65 research outputs found

    Success Rate of Airway Management by Residents in a Pre-hospital Emergency Setting: a Retrospective Study

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    Abstract : Objective: : The objective of this retrospective study over a 5-year period was to assess the success rate of airway management by residents. Criteria of successful airway management were both the adherence to a standardized protocol of pre-hospital airway management and successful endotracheal intubation (ETI) in rescue missions. Methods: : The minimal level of training time required for residents rotating in the pre-hospital emergency team was either 1 year in our university department of anesthesiology, or 3 years of internal medicine including 20 ETIs under supervision in the operating room. According to a strict protocol detailing indications and drugs to be administered, residents performed rapidsequence intubation (RSI) except in cases of cardiopulmonary arrests where ETI was performed without drugs. Adherence to the protocol of airway management was evaluated according to data provided by the residents. Successful endotracheal tube placement was confirmed only in transported patients with a combination of clinical signs, infrared capnography, and a chest X-ray on hospital admission. Results: : A total of 13,537 rescue missions were reviewed. The protocol adherence was 96.1%. ETI was attempted in 753 patients, and successful placement was confirmed in 98.2%. Conclusion: : Pre-hospital airway management (protocol adherence and proper endotracheal tube placement) was successful overall in 94.3% of rescue missions. Our results support the efficacy of a pre-hospital emergency rescue system reinforced by resident

    DRINKING PATTERNS AMONG MEDICAL IN-PATIENTS WITH REFERENCE TO MAST CATEGORIES: A COMPARATIVE STUDY

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    The aim of the study was to describe the drinking patterns and alcohol consumption of patients screened by the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST) in a sample of medical patients from a general hospital of a French-speaking, wine-drinking country. Data were recorded using a structured interview administered to 103 consecutively admitted 20-75-year-old MAST-positive patients and 103 age-matched and sex-matched MAST-negative controls admitted to the same ward. Relevant differences between MAST-positive and MAST-negative patients included the frequent report of recent and total abstinence in MAST-positive patients (23% versus 4% in controls), their tendency to drink alone, and less often during mealtimes, at home, or with family or friends than MAST-negative patients. Alcohol consumption was significantly higher in MAST-positive patients of both sexes with 250 and 270 g per week being the optimal discriminative cut-off level of consumption for men and women, respectively (kappa coefficient, 0.70 and 0.81, respectively). Regular drinking was the predominant drinking status of both MAST-positive and MAST-negative patients. This study suggests that a screening test such as the MAST, developed in an English-speaking country may be useful in a French-speaking, wine-drinking country. The test identified patients with drinking patterns that are culturally abnormal, yet in certain respects similar to those of alcoholic patients from other drinking cultures. These findings therefore emphasize the worldwide relevance of the concept of the alcohol dependence syndrome in addition to the transcultural usefulness of alcoholism screening test

    Hospitalisations pour effet indésirable médicamenteux: recensement prospectif dans un Service d'urgences médicales.

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    [Table des matières] I. Mise en perspective et méthodologie. II. Données démographiques : intoxications volontaires: descriptif succinct. III. Effets indésirables, descriptifs. 1. Médicaments. 2. Effets indésirables. 3. Imputabilité. 4. Gravité. 5. Evitabilité. 6. Responsabilité de l'évitabilité. 7. Destination des patients à la sortie de l'hôpital. 8. Caractéristiques des patients. 9. Durée de séjour et coûts. 10. Durée d'hospitalisation. 11. Jours d'hospitalisation imputables et évitables. 12. Coût des hospitalisations. IV. Associations. 1. Effets indésirables et médicaments incriminés. 2. Nombre de médicaments consommés. 3. Profil clinique des patients. V. Validation

    Missed Opportunities: Evolution of Patients Leaving without Being Seen or against Medical Advice during a Six-Year Period in a Swiss Tertiary Hospital Emergency Department

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    Aim. The study aimed at describing the evolution over a 6-year period of patients leaving the emergency department (ED) before being seen ("left without being seen" or LWBS) or against medical advice ("left against medical advice" or LAMA) and at describing their characteristics. Methods. A retrospective database analysis of all adult patients who are admitted to the ED, between 2005 and 2010, and who left before being evaluated or against medical advice, in a tertiary university hospital. Results. During the study period, among the 307,716 patients who were registered in the ED, 1,157 LWBS (0.4%) and 1,853 LAMA (0.9%) patients were identified. These proportions remained stable over the period. The patients had an average age of 38.5 ± 15.9 years for LWBS and 41.9 ± 17.4 years for LAMA. The median time spent in the ED before leaving was 102.4 minutes for the LWBS patients and 226 minutes for LAMA patients. The most frequent reason for LAMA was related to the excessive length of stay. Conclusion. The rates of LWBS and LAMA patients were low and remained stable. The patients shared similar characteristics and reasons for leaving were largely related to the length of stay or waiting time

    Impact of medical practice guidelines on the assessment of patients with acute coronary syndrome without persistent ST segment elevation

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    Objective. To assess the impact of introducing clinical practice guidelines on acute coronary syndrome without persistent ST segment elevation (ACS) on patient initial assessment. Design. Prospective before-after evaluation over a 3-month period. Setting. The emergency ward of a tertiary teaching hospital. Patients. All consecutive patients with ACS evaluated in the emergency ward over the two 3-month periods. Intervention. Implementation of the practice guidelines, and the addition of a cardiology consultant to the emergency team. Main outcome measures. Diagnosis, electrocardiogram interpretation, and risk stratification after the initial evaluation. Results. The clinical characteristics of the 328 and 364 patients evaluated in the emergency ward for suspicion of ACS before and after guideline implementation were similar. Significantly more patients were classified as suffering from atypical chest pain (39.6% versus 47.0%; P = 0.006) after guideline implementation. Guidelines availability was associated with significantly more formal diagnoses (79.9% versus 92.9%; P < 0.0001) and risk stratification (53.7% versus 65.4%, P < 0.0001) at the end of initial assessment. Conclusion. Guidelines implementation, along with availability of a cardiology consultant in the emergency room had a positive impact on initial assessment of patients evaluated for suspicion of ACS. It led to increased confidence in diagnosis and stratification by risk, which are the first steps in initiating effective treatment for this common conditio

    Synthesis and Luminescence Modulation of Pyrazine-Based Gold(III) Pincer Complexes

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    The first examples of pyrazine-based gold(III) pincer complexes have been synthesized; their intense photoemissions can be modified by interactions with the non-coordinating pyrazine-N atom. Luminescence modulation is possible without the need for altering the ligand framework. Emissions shift from red (77 K) to blue (298 K) due to thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF

    Luminescent osmium(II) bi-1,2,3-triazol-4-yl complexes: photophysical characterisation and application in light-emitting electrochemical cells

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    The series of osmium(II) complexes [Os(bpy)3-n(btz)n][PF6]2 (bpy = 2,2’-bipyridyl, btz = 1,1’-dibenzyl-4,4’-bi-1,2,3-triazolyl, 1 n = 0, 2 n = 1, 3 n = 2, 4 n = 3), have been prepared and characterised. The progressive replacement of bpy by btz leads to blue-shifted UV-visible electronic absorption spectra, indicative of btz perturbation of the successively destabilised bpy-centred LUMO. For 4, a dramatic blue-shift relative to the absorption profile for 3 is observed, indicative of the much higher energy LUMO of the btz ligand over that of bpy, mirroring previously reported data on analogous ruthenium(II) complexes. Unlike the previously reported ruthenium systems, heteroleptic complexes 2 and 3 display intense emission in the far-red/near-infrared (λmax = 724 and 713 nm respectively in aerated acetonitrile at RT) as a consequence of higher lying, and hence less thermally accessible, 3MC states. This assertion is supported by ground state DFT calculations which show that the dσ* orbitals of 1 to 4 are destabilised by between 0.60 and 0.79 eV relative to their Ru(II) analogues. The homoleptic complex 4 appears to display extremely week room temperature emission, but on cooling to 77 K the complex exhibits highly intense blue emission with λmax 444 nm. As complexes 1 to 3 display room temperature luminescent emission and readily reversible Os(II)/(III) redox couples, light-emitting electrochemical cell (LEC) devices were fabricated. All LECs display electroluminescent emission in the deep-red/near-IR (λmax = 695 to 730 nm). Whilst devices based on 2 and 3 show inferior current density and luminance than LECs based on 1, the device utilising 3 shows the highest external quantum efficiency at 0.3 %
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