Articles: emergency-department.
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The objective was to study the effect of serial night shifts on the cognitive, psychomotor, and moral performance of emergency medicine residents of an academic Emergency Medicine Department. ⋯ Residents sleep less following night versus day shifts, reporting the highest sleepiness levels after 5 consecutive nights. Despite this, psychomotor performance and reaction times did not significantly differ. However, considerable reductions occurred in moral judgment, working memory, and interference test performance after serial night shifts.
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Multicenter Study
Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics and course of acute heart failure and cardiogenic shock diagnosed in emergency departments.
To describe the characteristics of patients diagnosed with acute heart failure (AHF) in emergency departments (EDs) who develop cardiogenic shock (CS) not associated with ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome (STACS). ⋯ CS occurring outside a context of STACS is uncommon in ED patients with AHF and is related to poorer functional class. More of these patients have valve disease, hyponatremia, and non-STACS as a precipitant. Nearly 40% die in hospital. Almost a third die in the ED.
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Meta Analysis
Lidocaine patch for treatment of acute localized pain in the emergency department: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Lidocaine patches are commonly prescribed for acute localized pain. Most of the existing evidence is, however, derived from postoperative or chronic pain. The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of lidocaine patch compared to placebo patch or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for acute localized pain. ⋯ The risk of adverse events was similar between the groups (risk ratio: 0.90; 95% CI: 0.48-1.67; moderate-quality evidence). In the two trials comparing lidocaine patches with NSAIDs, there was no statistically significant difference in pain relief between the treatments. Low to moderate-quality evidence from small trials supports the efficacy and safety of lidocaine patch for the treatment of acute localized pain.
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The COVID-19 pandemic was managed in part by the rapid development of vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics including antiviral agents and advances in emergency airway and ventilatory management. The impact of these therapeutic advances on clinically pertinent metrics of emergency care have not been well-studied. ⋯ Operational and clinical outcomes of ED-based treatment of individuals with COVID-19 improved in the first two years of the pandemic. This improvement is likely multifactorial and includes the development and deployment of SARS-CoV-2-specific vaccines, therapeutic agents, and improved healthcare delivery in the ED and elsewhere addressing management of airway and ventilatory status, as well as increased innate immunity in the general population.
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Multicenter Study
Describing resident physician productivity in a Canadian academic emergency department.
This cohort study aimed to investigate resident physician productivity in an academic emergency department (ED) and assess the impact of longitudinal coaching relationships known as clinical coaching teams and co-learners (medical students) on resident productivity. ⋯ This study is the first of its kind to describe resident physician productivity in a Canadian emergency department. The results of this study demonstrate that resident physician productivity improves with seniority, and that co-learners and clinical coaching teams do not significantly impact productivity. This information will be useful to program directors and residents to help set realistic expectations around productivity and to ED physician leads in planning service delivery for patients in the context of a training program.