Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
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Adrenal failure, a treatable condition, can have catastrophic consequences if unrecognized in critically ill ED patients. The authors' objective was to prospectively study adrenal function in a case series of hemodynamically unstable (high-risk) patients from a large, urban ED over a 12-month period. ⋯ Adrenal dysfunction is common in high-risk ED patients. Overall, it has a frequency of 19% among a homogeneous population of hemodynamically unstable vasopressor-dependent patients. The effect of physiologic glucocorticoid replacement in this setting remains to be determined.
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The SAEM EC Categorization Task Force was developed in response to the 1994 Macy Foundation's recommendation that emergency medicine (EM) organizations "should revise the classification of emergency departments ... to reflect the level of care available in emergency departments, and indicate whether or not facilities are adequate and whether appropriately qualified and credentialed emergency physicians are available 24 hours a day." By holding Level 1 emergency centers (ECs) to objective standards based on the quality of care delivered as well as administrative, research, and educational efforts, SAEM hopes to improve patient care. The SAEM EC Categorization Task Force is now beginning the process of reviewing ECs that provide comprehensive emergency care and serve as regional resources for education, research, and administration in EM. This standards document describes relative and critical criteria to be met in order to receive designation as a Level 1 emergency center. ⋯ Any EC is eligible for review. Any institution can initiate the review process by applying. Application materials and further information, including the policies and procedures of the SAEM EC Categorization Task Force, are available from SAEM.