The American journal of emergency medicine
-
Observational Study
High risk clinical characteristics for pyogenic spinal infection in acute neck or back pain: Prospective cohort study.
To identify clinical characteristics associated with pyogenic spinal infection among adults presenting to a community emergency department (ED) with neck or back pain. A secondary objective was to describe the frequency of these characteristics among patients with spinal epidural abscess (SEA). ⋯ Male sex, fever, and recent soft tissue infection or bacteremia were associated with pyogenic spinal infection in this prospective ED cohort.
-
Sudden cardiac arrest is a leading cause of death in the United States, with many occurring out of the hospital. Immediate response by bystanders, through the initiation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), leads to increased survival; however, many do not respond due to lack of training and education. This study sought to determine the efficacy of a training model developed to rapidly and effectively train large numbers of individuals on hands-only CPR. ⋯ Faculty then went on to train their respective students. Ninety-six faculty and staff and 1615 students were trained within 3 weeks, demonstrating this model was effective in rapidly training large numbers of individuals in a short period of time while increasing CPR knowledge and confidence. This method may be effective in other community settings.
-
The most recent guidelines on prescribing opioids from the United States Centers for Disease Control recommend that clinicians not prescribe opioids as first-line therapy for chronic non-cancer pain. If an opioid prescription is considered for a patient already on opioids, prescribers are encouraged to check the statewide prescription drug monitoring database (PDMP). Some additional guidelines recommend screening tools such as the Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM) which may also help identify drug-aberrant behaviors. ⋯ The PDMP alone is a more useful as a screening instrument than either the COMM or the combination of the PDMP plus COMM in patients already taking opioids at time of ED presentation. However, the PDMP misses a majority of patients with documented drug-aberrant behaviors in the EMR, and should not be used in isolation to justify whether a particular opioid prescription is appropriate.
-
Significant morbidity and mortality is attributed to infection with the influenza virus annually and care is often sought in Emergency Departments (ED). The exposure of Emergency Department healthcare personnel and subsequent illness is speculated to be high but has not been quantified. ⋯ Among Emergency Department providers, transmission of clinically significant Influenza illness was low.
-
There is variability in the management of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) and abnormal findings on their initial head computed tomography (CT). The main objective of this study was to validate the value of the Important Brain Injury (IBI) criteria, introduced by the Canadian CT-Head Rule, in predicting the need for surgical intervention. The secondary objective was to identify independent predictors for neurosurgical intervention. ⋯ The IBI criteria for MTBI identified all patients who required neurosurgical intervention; however its specificity is low.