CJEM
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Completeness and accuracy of digital charting vs paper charting in simulated pediatric cardiac arrest: a randomized controlled trial.
To determine if data collected through digital charting are more complete and more accurate compared to traditional paper-based charting during simulated pediatric cardiac arrest. ⋯ Compared to paper-based charting, digital charting group captured more critical tasks during pediatric simulated resuscitation and was more accurate in the time intervals between real-time tasks performance and charted time. For tasks charted, paper-based charting was significantly more complete and more detailed during simulated pediatric cardiac arrest.
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To determine the association between neighborhood marginalization and rates of pediatric ED visits in Ottawa, Ontario. Secondary objectives investigated if the association between neighborhood marginalization and rates varied by year, acuity, and distance to hospital. ⋯ Neighborhood residential instability and material deprivation should be considered when locating alternatives to emergency care.
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As digital technologies continue to impact medicine, emergency medicine providers have an opportunity to work together to harness these technologies and shape their implementation within our healthcare system. COVID-19 and the rapid scaling of virtual care provide an example of how profoundly emergency medicine can be affected by digital technology, both positively and negatively. ⋯ As virtual care becomes a permanent fixture of our system, and other technologies such as AI and wearables break into Canadian healthcare, more advocacy, research, and health system leadership will be required to best leverage these tools. This paper outlines the purpose and outputs of the newly founded CAEP Digital Emergency Medicine (DigEM) Committee, with the hope of inspiring further interest amongst CAEP members and creating opportunities to collaborate with other organizations within CAEP and across EM groups nationwide.
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Review
Heatstroke presentations to urban hospitals during BC's extreme heat event: lessons for the future.
Climate change is leading to more extreme heat events in temperate climates that typically have low levels of preparedness. Our objective was to describe the characteristics, treatments, and outcomes of adults presenting to hospitals with heatstroke during BC's 2021 heat dome. ⋯ Heatstroke patients were unable to activate 911 themselves, and most presented with a 48-h delay. This delay may represent a critical window of opportunity for pre-hospital and hospital systems to prepare for the influx of high-acuity resource-intensive patients.