Annals of emergency medicine
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Editorial Comment
Beyond the Numbers: Assessing Competency in Point-of-Care Ultrasound.
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Multicenter Study
Extended-Release Naltrexone and Case Management for Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder in the Emergency Department.
To assess the feasibility of initiating treatment for alcohol use disorder with extended-release naltrexone and case management services in the emergency department (ED) and measure the intervention's impact on daily alcohol consumption and quality of life. ⋯ We found that initiation of treatment of alcohol use disorder with extended-release naltrexone and case management is feasible in an ED setting and observed significant reductions in drinking with improved quality of life in the short term. Multicenter randomized controlled trials are needed to further validate these findings.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Implementation of an Electronic Alert to Improve Timeliness of Second Dose Antibiotics for Patients With Suspected Serious Infections in the Emergency Department: A Quasi-Randomized Controlled Trial.
Delays in the second dose of antibiotics in the emergency department (ED) are associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients with serious infections. We analyzed the influence of clinical decision support to prevent delays in second doses of broad-spectrum antibiotics in the ED. ⋯ The implementation of a clinical decision support alert reminding clinicians to reorder second doses of antibiotics was associated with a reduction in the length and frequency of antibiotic delays in the ED. There was no effect on the rates of ICU transfers, inpatient mortality, or hospital length of stay.
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Many emergency departments (EDs) have identified the importance of HIV prevention and have implemented steps to screen and offer preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP). The objective of this study was to systematically review existing literature that identifies PrEP eligibility in the ED and summarize outcomes along the PrEP cascade of care (awareness, interest, linkage to treatment, initiation, and retention) for patients in ED. ⋯ Although up to a third of patients in ED assessed in the current study were PrEP eligible, less than half of PrEP-eligible participants had prior knowledge of PrEP, and very few who expressed interest in the ED were ultimately linked to PrEP treatment or initiated PrEP. Future research is necessary to identify strategies to increase PrEP education, interest, and linkage to care from the ED.