Articles: hospitals.
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Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2025
Observational StudyDevelopment of a Scoring Model to Predict Severe Dengue in Children at Admission in the Emergency Care: An Observational Study.
Dengue has emerged as the most widely spread mosquito-borne disease, hyperendemic in India. Although severe dengue occurs only in a small proportion of cases, delays in the recognition and management can result in significant morbidity and mortality. Risk stratification of children in the emergency care and identifying those at risk for worsening during hospital stay facilitates optimum utilization of health care resources. The objective of our study was to develop and validate a scoring model to predict the development of severe dengue in hospitalized children by identifying risk factors present in them at the time of admission to the emergency department. ⋯ The dengue severity scoring model was found to have reasonable diagnostic accuracy in predicting severe disease prior to hospitalization. However, more studies are required to validate the score in different emergency care settings with varied pediatric populations.
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Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2025
Suicide Prevention and Telehealth in Children's Hospital Emergency Departments.
Suicide is a leading cause of death among adolescents. Emergency department (ED) visits for mental health concerns are rising, and telehealth is increasingly used to provide emergency mental health care. We conducted a national survey to describe suicide prevention practices and tele-mental health care in children's hospital EDs. ⋯ Approximately half of children's hospital EDs use tele-mental health care, and hospitals with versus without tele-mental health care report similar rates of suicide prevention practice use. Opportunities exist to increase use of discharge safety practices.
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The "July Effect" hypothesizes increased morbidity and mortality after the addition of inexperienced physicians at the beginning of an academic year. However, the impact of newer members on neurosurgical teams managing patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) has yet to be examined. This study conducted a nationwide analysis to evaluate the existence of the "July Effect" in the setting of patients with TBI. ⋯ The findings suggested that there is no "July Effect" on patients with TBI treated at teaching hospitals in the United States.
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Few data on the impact of specific interventions against Emergency Rooms 'or Hospitals overcrowding are available in France. ⋯ The reduced number of Internal Medicine bed-spaced patients, the reduced LOS of patients in short-stay observation unit when associated with the admitter-rounder model and the increase of LOS among some of the in-patient internal medicine units observed in this study should be evaluated elsewhere.
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Observational Study
Social Vulnerability and Receipt of Guideline-Concordant Care among Patients with Colorectal Cancer.
Cancer outcome disparities have been reported in highly vulnerable communities. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association of social vulnerability with receipt of guideline-concordant care (GCC) and mortality risk for patients with colorectal cancer. ⋯ For highly vulnerable patients, treatment at CoC-accredited hospitals was associated with increased receipt of GCC and decreased mortality risk, which may reflect CoC accreditation requirements for treatment guideline adherence, community engagement, and addressing barriers to care.