CJEM
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Observational Study
Can ED chest pain patients with intermediate HEART scores be managed as outpatients?
Current guidelines recommend hospital admission for patients who present to the emergency department (ED) with chest pain and are scored as intermediate risk for adverse outcomes based on the HEART score. While hospital admission for these patients allows for timely investigation and treatment, it is a resource-intensive process. This study examines whether intermediate HEART score patients can be safely managed on an outpatient basis through rapid access chest pain clinics. ⋯ This study demonstrates that rapid access clinics are likely a safe alternative to admission for intermediate-risk chest pain patients and could reduce costly inpatient admissions for chest pain. With angiography excluded, MACE rates were well below the American College of Emergency Physicians cited 2% threshold.
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Patients with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) are frequently discharged from the emergency department (ED) and treated with antibiotics. The role of antibiotics in the outpatient management of AECOPD is controversial and has never been studied in the ED setting. ⋯ For patients with AECOPD discharged from the ED, we did not find an association between outpatient treatment with antibiotics and lower rates of rehospitalization after accounting for differences in baseline patient characteristics. However, the small sample size and low observed rate of the primary outcome created substantial risk of Type II error. Until further evidence is available, clinicians should continue prescribing antibiotics for patients with AECOPD based on clinical judgement and current practice guidelines.
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An innovative program, 'Paramedics Providing Palliative Care at Home,' was implemented in Nova Scotia, Canada in 2015. Roles like this are part of an evolving professional identity; role discordance or lack of clarity not only hinders professionalization but may impair the wellbeing, and career longevity of paramedics. This study explored the alignment of providing palliative support at home with paramedic professional identity. ⋯ Paramedics and palliative health care providers highlighted the provision of palliative care as part of a positive growth of paramedicine as a health profession, and a good fit with professional identity. Novel roles like this are important in the evolution of our health care system faced with increasing pressures to get the right care with the right provider at the right time.
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We examined changes in annual paramedic transport incidence over the ten years prior to COVID-19 in comparison to increases in population growth and emergency department (ED) visitation by walk-in. ⋯ There was a substantial increase in the demand for paramedic transportation. Growth in paramedic demand outpaced population growth markedly and may continue to surge alongside population aging. Increases in the rate of paramedic transports per population were not bound to urbanized regions, but were province-wide. Our findings indicate a mounting need to develop innovative solutions to meet the increased demand on paramedic services and to implement long-term strategies across provincial paramedic systems.