Articles: hospital-emergency-service.
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Arch Pediat Adol Med · Feb 2004
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialA randomized trial of nebulized epinephrine vs albuterol in the emergency department treatment of bronchiolitis.
To determine if nebulized epinephrine is more efficacious than nebulized albuterol in the emergency department (ED) treatment of moderately ill infants with bronchiolitis. ⋯ Although the patients treated with epinephrine were judged well enough for ED discharge significantly earlier than the patients treated with albuterol, epinephrine was not found to be more efficacious than albuterol in treating moderately ill infants with bronchiolitis.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Prospective multicenter study of relapse following emergency department treatment of COPD exacerbation.
To determine the incidence and risk factors of relapse after an emergency department (ED) visit for COPD exacerbation. ⋯ Among patients discharged to home after ED treatment of a COPD exacerbation, one in five patients will experience an urgent/emergent relapse event during the next 2 weeks. Both chronic factors (ie, a history of urgent clinic or ED visits) and acute factors (ie, activity limitations and initial respiratory rate) are associated with increased risk. Further research should focus on ways to decrease the relapse rate among these high-risk patients. The clinicians may wish to consider these historical factors when making ED decisions.
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Letter Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Scrubs versus professional attire: ED patients are indifferent.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effect of race/ethnicity and desirable social characteristics on physicians' decisions to prescribe opioid analgesics.
Racial/ethnic disparities in physician treatment have been documented in multiple areas, including emergency department (ED) analgesia. The purpose of this study was to determine if physicians were predisposed to different treatment decisions based on patient race/ethnicity and if physicians' treatment predispositions changed when socially desirable information about the patient (occupation, socioeconomic status, and relationship with a primary care physician) was made explicit. ⋯ Patient race/ethnicity did not influence physicians' predispositions to treatment plans in clinical vignettes. Even knowing that the patient had a high-prestige occupation and a primary care provider only minimally increased prescribing of opioid analgesics for conditions with few objective findings.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Violence prevention in the ED: linkage of the ED to a social service agency.
Interpersonal violence continues to be a problem in the United States, most prominent in the inner-city minority young persons population. The medical approach of "treat 'em and street 'em" philosophy has led to foregoing the psychosocial needs of injured young persons. This study describes a program to link young persons who are victims of interpersonal violence to a healthcare system and a social service agency in an effort to meet their psychosocial needs. ⋯ Nine of the 92 (9.8%) in the control group used services; most of these referrals were for social services (7 of 9 respondents) and the others were healthcare-related. The difference in utilization of services between the treatment and the control groups were found to be significant different (95% confidence interval, 1.41-1.55, significance =.00), and there was a strong positive correlation of using services and case management (Pearson coefficient = 0.728, significance =.00). The referral of young victims of violence from the ED to psychosocial services could be successful using a case management model and an alliance between a healthcare system and a social service agency.