Emergency
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When Psychiatric Patient Comes to ED, Consider Entire Hospital’s Capabilities
An attorney who worked on the case provides detailed information about a recent record-breaking EMTALA settlement.
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Inspector General Sets Sights on ED Psychiatric Boarding Practices
Psychiatric patients are held routinely in EDs for hours, days, or even weeks due to lack of available facilities. Few would argue it’s a high-risk situation for the patient, EPs, and the hospital; yet, the dangerous practice continues.
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Non-prudent Limits on Patient Visits: Overcoming Barriers to Provide Necessary Care
Since EMTALA requires medical professionals to provide care to their patients, big insurance companies see no reason to provide payment for care they do not feel like covering. While some argue that on the surface this is their right to pay only for necessary services, the decision to retrospectively deny coverage is a fundamental assault on the rights of patients to seek emergency care and providers to bill for legitimate services rendered. Using the “retrospectoscope” to lecture patients and providers about care for serious health threats is a disservice to all medical professionals. It is unconscionable, immoral, illegal, and potentially unconstitutional.
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The Pediatric Airway and Rapid Sequence Intubation in Trauma
This article will discuss in detail the approach to the pediatric trauma patient, with a strict focus on the pediatric airway.
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Shocking Nurse Arrest Prompts Discussions About Working With Police Officers
Hospital workers and law enforcement officers often drill together, and they generally work cooperatively to ensure safety and security. Consequently, while disputes are not unheard of, the well-publicized arrest of a Utah nurse who refused to comply with a police detective’s request for a blood sample is a reminder that frontline providers must be well-versed in how to handle such requests.
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Detailed Preparation Helped Miami Hospital Staff Withstand Hurricane Irma
While Hurricane Harvey was submerging much of southeast Texas with flood waters, another monster storm was aiming for Florida, and hospitals there were preparing for what forecasters said would be a historic hurricane in terms of size and the potential for damage.
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Hurricane Harvey Pushed Southeast Texas Hospitals to the Limit
With several medical facilities in southeast Texas affected by the historic storm, Franklin, TN-based IASIS Healthcare pooled its resources, shuttled in relief staff from hospitals in other states, and found creative ways to reach hospitals surrounded by flood waters.
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Hemodynamic Monitoring Modalities in the Emergency Department
Hemodynamic monitoring is a very important component in effectively resuscitating critically ill patients. Various methods of hemodynamic monitoring not only give the physician an idea of the patient’s overall pathophysiology, but can alert the physician to acute changes.
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Joint Arthrocentesis in the Emergency Department
The ability to rapidly recognize infection, as well as distinguish inflammatory arthropathy from infection, crystal arthropathy, and osteoarthritis, makes arthrocentesis a valuable and sometimes essential emergency medicine procedure.
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Angiotensin II Raises Blood Pressure in Patients with Vasodilatory Shock
Infusion of recombinant angiotensin II improved blood pressure control in patients with vasodilatory shock already receiving conventional vasopressors.