CJEM
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Clinical failure in abscess treatment: the role of ultrasound and incision and drainage.
Skin and soft tissue abscesses are commonly treated in emergency departments (ED). The use of bedside ultrasound may improve patient outcomes. The primary objective of this study was to examine the relationship between ultrasound use and risk of treatment failure in ED patients treated for abscesses. ⋯ The use of ultrasound in diagnosing and or/treating patients with abscesses in the ED is associated with decreased treatment failure risk when utilized with incision and drainage. Consideration of ultrasound use in other studies which assess treatment methods in relation to patient outcomes may be warranted.
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Multicenter Study
The mean abnormal result rates of laboratory tests ordered in the emergency department: shooting percentage insights from a multi-centre study.
While there is concern about excessive laboratory test ordering in the ED, it is difficult to quantify the problem. One solution involves the Mean Abnormal Result Rate (MARR), which is the proportion of tests ordered that return abnormal results. The primary objective of this study was to calculate MARR scores, and factors associated with MARR scores, for tests ordered between April 2014 and March 2019 at adult EDs in Calgary. ⋯ This is the first study to measure MARR scores in an ED setting. While lower scores (close to 5%) are less optimal in principle, ideal scores will depend on the clinical context in which tests are used. However, once departmental benchmarks are established, MARR score-monitoring allows efficient tracking of ordering practices across millions of tests.
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Frequent emergency department (ED) use is a growing problem that is associated with poor patient outcomes and increased health care costs. Our objective was to analyze the association between mood disorders and the incidence of frequent ED use. ⋯ This national survey showed that people with a mood disorder had a three-fold risk of frequent ED use, compared to people without mood disorder. These results can inform the development of policies and targeted interventions aimed at identifying and supporting ED patients with mood disorder.
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Current guidelines suggest assessing non-infectious causes and careful observation before giving antibiotics to delirious patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria. Our study aims to describe the current practice of Canadian physicians regarding the investigation and treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria in delirious older patients (aged ≥ 65 years). ⋯ This survey highlights the heterogeneous clinical management of asymptomatic bacteriuria in delirious patients and the need for clear guidelines for patients.
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Emergency department (ED) crowding compromises patient outcomes. Existing crowding measures are complex and difficult to use in real-time. This study evaluated readily available single flow variables as crowding measures. ⋯ ED occupancy as a single measure has similar predictive accuracy to complex crowding scores and is easily generalizable to diverse emergency departments. Real-time tracking of this simple indicator could be used to prompt investigation and implementation of crowding interventions.