Can J Emerg Med
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The Ottawa Emergency Department Shift Observation Tool (O-EDShOT) is a workplace-based assessment designed to assess a trainee's performance across an entire shift. It was developed in response to validity concerns with traditional end-of-shift workplace-based assessments, such as the daily encounter card. The O-EDShOT previously demonstrated strong psychometric characteristics; however, it remains unknown whether the O-EDShOT facilitates measurable improvements in the quality of documented assessments compared to daily encounter cards. ⋯ The O-EDShOT yields higher quality documented assessments when compared to the traditional end-of-shift daily encounter card. Our results provide additional validity evidence for the O-EDShOT as an assessment tool for capturing trainee on-shift performance that can be used as a stimulus for actionable feedback and as a source for high-quality workplace-based assessment data to inform decisions about emergency medicine trainee progress and promotion.
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Multicenter Study
Post-concussion symptoms in sports-related mild traumatic brain injury compared to non-sports-related mild traumatic brain injury.
To compare post-concussion symptoms in patients who sustained a sports-related mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) to those with non-sports-related mild TBI at 7 and 90 days post-injury. ⋯ Patients who sustained sports-related mild TBI could be at lower risk of experiencing symptoms such as fatigue and dizziness 90 days post-injury. Clinicians should be mindful that non-sports-related mild TBI patients may experience more post-concussion symptoms and that the level of physical activity may influence the patient's rehabilitation.
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A 23-year-old female presents with right lower quadrant pain that has been intermittent for the past several days. The pain suddenly worsened 1 hour ago. She denies vaginal bleeding or discharge, dysuria, fever, and back pain, but she has had several episodes of nausea with nonbloody, nonbilious vomiting. On examination, she is tender in the right lower quadrant, but her abdomen is not rigid.
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Emergency department (ED) throughput efficiency is largely dependent on staffing and process, and many operational interventions to increase throughput have been described. ⋯ Introducing a fast track and optimizing processes for important case-mix groups will likely enhance throughput efficiency. Expediting diagnostic and treatment decisions by shifting physician-patient contact to the earliest possible process point (e.g., triage) is an effective cost-neutral strategy to increase flow. Focusing ED staff on operational improvement is likely to improve performance, regardless of the intervention type.
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The Emergency Medicine (EM) Specialty Committee of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) specifies that resuscitation entrustable professional activities (EPAs) can be assessed in the workplace and simulated environments. However, limited validity evidence for these assessments in either setting exists. We sought to determine if EPA ratings improve over time and whether an association exists between ratings in the workplace v. simulation environment. ⋯ No correlation was observed between EPA F1 ratings in the workplace v. simulation environments. Further studies are needed to clarify the conflicting results of our study with others and build an evidence base for the validity of EPA assessments in simulated and workplace environments.