Emergency Medicine - Adult and Pediatric
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How Can Emergency Physician Counter Patient’s Claim that Exam Was Rushed?
Documentation showing the patient appeared well before discharge can make or break a case.
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High Payouts Make Missed Meningitis Cases Very Appealing to Plaintiff Attorneys
Meningitis claims are likely to be settled, even if the EP’s care was entirely appropriate and well-documented because of the extremely high payouts associated with meningitis cases.
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Simple Actions Before Discharge Can Prevent Some ED Claims
Lack of specific personalized discharge instructions and no indication of the EP’s rationale complicated the defense of a recent malpractice claim involving a 38-year-old woman who presented to an ED with abdominal pain, nausea, and a fever that resolved in the ED.
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Unique Legal Risks Posed by ED “Bridge Orders”
The expectation of everyone involved should be that bridge orders are just that — a bridge to fill the gap from when the EP relinquishes care and the admitting physician actively assumes care.
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Court Rules on Standard of Care for Pediatric Patients in “General” EDs
Recent malpractice litigation involved an infant who died of complications of enterovirus infection after being discharged from an ED.
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Damage Control Resuscitation
MONOGRAPH: Exsanguinating hemorrhage is one of (if not the) most common preventable cause of death after trauma.
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Supraventricular Tachycardia: A Review for the Practicing Emergency Physician
Supraventricular tachycardias are a common category of dysrhythmia seen in the emergency setting.
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The Borderline Personality Disorder and Its Paradoxical Association with Pain
Borderline personality disorder is a striking personality dysfunction characterized by inherent difficulties with self-regulation as well as chronic self-destructive behavior.
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Spinal Trauma
Spinal trauma is relatively uncommon in children. However, spinal injuries should be considered in all children who have sustained head or neck trauma or multiple severe injuries. Upper cervical spine injury (C1-C4) is more common in children < 8 years of age.
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Neurologic Trauma
Head injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates there are more than 7000 pediatric deaths annually. In addition, nearly 40% of all trauma-related deaths in children are secondary to traumatic brain injury (TBI).