The American journal of emergency medicine
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Constipation is a common diagnosis in adults and children. Emergency department (ED) visits for constipation increased from 1980 to 2010. Since then, efforts have aimed to reduce resource utilization for constipation in the ED setting. Our objective is to examine contemporary ED practice patterns in the context of updated care guidelines. ⋯ ED visits for constipation have increased significantly since 2006. Rates of diagnostic tests and prescriptions have not changed despite published evidence and guidelines that the diagnosis of constipation does not require imaging, and that the management of constipation requires consistent outpatient treatment. Opportunities exist to reduce ED resource utilization through knowledge dissemination and implementation.
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To determine how cohorting patients based on presenting complaints affects risk of nosocomial infection in crowded Emergency Departments (EDs) under conditions of high and low prevalence of COVID-19. ⋯ The proportion of patients with a chief complaint of COVID-19 symptoms and confirmed COVID-19 infection was exceeded by the proportion without actual infection. This was true when prevalence in the ED was as high as 30%. Cohorting of patients based on the CDC's list of COVID-19 symptoms will expose many patients who do not have COVID-19 to risk of nosocomially acquired COVID-19. EDs should not use the CDC list of COVID-19 symptoms as the only strategy to minimize exposure.
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Prompt and definitive diagnosis of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) is a challenge for health care providers. There is a global burden of ADRs worldwide associated with a negative impact on the patient's health, in parallel with increasing costs for the community. This study aims to determine the annual incidence of ADRs in the cohort of patients requiring immediate intervention of the French prehospital emergency medical service (PEMS). The definitive diagnosis of ADR was provided by the follow-up of the entire course of hospitalization from PEMS presentation to final discharge in each suspected case. ⋯ The collaboration between PEMS and in hospital Pharmacovigilance Centre is feasible from the PEMS report to the long-term follow-up. The definition of a clinical pattern for some drugs is needed to allow the medical team to anticipate the clinical outcome of the involved patient and therefore adapting the patient's support as soon as possible.
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Case Reports
Delayed care in myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.
COVID-19 has profound direct health consequences, however secondary effects were much broader as rates of hospital visits steeply declined for non-COVID-19 concerns, including myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke, with patients choosing to wait longer before symptoms convince them to seek medical attention. Thus, patients where ischemia leads to tissue loss should be a major concern. ⋯ ED volume was significantly lower during the early stages of the pandemic. During this time however only death from cardiac events increased, in spite of similar ejection fractions at discharge. The cause of this remains unclear as ejection fraction similarities make it less attributable to loss of tissue than to other factors. Patient behavior significantly changed during the pandemic, making this a likely source of the increase in mortality seen.