article thumbnail

Speaking urgent care flow fluently

St. Emlyn

St.Emlyn's - Emergency Medicine #FOAMed Simplifying urgent care data translation is essential for hospital flow improvement. The post Speaking urgent care flow fluently appeared first on St.Emlyn's. This post provides a perspective on how to achieve this.

article thumbnail

Urgent care flow

Life in the Fast Lane

Stevan Bruijns Urgent care flow Speaking urgent care flow fluently - to highlight some important new ideas and provide a fresh perspective on old concepts.

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

A podcast for patients and families on deciding between the ED and Urgent Care

PEMBlog

It provides succinct recommendations on when to call 911, seek care in the Emergency Department or Urgent Care, when to ask the advice of your primary care provider, and even when virtual urgent care visits are appropriate. Listen today so you’re ready for anything that may happen tomorrow!

article thumbnail

2046 'Call before Convey - Delivering urgent care for patients in the right place with the right clinician, first time

Emergency Medicine Journal

Aims and Objectives Aim: Ensure patients have timely access to the right urgent care, in the right place with the right clinician. Many people access urgent care via the emergency department (ED) resulting in poor patient experience, delays to care and duplication, also causing overcrowding, leading to harm.

article thumbnail

Lactation – A brief guide for the emergency provider

EM Ottawa

You are seeing your next patient in urgent care, a 35-year-old female with a wrist injury who has been waiting for 6-hours. After sending her for an x-ray and offering pain control in the ED, she tells you she is 3-months post-partum and is currently nursing.

article thumbnail

Kings lower limb immobilisation VTE risk assessment tool (K4 score) in conservatively treated ambulatory patients: a 2-year review

Emergency Medicine Journal

Risk assessment is a mandatory field during electronic referral from the EDs or urgent care centres (UCCs) to the orthopaedic team. However, as the risk is low (0.6–2%), –2%), it is preferable to use a risk assessment tool to determine who should receive prophylaxis.

article thumbnail

Ocular POCUS and ICP elevation

Mount Sinai EM

She was seen in urgent care for these headaches two weeks ago, and was prescribed naproxen, which has not significantly improved her symptoms. Her headaches have been intermittent, however over the past few days she has had a few episodes of vomiting and brief episodes of blurred vision. Her headache is 8/10 currently.