Articles: emergency-services.
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The results of 163 patients (49 SWs, 85 GSWs, 29 blunt trauma) who had resuscitative thoracotomy in the emergency room (ERT) were reviewed to reassess the indications for the procedure. The Revised Trauma Score (RTS) of the patients ranged from 0 to 3 in 138, 4 to 8 in 21, and greater than 8 in four. No patient with blunt trauma survived. ⋯ Two of the five patients (40%) with extremity vascular injuries survived after ERT was successful in restoring a cardiac rhythm. These data suggest that in patients without vital signs, ERT "directed" at potential cardiac injury based on thoracic penetration is an important prognostic prerequisite for survival. Emergency room thoracotomy is not beneficial in blunt trauma and its role in penetrating abdominal injuries remains unproven.
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A disaster that produces a multitude of patients may severely stress a community's health-care system, from the EMS system to the hospitals. Physicians involved in such an event must realize that they will have to change their normal mode of delivering care, having to make decisions with less than the normal amount of information, and doing the most good for the most salvageable patients. Some understanding of and appreciation for the unique problems that face emergency personnel in the field are important for physicians who do not normally interact with fire and EMS personnel, because it will allow them to realize that they are not alone in the chaos of a disaster. ⋯ Hospital physicians can do much to prepare themselves for these eventualities. Discussion and planning should be done among separate staffs (ICU, operating suite, emergency department), as well as among staff of the various disciplines so they can interact more effectively when a disaster occurs. Local disaster planners should receive input from hospital staffs so hospital capabilities are known and the field operation can mesh well with the hospital's operation.
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Emerg. Med. Clin. North Am. · Feb 1991
ReviewPsychological reaction to hospitalization and illness in the emergency department.
Each personality type presents with different methods of coping. Physicians should be aware of the impact on a patient's psychological functioning and ability to cope with illness and hospitalization, to understand and more effectively manage the patient. The physician must try to assess the patient's baseline personality from their past and present behavior. ⋯ The stress of medical illness and/or hospitalization can be overwhelming for some patients and is usually followed by some form of psychological response. Current understanding of the psychological impact of illness is based upon psychological defenses, coping mechanisms, and individual personality. It is the ability of the emergency physician to identify defenses, coping skills and personality types that will aid him or her in the medical management of the patients in their time of illness and hospitalization.
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Emergency physicians frequently face death, yet many are unprepared to deal with the family survivors of a patient who has died unexpectedly. Without the benefit of establishing prior rapport with the family, the emergency physician must anticipate the family's grief response so that he or she can intervene to avoid an unnecessarily prolonged or morbid grief reaction. ⋯ Certain key actions in the process of notifying survivors, viewing the body, concluding the emergency department visit, and following up after the patient's death help facilitate survivor grief in the least traumatic way possible. Emergency Departments can improve their dealing with death by instituting a team approach using doctors, nurses, social workers, and clergy to better support family members in their emergency department experience and to provide a link with community service organizations helpful to the family after they leave the hospital.
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Emerg. Med. Clin. North Am. · Feb 1991
ReviewEvaluation of behavioral and cognitive changes: the mental status examination.
Patients who present to the Emergency Department with a behavioral or cognitive disorder should be treated in an organized fashion. The most important element of their care is determining the etiology of their abnormality, whether organic or functional. ⋯ It must be focused and brief. By focusing on seven major areas (affect, attention, language, orientation, memory, visual-spatial ability, and conceptualization), a quick and thorough examination of the patient's mental status can be performed.