Articles: emergency-department.
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Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2025
POCUS the Pelvis: A Case Series of Timely Diagnoses in Pediatric Patients With Abdominal Pain.
Abdominal pain is a frequent presenting complaint in the pediatric emergency department (PED). Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) can expedite the diagnosis and management of patients in the PED with abdominal pain. We present a series of 6 patient cases in which a "POCUS the pelvis" approach expedited diagnosis of undifferentiated abdominal pain in the PED, and thus facilitated definitive management.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Association of early doses of diuretics and nitrates in acute heart failure with 30 days outcomes: ancillary analysis of ELISABETH study.
The optimal dose of diuretics and nitrates for acute heart failure treatment remains uncertain. This study aimed to assess the association between intravenous nitrates and loop diuretics doses within the initial 4 h of emergency department presentation and the number of days alive and out of hospital (NDAOH) through 30 days. ⋯ In this ancillary analysis, there was no significant association between different doses of diuretics and nitrates with the NDAOH at 30 days. Point estimates and CIs may suggest that the optimal doses are less than 60 mg of diuretics, and more than 16 mg of nitrates in the first 4 h.
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Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in health care fosters many positive outcomes including improved patient care. DEI initiatives are often created by or require buy-in from departmental leaders with low DEI literacy. Book clubs are one way to develop DEI literacy. The purpose of this paper is to describe how leaders in the department of emergency medicine (DEM) process the information gained from reading a DEI book through discussion in a book club setting and explore how participation enhances their DEI literacy and fosters self-reflection. ⋯ By addressing privilege and systemic inequities through the reflective practice and dialogue of a book club, participants demonstrated a growing commitment and perceived readiness to advancing inclusive practices within medicine.
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Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is critical for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients but is prone to rapid changes and errors. Effective teamwork and leadership are essential for high-quality CPR. We aimed to introduce the Airway-Circulation-Leadership-Support (A-C-L-S) teamwork model in the emergency department (ED) to address these challenges. ⋯ The A-C-L-S teamwork model is feasible, applicable, and effective. Further research is needed to assess its influence on patient outcomes.
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The diagnostic accuracy of focused cardiac ultrasound (FoCUS) performed in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with chest pain is currently unknown. ⋯ In ED patients with chest pain and no ST elevation, the detection of regional wall motion abnormalities was a predictor of NSTE-ACS. Despite a high specificity, which indicated a possible role of FoCUS in the rule-in of NSTE-ACS, sensitivity was too low to allow a safe rule-out using FoCUS results alone.