for tissue requests in 1991. ⋯ Tissue procurement rates in EDs with procurement systems in place are low despite consent rates of those approached of 36%. The major contributing factor is the failure to request tissue from the families of eligible candidates even when there are no exclusion criteria met. Suburban EDs had a higher success rate than urban EDs.
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Emergency departments serve many functions in the current U.S. healthcare system, including initial management of patients with critical illnesses and primary care for a growing proportion of the population. Overcrowding of emergency departments is a growing problem. Delays in admitting patients to inpatient units have been reported as a contributing factor to overcrowding. To date, the effect of the critically ill patients on the emergency department has not been fully described. It was the purpose of this study to examine the incidence of critical illness in the emergency department and its total burden as reflected in emergency department length of stay. ⋯ Critically ill patients constitute an important proportion of emergency department practice and may remain in the emergency department for significant periods of time. Solutions to emergency department overcrowding may include alternatives for continuing management of critically ill patients. Given the realities of emergency department practice, emergency medicine practitioners should receive training in the continuing management of critically ill patients.
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Clinical pediatrics · Jul 1993
Efficacy of a protocol to distinguish risk of serious bacterial infection in the outpatient evaluation of febrile young infants.
A study of 534 febrile infants ages 4 to 8 weeks evaluated for sepsis assessed the efficacy of the Milwaukee Protocol (MP) for selecting patients at low risk for serious bacterial infection (SBI) who might benefit from outpatient management. Two groups were compared: 1) Infants with uncompromised presentation (UP) who met all MP criteria received ceftriaxone 50 mg/kg and were discharged, then reevaluated within 24 hours. 2) Infants with compromised presentation (CP) who did not meet MP criteria were hospitalized for antibiotic therapy pending culture results. ⋯ The only UP patient with SBI was afebrile and had a negative repeat blood culture after 24 hours, and recovered with no complications. Managing UP infants as outpatients avoided 48 to 72 hours of hospitalization, decreasing health-care costs by an estimated total of $465,170.