Articles: emergency-services.
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To assess the numbers of high-risk adult patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) who have not been vaccinated against influenza or pneumococcal disease and whether emergency physicians are willing or able to routinely provide vaccination. ⋯ Significant numbers of high-risk patients who are unimmunized against influenza and pneumococcal pneumonia present to the ED. There is hesitancy among ED physicians about assuming the primary care task of providing such immunizations. Any attempt to institute a large-scale vaccination program in an ED setting needs to be carefully planned in a way to involve primary care providers and to decrease ED physician concerns and reluctance.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Asthma audit: a multicentre pilot study.
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Ugeskrift for laeger · Jul 1994
[Did the distribution of trauma treatment by general practitioners and emergency departments in the county of Ringkøbing change after the introduction of the on-call coverage for general practitioners?].
The aim of the study was to investigate the changes in minor trauma treatment structure after a reduction in the number of general practitioners on call in a county, where minor trauma treatment is supposed to be carried out by general practitioners and only major trauma is supposed to be treated at the hospital Accident and Emergency Department. The design was a cross-sectional analysis of trauma treatment in Ringkøbing County before and after the reduction in the number of general practitioners on call. Over a four week period before and after the reduction in the number of general practitioners on call all trauma treatment at the Accident and Emergency Departments was registered together with trauma treatment by general practitioners. ⋯ Analysis showed that there was a minor reduction in the total number of trauma treatments after the reduction in the number of general practitioners on call was made. The percentage of patients that were treated at the Accident and Emergency Departments at hospital directly without being referred from general practitioners was reduced from 30% to 21%. The population's behaviour and attitude towards minor trauma was unchanged.
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Comparative Study
ED length-of-stay and illness severity in dizzy and chest-pain patients.
Emergency department (ED) length of stay, illness severity, and patterns of ED-based testing can be used to compare different ED patient populations. To assess the relative significance of ED patients with dizziness and chest pain in emergency medicine practice, the investigators formed a retrospective chart review of 3,864 adults (age > or = 16 years) seen at the University of North Carolina Hospitals' ED during May and June of 1991. Patients were eligible if they had any complaint of dizziness (n = 259), nontraumatic chest pain (n = 168), or both (n = 18). ⋯ Chest-pain patients were more likely to undergo electrocardiogram and x-ray testing, whereas dizzy patients more often received testing such as brain computed tomography scanning (10.8% v 3.6%, P = .01). ED patients with dizziness and chest pain were similar with regard to ED length of stay. Given their overall similarities to the chest-pain group, dizzy patients appear to represent a significant population of ED patients and may warrant more clinical study.