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If ED physicians and nurses could choose only one strategy for avoiding lawsuits, it should be to keep patient satisfaction levels high, say several experts interviewed by ED Management.
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Several EDs have introduced physician scribes to free up doctors to spend more time with their patients, but most of those departments use paper charting. At Tri-City Medical Center in Oceanside, CA, physician scribes work within the context of an electronic medical record (EMR).
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With a vaccine shortage projected for novel H1N1 influenza A, only the highest priority groups are likely to be offered the shot when initial lots are cleared for distribution this fall.
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The Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) course for doctors was introduced in Nebraska in 1978 and given nationally for the first time in 1980 by the American College of Surgeons. The goal of ATLS is to serve as a safe and reliable method for managing patients with traumatic injury and provide a "common baseline for the continued innovation and challenge of existing paradigms in trauma care."
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Remember the principle of homeostasis from first-year physiology the idea that the human body has self-regulating processes to maintain a desirable internal state? What were we taught to do when disease disrupted the self-regulating processes, and physiologic parameters were abnormal? Use medical treatments to restore them to normal values. Well, now we know that this may not be the best way to enhance survival.
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The introduction of telemedicine in the ICU dates to the 1980s when Grundy and colleagues reported results of an 18-month trial using interactive television to provide consultation between university-based critical care physicians and a small (7-bed) inner city ICU with no intensivist of its own.
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After randomized controlled trials demonstrated the benefit of daily sedation and analgesia vacations in critically ill patients, sedation and analgesia practices in many centers changed, such that patients are now maintained at a lighter depth of sedation.
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After identifying the first 2 cases of novel influenza (H1N1) infection in the United States in mid-April 2009, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provided interim recommendations to reduce the risk of transmission in health care settings.
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Nassar and colleagues at the University of São Paulo in Brazil investigated the incidence, associations, and outcomes of constipation among all patients admitted to their 14-bed surgical ICU during a 6-month period.