Articles: outcome.
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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Oct 2001
Parental coping and bereavement outcome after the death of a child in the pediatric intensive care unit.
Parental grief after the death of a child may be influenced by the chronicity of the child's illness, the quality of care provided, and the parents' ability to cope. Our objective is to identify aspects of pediatric intensive care and parental coping that have a favorable effect on parental bereavement outcome. ⋯ Parents' physical well-being enables more effective handling of early grief. Parents' understanding of their own self-worth and their child's illness determine long-term adaptation to loss. A caring emotional attitude displayed by pediatric intensive care unit staff has beneficial short-term and long-term effects on parental bereavement.
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We conducted a qualitative systematic review to evaluate the efficacy and safety of propofol for direct current cardioversion (DCC), rapid sequence intubation (RSI) and procedural sedation in adult emergency department (ED) patients. ⋯ The body of literature evaluating propofol for DCC and RSI in the ED is limited. There is evidence to support the use of propofol for DCC and RSI, but this evidence comes from stable patients in non-ED settings. Further ED-based randomized comparative trials should be conducted before propofol is adopted for widespread use in the ED.
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The last decade has witnessed a rapidly growing public and academic interest in medical error, an interest that has culminated in the emergence of the science of error prevention in health care. The impact of this new science will be felt in all areas of medicine but perhaps especially in emergency medicine (EM). The emergency department's unique operating characteristics make it a natural laboratory for the study of error. ⋯ Changes in societal attitudes will be an important component of the new culture of patient safety. A nationwide reporting system is proposed to disseminate error information expediently. Canadian EM providers are in a pivotal position to provide leadership to the Canadian health care system in this important area.
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Cauda equina syndrome (CES) is a feared complication of lumbar disc herniation. It is generally accepted that CES requires decompression within 6 hours of symptom onset, but this time goal is rarely met, and the relative benefit of delayed decompression on functional status and quality of life (QOL) remains unknown. The study objective was to describe the functional status and quality of life outcomes for patients who undergo delayed surgical decompression for CES. ⋯ Patients who undergo delayed decompression for CES have increased pain and impaired social and physical function. Longer delays correlate with worse functional outcomes. Beyond 24 hours, decompression delay may be associated with a poorer quality of life but, because of the rarity of CES, the sample size in this study was too small to provide definitive conclusions. Since no patients underwent surgery within 38.4 hours of symptoms, it is not possible to comment on the importance of emergent decompression in early presenters.
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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Oct 2001
Respiratory syncytial virus infections in the pediatric intensive care unit: clinical characteristics and risk factors for adverse outcomes.
To describe the clinical characteristics of infants admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection, including the prevalence of indications for RSV passive antibody prophylaxis (as currently recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics), and to identify risk factors that predict adverse outcomes among this population. ⋯ A minority of infants admitted to our PICU for severe RSV disease meet currently recommended indications for RSV passive antibody prophylaxis. Risk factors that predict prolonged durations of ventilation, PICU stay, or hospital stay among this population include congenital heart disease, chronic lung disease, upper airway abnormalities, and noncardiac congenital malformations.