Articles: emergency-department.
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Following standard syncope care, after exclusion of cardiac syncope, further workup is generally only recommended in cases of severe syncope due to consequential risk such that syncope is associated with injury or negative impacts on quality of life. This study is aimed to identify incidence and risk factors of severe syncope due to consequential risk, in a cohort of ED patients with non-cardiac syncope. ⋯ Syncope has a negative impact on a patient's life, through injuries or other personal consequences, in roughly one third of cases; to identity these patients, needing further investigation, emergency physicians should focus on episodes not preceded by prodromes, unwitnessed and with characteristic other than reflex syncope. Nonetheless, specific tools are needed to evaluate the impact of syncope on quality of life, to avoid clogging the path after ED discharge.
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Intravenous digoxin is still used in emergency departments (EDs) to treat patients with acute heart failure (AHF), especially in those with rapid atrial fibrillation. Nonetheless, many emergency physicians are reluctant to use intravenous digoxin in patients with advanced age, impaired renal function, and potassium disturbances due to its potential capacity to increase adverse outcomes. ⋯ The use of intravenous digoxin in the ED was not associated with significant changes in 30-day mortality, which was confirmed irrespective of patient age or the existence of renal dysfunction or serum potassium disturbances.
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Pediatric emergency care · Oct 2024
From Their Perspective: Pediatric Patients With Acute Mental Health Needs and Prolonged Emergency Department Stays.
The pediatric emergency department (PED) is experiencing a rising volume of patients with mental health concerns, leading to prolonged boarding times and delays in initiating active therapeutic plans. A paucity of research exists for the self-reported pediatric patient experience during such boarding. ⋯ Patients in mental health crisis boarding in the PED have already experienced stressful life events. By listening to the personal stories of this vulnerable population, the PED can improve care delivery and design a more therapeutic environment, especially as the need for acute mental health management continues to increase.