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Full-Text Articles in Emergency Medicine

The Impact Of A Large-Scale Power Outage On Hemodialysis Center Operations, Mahshid Abir, Sophia Jan, Lindsay Jubelt, Raina M. Merchant, Nicole Lurie Dec 2013

The Impact Of A Large-Scale Power Outage On Hemodialysis Center Operations, Mahshid Abir, Sophia Jan, Lindsay Jubelt, Raina M. Merchant, Nicole Lurie

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

INTRODUCTION:

On June 29, 2012, mid-Atlantic storms resulted in a large-scale power outage affecting up to three million people across multiple (US) states. Hemodialysis centers are dependent on electricity to provide dialysis care to end-stage renal disease patients. The objective of thisstudy was to determine how the power outage impacted operations in a sample of hemodialysis centers in the impacted regions.

METHODS:

The sample consisted of all hemodialysis centers located in the District of Columbia and a total of five counties with the largest power losses in West Virginia, Virginia, and Maryland. A semi-structured interview guide was developed, and …


Depression Is Associated With Repeat Emergency Department Visits In Patients With Non-Specific Abdominal Pain, Andrew C. Meltzer, Benjamin Bregman, Janice Blanchard Nov 2013

Depression Is Associated With Repeat Emergency Department Visits In Patients With Non-Specific Abdominal Pain, Andrew C. Meltzer, Benjamin Bregman, Janice Blanchard

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: Patients with abdominal pain often return multiple times despite no definitive diagnosis. Our objective was to determine if repeat emergency department (ED) use among patients with non-specific abdominal pain might be associated with a diagnosis of moderate to severe depressive disorder.

Methods: We screened 987 ED patients for major depression during weekday daytime hours from June 2011 through November 2011 using a validated depression screening tool, the PHQ-9. Each subject was classified as either no depression, mild depression or moderate/ severe depression based on the screening tool. Within this group, we identified 83 patients with non-specific abdominal pain by …


Creation And Implementation Of An Emergency Medicine Education And Training Program In Turkey: An Effective Educational Intervention To Address The Practitioner Gap, Jennifer Whitfield Bellows, Katherine A. Douglass, Atilla Ridvan, Jeffrey Smith, G. Bobby Kapur Jul 2013

Creation And Implementation Of An Emergency Medicine Education And Training Program In Turkey: An Effective Educational Intervention To Address The Practitioner Gap, Jennifer Whitfield Bellows, Katherine A. Douglass, Atilla Ridvan, Jeffrey Smith, G. Bobby Kapur

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Background

The specialty of Emergency Medicine has enjoyed recognition for nearly 20 years in Turkey. However, the majority of underserved and rural Turkish emergency departments are staffed by general practitioners who lack formal training in the specialty and have few opportunities to increase emergency medicine-specific knowledge and skills.

Methods

To address this “practitioner gap,” the authors developed a four-phase comprehensive emergency medicine education and training program for general practitioners practicing in government hospitals in Turkey.

Results

From April 2006 until June 2009, 42 courses were taught by 62 trainers across seven regions in Turkey. A total of 2,262 physicians were …


National Estimates Of Emergency Department Visits For Pediatric Severe Sepsis In The United States, Sara Singhal, Mathias W. Allen, John-Ryan Mcannally, Kenneth S. Smith, John P. Donnelly, Henry E. Wang May 2013

National Estimates Of Emergency Department Visits For Pediatric Severe Sepsis In The United States, Sara Singhal, Mathias W. Allen, John-Ryan Mcannally, Kenneth S. Smith, John P. Donnelly, Henry E. Wang

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Objective. We sought to determine the characteristics of children presenting to United States (US) Emergency Departments (ED) with severe sepsis.

Study design. Cross-sectional analysis using data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS). Using triage vital signs and ED diagnoses (defined by the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes), we identified children(triage fever or ICD-9 infection) and organ dysfunction (triage hypotension or ICD-9 organ dysfunction).

Results. Of 28.2 million pediatric patients presenting to US EDs each year, severe sepsis was present in 95,055 (0.34%; 95% CI: 0.29-0.39%). Fever and respiratory infection were the most common indicators of …


A Risk Score For Identifying Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus In Patients Presenting To The Hospital With Pneumonia., Andrew F. Shorr, Daniela E. Myers, David B. Huang, Brian H. Nathanson, Matthew F. Emons, Marin H. Kollef May 2013

A Risk Score For Identifying Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus In Patients Presenting To The Hospital With Pneumonia., Andrew F. Shorr, Daniela E. Myers, David B. Huang, Brian H. Nathanson, Matthew F. Emons, Marin H. Kollef

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Background

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) represents an important pathogen in healthcare-associated pneumonia (HCAP). The concept of HCAP, though, may not perform well as a screening test for MRSA and can lead to overuse of antibiotics. We developed a risk score to identify patients presenting to the hospital with pneumonia unlikely to have MRSA.

Methods

We identified patients admitted with pneumonia (Apr 2005 – Mar 2009) at 62 hospitals in the US. We only included patients with lab evidence of bacterial infection (e.g., positive respiratory secretions, blood, or pleural cultures or urinary antigen testing). We determined variables independently associated with the …


Rapid 13(C) Urea Breath Test To Identify Helicobacter Pylori Infection In Emergency Department Patients With Upper Abdominal Pain, Andrew C. Meltzer, Rebecca Pierce, Derek A.T. Cummings, Jesse M. Pines, Larissa May, Meaghan A. Smith, Joseph Marcotte, Melissa L. Mccarthy May 2013

Rapid 13(C) Urea Breath Test To Identify Helicobacter Pylori Infection In Emergency Department Patients With Upper Abdominal Pain, Andrew C. Meltzer, Rebecca Pierce, Derek A.T. Cummings, Jesse M. Pines, Larissa May, Meaghan A. Smith, Joseph Marcotte, Melissa L. Mccarthy

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: In emergency department (ED) patients with upper abdominal pain, management includes ruling out serious diseases and providing symptomatic relief. One of the major causes of upper abdominal pain is an ulcer caused by Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), which can be treated and cured with antibiotics. We sought to estimate the prevalence of H. pylori infection in symptomatic patients using a convenience sample at a single urban academic ED and demonstrate the feasibility of ED-based testing.

Methods: We prospectively enrolled patients with a chief complaint of pain or discomfort in the upper abdomen for 1 year from February …


Patient-Driven Resource Planning Of A Health Care Facility Evacuation, Bruno P. Petinaux, Kabir Yadav Apr 2013

Patient-Driven Resource Planning Of A Health Care Facility Evacuation, Bruno P. Petinaux, Kabir Yadav

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: The evacuation of a health care facility is a complex undertaking, especially if done in an immediate fashion, ie, within minutes. Patient factors, such as continuous medical care needs, mobility, and comprehension, will affect the efficiency of the evacuation and translate into evacuation resource needs. Prior evacuation resource estimates are 30 years old.

Methods: Utilizing a cross-sectional survey of charge nurses of the clinical units in an urban, academic, adult trauma health care facility (HCF), the evacuation needs of hospitalized patients were assessed periodically over a two-year period.

Results: Survey data were collected on 2,050 patients. Units with patients …


Prevalence And Risk Factor Analysis Of Resistant Escherichia Coli Urinary Tract Infections In The Emergency Department, Abby M. Bailey, Kyle A. Weant, Stephanie N. Baker Apr 2013

Prevalence And Risk Factor Analysis Of Resistant Escherichia Coli Urinary Tract Infections In The Emergency Department, Abby M. Bailey, Kyle A. Weant, Stephanie N. Baker

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a frequent uropathogen in urinary tract infections (UTI). Widespread resistance to sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim (SMX-TMP) and increasing resistance to fluoroquinolones amongst these isolates has been recognized. There are limited data demonstrating risk factors for resistance to both SMX-TMP and fluoroquinolones.

OBJECTIVE: This study was conducted to assess for the prevalence of community resistance amongst E. coli isolates to SMX-TMP and levofloxacin in ambulatory patients discharged from the emergency department (ED).

METHODS: Adults presenting for evaluation and discharged from the ED with a diagnosis of an E. coli UTI were retrospectively reviewed. Utilizing demographic and clinical data …


Pathogen-Specific Risk Of Chronic Gastrointestinal Disorders Following Bacterial Causes Of Foodborne Illness, Chad K. Porter, Daniel Choi, Brooks Cash, Mark Pimentel, Joseph Murray, Larissa May, Mark S. Riddle Mar 2013

Pathogen-Specific Risk Of Chronic Gastrointestinal Disorders Following Bacterial Causes Of Foodborne Illness, Chad K. Porter, Daniel Choi, Brooks Cash, Mark Pimentel, Joseph Murray, Larissa May, Mark S. Riddle

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Background

The US CDC estimates over 2 million foodborne illnesses are annually caused by 4 major enteropathogens: non-typhoid Salmonella spp., Campylobacter spp., Shigella spp. and Yersinia enterocoltica. While data suggest a number of costly and morbid chronic sequelae associated with these infections, pathogen-specific risk estimates are lacking. We utilized a US Department of Defense medical encounter database to evaluate the risk of several gastrointestinal disorders following select foodborne infections.

Methods

We identified subjects with acute gastroenteritis between 1998 to 2009 attributed to Salmonella(nontyphoidal) spp., Shigella spp., Campylobacter spp. or Yersinia enterocolitica and matched each with up to 4 …


Broadening Access To Medical Care During A Severe Influenza Pandemic: The Cdc Nurse Triage Line Project., Lisa M. Koonin, Dan Hanfling Mar 2013

Broadening Access To Medical Care During A Severe Influenza Pandemic: The Cdc Nurse Triage Line Project., Lisa M. Koonin, Dan Hanfling

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

The impact of a severe influenza pandemic could be overwhelming to hospital emergency departments, clinics, and medical offices if large numbers of ill people were to simultaneously seek care. While current planning guidance to reduce surge on hospitals and other medical facilities during a pandemic largely focuses on improving the “supply” of medical care services, attention on reducing “demand” for such services is needed by better matching patient needs with alternative types and sites of care. Based on lessons learned during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and its partners are currently exploring the acceptability …


Asynchronous Web-Based Learning, A Practical Method To Enhance Teaching In Emergency Medicine, Ali Pourmand, Raymond Lucas, Mehdi Nouraie Mar 2013

Asynchronous Web-Based Learning, A Practical Method To Enhance Teaching In Emergency Medicine, Ali Pourmand, Raymond Lucas, Mehdi Nouraie

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Objective: To compare medical knowledge acquisition among emergency medicine (EM) residents who attend weekly core content lectures with those absent but asynchronously viewing the same lectures in a Web-based electronic platform.

Subjects and Methods: During the study period all EM residents attending or absent from weekly educational conferences were given a quiz on the covered material. During Phase 1, absentees were not given supplemental educational content for missed lectures. During Phase 2, absentees were sent a link to an online multimedia module containing an audiovisual recording of the actual missed lecture with presentation slides. Scores between attendees and absentees during …


Bedside Teaching On Time To Disposition Improves Length Of Stay For Critically-Ill Emergency Departments Patients, Ali Pourmand, Raymond Lucas, Jesse M. Pines, Hamid Shokoohi, Kabir Yadav Mar 2013

Bedside Teaching On Time To Disposition Improves Length Of Stay For Critically-Ill Emergency Departments Patients, Ali Pourmand, Raymond Lucas, Jesse M. Pines, Hamid Shokoohi, Kabir Yadav

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: We tested the effect of a brief disposition process intervention on residents’ time to disposition and emergency department (ED) length of stay (LOS) in high acuity ED patients.

Methods: This was a quasi-experimental study design in a single teaching hospital where ED residents are responsible for administrative bed requests for patients. Enrollment was performed for intervention and control groups on an even-odd day schedule. Inclusion criteria were ED patients triaged as Emergency Severity Index (ESI) 1 and 2. In the intervention group, the attending physician prompted the resident to make the disposition immediately after the evaluation of resuscitation patients. …


Reducing Ambulance Diversion At Hospital And Regional Levels: Systematic Review Of Insights From Simulation Models, M. Kit Delgado, Lesley J. Meng, Mary P. Mercer, Jesse M. Pines, Douglas K. Owens, Gregory S. Zaric Mar 2013

Reducing Ambulance Diversion At Hospital And Regional Levels: Systematic Review Of Insights From Simulation Models, M. Kit Delgado, Lesley J. Meng, Mary P. Mercer, Jesse M. Pines, Douglas K. Owens, Gregory S. Zaric

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: Optimal solutions for reducing diversion without worsening emergency department (ED) crowding are unclear. We performed a systematic review of published simulation studies to identify: 1) the tradeoff between ambulance diversion and ED wait times; 2) the predicted impact of patient flow interventions on reducing diversion; and 3) the optimal regional strategy for reducing diversion.

Methods: Data Sources: Systematic review of articles using MEDLINE, Inspec, Scopus. Additional studies identified through bibliography review, Google Scholar, and scientific conference proceedings. Study Selection: Only simulations modeling ambulance diversion as a result of ED crowding or inpatient capacity problems were included. Data extraction: Independent …


The Treatment Of Cutaneous Abscesses: Comparison Of Emergency Medicine Providers' Practice Patterns, Gillian Schmitz, Tress Goodwin, Adam Singer, Chad S. Kessler, David Bruner, Hollyn Larabee, Larissa S. May, Samuel D. Luber, Justin Williams, Rahul Bhat Feb 2013

The Treatment Of Cutaneous Abscesses: Comparison Of Emergency Medicine Providers' Practice Patterns, Gillian Schmitz, Tress Goodwin, Adam Singer, Chad S. Kessler, David Bruner, Hollyn Larabee, Larissa S. May, Samuel D. Luber, Justin Williams, Rahul Bhat

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

INTRODUCTION:

Cutaneous abscesses are commonly treated in the emergency department (ED). Although incision and drainage (I&D) remains the standard treatment, there is little high-quality evidence to support additional interventions such as pain control, type of incision, and use of irrigation, wound cultures, and packing. Although guidelines exist to support clinician management of abscesses, they do not clearly specify these additional interventions. This study sought to describe the ED treatments administered to adults with uncomplicated superficial cutaneous abscesses, defined as purulent lesions requiring incision and drainage that could be managed in an ED or outpatient setting.

METHODS:

Four hundred and seventy-four …


Perceptions Of Emergency Department Crowding In The Commonwealth Of Pennsylvania, Jesse M. Pines, Joshua A. Isserman, John J. Kelly Feb 2013

Perceptions Of Emergency Department Crowding In The Commonwealth Of Pennsylvania, Jesse M. Pines, Joshua A. Isserman, John J. Kelly

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: The state of emergency department (ED) crowding in Pennsylvania has not previously been reported.

Methods: We assessed perceptions of ED crowding by surveying medical directors/chairs from Pennsylvania EDs in the spring of 2008.

Results: A total of 106 completed the questionnaire (68% response rate). A total of 83% (86/104) agreed that ED crowding was a problem; 26% (27/105) reported that at least half of admitted patients boarded for more than 4 hours. Ninety-eight percent (102/104) agreed that patient satisfaction suffers during crowding and 79% (84/106) stated that quality suffers. Sixty-five percent (68/105) reported that crowding had worsened during the …


False Passage To The Trachea After Emergency Intubation In A Victim Of Near Hanging, Ali Pourmand, Hamid A. Shokoohi Jan 2013

False Passage To The Trachea After Emergency Intubation In A Victim Of Near Hanging, Ali Pourmand, Hamid A. Shokoohi

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Emergency medicine physicians should have enough knowledge and experience to deal with emergent and traumatic difficult airway. In this paper, we present a case of near hanging with neck soft tissue injury, tracheal and esophageal rupture that is complicated by a displaced intubation and false passage to the trachea.


Tension Pneumothorax, Pneumoperitoneum, And Cervical Emphysema Following A Diagnostic Colonoscopy, Ali Pourmand, Hamid A. Shokoohi Jan 2013

Tension Pneumothorax, Pneumoperitoneum, And Cervical Emphysema Following A Diagnostic Colonoscopy, Ali Pourmand, Hamid A. Shokoohi

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Colonoscopy is currently a widespread procedure used in screening for colorectal cancer. Iatrogenic colonic perforation during colonoscopy is a serious and potentially life-threatening complication that can cause significant morbidity and mortality. “Triple pneumo” (a combination of pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, and pneumoperitoneum) following colonoscopy is a rare but a serious condition requiring immediate diagnosis and emergent intervention. In majority of these cases a colonic perforation is the initial injury that is followed by pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum through the potential anatomical connection with retroperitoneal and mediastinal spaces. In this rare case report we are presenting a case of “triple pneumo” with no evidence …


Impacts Of Social Networking Sites On Patient Care In The Emergency Department, Anne Bennett, Ali Pourmand, Robert Shesser, Jesus Sanchez, Joseph Joyce Jan 2013

Impacts Of Social Networking Sites On Patient Care In The Emergency Department, Anne Bennett, Ali Pourmand, Robert Shesser, Jesus Sanchez, Joseph Joyce

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

The use of Facebook is ubiquitous among both patients and physicians. Often Facebook intrudes into medical practice, thereby highlighting its potential to be either a positive or negative factor in a patient's medical care. Despite being a “hot topic” in the medical literature, very few real world examples exist of physicians actually using information obtained from Facebook to reach a diagnosis or otherwise affect patient care. We present a case involving a 13-year-old girl who posted photographs and captions on Facebook demonstrating suicidal ideation. The patient's parents were alerted to the girl's statements in her Facebook profile and brought her …


A Syndromic Approach To Emergency Department Surveillance For Skin And Soft Tissue Infections, Larissa S. May, Marcus Rennick, Leah Gustafson, Julia Gunn Jan 2013

A Syndromic Approach To Emergency Department Surveillance For Skin And Soft Tissue Infections, Larissa S. May, Marcus Rennick, Leah Gustafson, Julia Gunn

Emergency Medicine Faculty Publications

Objective

We sought to describe the epidemiology of emergency department (ED) visits for skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) in an urban area with diverse neighborhood populations using syndromic surveillance system data for the time period from 2007–2011. Our aims were threefold: to demonstrate a proof of concept using syndromic surveillance for SSTI surveillance in the absence of laboratory data, to estimate the burden of ED visits associated with SSTI, and to determine potential geographic “hotspots” for these infections.

Introduction

The incidence of and hospitalizations for SSTI have steadily increased over the last decade in the United States, primarily due …