European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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Portugal has many weak links in the so-called 'chain of survival' both in the pre-hospital and in-hospital setting. Apart from evaluating the performance of a newly implemented in-hospital cardiac arrest system, we assessed the correlation between different clinical variables and outcome after cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). All resuscitation attempts during 1995 were registered using the form recommended by the European Resuscitation Council. ⋯ The results from this series concur with other reported series. Although good standards of care were achieved, we are aware that this was only an isolated step in the implementation of the 'chain of survival' in our country. The authors conclude that there is an urgent need for a nationwide programme that improves the standards of care for these patients.
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Editorial Comment
Total quality management and the culture of organization.
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Spiral computed tomography (CT) has proved to be a valuable tool by providing three-dimensional (3D) images of the studied structures. We hypothesized that a more realistic depiction of lesions by 3D CT could be of interest for surgeons who are treating blunt abdominal traumas and lead to less inappropriate triage. A good working relationship between surgeons and radiologists allowed us to perform a 3D CT examination in six patients. ⋯ The fifth patient presented a fragmented spleen and transient massive haematuria related to a well-contained laceration of the kidney upper pole that were amenable to nonoperative management. The sixth patient was emergency operated for active bleeding from a fragmented spleen. 3D CT performed 2 months after spleen repair allowed the assessment of the amount of devascularized tissue, as well as the status of the upper abdomen arteries. For haemodynamically stable patients, 3D CT could be a helpful addition to conventional axial CT for quantifying blunt abdominal traumas, for making the choice between nonoperative and operative treatment, but also between emergency and delayed surgical strategy.
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Acute confusion in the elderly as a presenting symptom in an accident and emergency department requires just the same energy devoted to diagnosis as does, say for example, acute coma, epilepsy or haematemesis. Doctors in accident and emergency departments are reminded not to succumb to the pitfalls of assuming that acute confusion is merely part of a progressive dementia in an elderly person and therefore incapable of treatment. ⋯ In passing, the abbreviated mental test score is commended to accident and emergency doctors as being just as useful in a different context as the worldwide acceptance has been of the Glasgow Coma Score. Currently the standard abbreviated mental test score seems confined to the United Kingdom as part of the generally accepted practice.
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Repetition of psychiatric emergency department use by a relatively small number of patients constitutes a major problem for clinicians and service providers. This study aimed at the identification of risk factors for repetition by addressing the time interval between the first and second visits to the emergency department. The purpose was to investigate what patient characteristics and referral circumstances determine this interval. ⋯ Younger, male patients who present themselves spontaneously are more likely to repeat than others. Previous inpatient service use and the presence of a diagnosis of substance abuse disorder or psychotic disorder at the first visit further increases the risk for repetition. Previous service use and, to a lesser degree, demographic and clinical characteristics of psychiatric patients are useful in the prediction of variations in time between first and second referrals to the emergency department.