Articles: hospital-emergency-service.
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Pediatric emergency care · Apr 2024
Utility of Serum Amylase in Children With Abdominal Pain in the Pediatric Emergency Department.
Abdominal pain is among the most common chief complaints seen in pediatric emergency departments (PEDs). This study aims to evaluate the diagnostic utility of amylase and lipase in the evaluation of abdominal pain in the PED. ⋯ Although serum amylase and lipase testing may be suitable for abdominal pain screening, the concurrent use of both does not seem to add any clinically significant value to diagnosis.
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To develop and internally validate a multivariable logistic regression model (LRM) for the prediction of the probability of 1-year readmission to the emergency department (ED) in patients with acute alcohol intoxication (AAI). We developed and internally validated the LRM on a previously analyzed retrospective cohort of 3304 patients with AAI admitted to the ED of the Sant'Orsola-Malpighi Hospital (Bologna, Italy). The benchmark LRM employed readmission to the same ED for AAI within 1 year as the binary outcome, age as a continuous predictor, and sex, alcohol use disorder, substance use disorder, at least one previous admission for trauma, mental or behavioral disease, and homelessness as the binary predictors. ⋯ The reduced LRM had the following optimism-corrected metrics: scaled Brier score 17.0%, C-statistic 0.799 (95% CI 0.778 to 0.821), calibration in the large 0.000 (95% CI - 0.099 to 0.099), calibration slope 0.985 (95% CI 0.893 to 1.088), and an acceptably accurate calibration plot. An LRM based on sex, age, at least one previous admission for trauma, mental or behavioral disease, and homelessness can be used to estimate the probability of 1-year readmission to ED for AAI. To begin proving its clinical utility, this LRM should be validated in external cohorts.
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To investigate current ED management of patients with syncope in Italy and opportunities for optimization, we carried out a questionnaire survey involving 102 directors of ED facilities in our country, of any complexity level, with 55.9% located in the North, 97% equipped with an ED Observation Unit (EDOU), and 21.8% with an outpatient Syncope Unit (SU). 43.6% of EDs management is not standardized. Clinical judgment and monitoring are the main factors leading management while old age and neuropsychic comorbidities the most hindering it. More than one third of ED facilities treats fewer than half of patients in EDOU. ⋯ To optimize it, 98% of them believe that is appropriate to implement a standardized approach, with and a large majority focusing on increasing diagnostic yield and safety; other priorities include application of guidelines, implementation of care pathways, enhancement of the role of EDOU, and direct path to the SU. This study highlights that the management of syncope patients in our country requires a further improvement, especially through standardization of pathways and adoption of innovative organizational solutions. Admissions appear to be lower than reported in the literature but this finding must be confirmed by a multicentric study based on direct collection of data.
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Observational Study
Emergency department use of an electronic differential diagnosis generator in the evaluation of critically ill patients.
Accurate diagnosis is an essential component of managing critically ill emergency department (ED) patients. Electronic diagnosis generators (EDGs) are software tools which assist clinicians in their diagnosis generation; however, they have not been evaluated for use for critical ED patients. We aimed to evaluate the use of an EDG for this population to determine its impact on diagnosis generation and diagnostic testing. ⋯ EDGs have some potential to improve diagnosis in critical EM patients by expanding the differential diagnosis and, to a lesser extent, altering diagnostic testing.
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To understand factors that contribute to variation in time to abdominal and/or pelvic ultrasound in pediatric patients in an emergency department (ED) by utilizing rational subgrouping to assess opportunity for improvement. ⋯ Longer time to study completion was observed in female patients, older patients, and during night shifts. Use of rational subgrouping supported understanding of variation among subgroups of patients evaluated with abdominal and/or pelvic ultrasound. This allowed informed decision-making regarding opportunities for improvement. Rational subgrouping is a useful methodology in planning QI initiatives as it identifies sources of variation within a nonhomogeneous population and allows for judicious decision-making in a context of limited resources.