article thumbnail

Communic8: Eight Universal Leadership Lessons from the Children’s Emergency Department

Don't Forget the Bubbles

The Childrens Emergency Department is a busy, challenging, and dynamic environment. Here are eight key leadership lessons inspired by real-life interactions and reflections from Paediatric Emergency Care 1. They involve a mixture of clinical, communication, and leadership traits. Use humour wisely and always gauge the context.

article thumbnail

Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Thoracentesis in the Emergency Department

Taming the SRU

Shortness of breath is one of the most common complaints presenting to emergency departments. A less common but more emergent scenario is the presentation of a patient to the emergency department with a large pleural effusion causing hypoxia and respiratory distress.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Transfers In: Direct Admit vs Send To The ED

The Trauma Pro

The practice at many centers is to bring all transfer patients in through the emergency department. Bringing Patients To Your Emergency Department Patients can be reassessed to see if they meet any of your trauma activation criteria. Access to certain critical services may be more rapid from the emergency department.

article thumbnail

A First Look at Emergency Department Data for 2022

ACEP Now

Software attacks crippled operations in large hospital chains, and physical assaults on ED staff continued unabated. The preliminary results of the 2022 Emergency Department Benchmarking Alliance performance measures survey found a significant deterioration in patient processing due to inpatient boarding. Maame Y, et al.

article thumbnail

Ethical Issues in Interhospital Transfers of Emergency Department Patients

ACEP Now

Emergency departments (EDs) provide the essential service of evaluating patients with unscheduled, acute, undifferentiated, and decompensated conditions. Conclusion/Recommendation ED crowding is a national patient safety issue driven by hospitals routinely operating over capacity. ED crowding impairs this mission. PloS one 13.8

article thumbnail

Re-Engineering Flow in an Academic Emergency Department

ACEP Now

In 1901, UVA opened its first hospital with 25 beds and three operating rooms. The emergency department (ED) at UVA was rebuilt in 2019 and the department had not fully optimized its operations when COVID-19 hit. She is a consultant with Quality Matters Consulting, and her expertise is in ED operations.

article thumbnail

Post-Tonsillectomy Hemorrhage: ReBaked Morsel

Pediatric EM Morsels

If bleeding, the only lab that is needed in the Emergency Department is a type and cross. If bleeding has completely stopped, most of these children still come into the hospital for observation so access will likely be necessary and helpful should patient have rebleed event. Well… sometimes it starts again.