Here is a quick look at two articles published in the November issue of Annals of Emergency Medicine. Visit www.annemergmed.com to read the full text.
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ACEP News: Vol 29 – No 11 – November 2010Safety of Assessment for Patients With Potential Ischemic Chest Pain in an Emergency Department Waiting Room: A Prospective Comparative Cohort Study
By F Scheuermeyer, et al.
Editor’s Capsule Summary
- What is already known on this topic: Crowding can lead to delays in the evaluation and management of patients.
- What question this study addressed: Can selected emergency department (ED) patients complaining of chest pain safely receive some or all of their care in the waiting room?
- What this study adds to our knowledge: There were no missed cases of acute coronary syndrome and no important complications in the 303 patients triaged to the waiting room.
- How this is relevant to clinical practice: This study suggests that with careful triage and prompt physician assessment, waiting room management might be an adequate, albeit not optimal, means of managing low-risk chest pain patients when there are no monitored beds available in the emergency department.
- Research we would like to see: Replication of this study with a larger number of subjects at multiple sites will be needed to establish exactly how safe this strategy is.
Infection and Natural History of Emergency Department–Placed Central Venous Catheters
By C LeMaster, et al.
Editor’s Capsule Summary
- What is already known on this topic: There is a perception that central lines placed while the patient is in the ED are more prone to infection, but little data exist.
- What question this study addressed: Billing and infection control data were used to estimate the infection rate of central lines placed in the ED at a busy urban teaching hospital over 2 years.
- What this study adds to our knowledge: The 656 lines placed in the ED were typically left in for 4-5 days. The infection rate was 1.9/1000, similar to that reported for central lines in other ICU case series.
- How this is relevant to clinical practice: These data do not support the practice of quickly changing central lines placed in the ED because of perceived infection risk.
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