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  • Herbal Medications and Surgery: How Much Do Patients Tell Us?

    Herbal medication use is quite common among surgical patients. This pattern is consistent with the recent substantial increase in the use of alternative medical therapies.
  • Full September issue in PDF

  • A Widespread Outbreak of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis O:3 Infection from Iceberg Lettuce

    An outbreak of food poisoning by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis in Finland in October/November 1998 involved 46 cases and was traced to locally grown iceberg lettuce.
  • More Antibiotic Resistance — Now Syphilis

    Azithromycin therapy failed in a patient in San Francisco with a primary syphilitic chancre which subsequently resolved after administration of a single dose of benzathine penicillin. Sequencing of the 23S rRNA genes of Treponema pallidum from 2 San Francisco patients who had failed azithromycin therapy revealed the presence of a mutation identical to that previously associated with macrolide resistance in a single isolate (T. pallidum, Street 14 strain).
  • Journal Reviews

    Hsu J, Reed M, Brand R, et al. Cost sharing: Patient knowledge and effects on seeking emergency department care. Med Care 2004; 42:290-296. Saketkhoo DD, Bhargavan M, Sunshine JH, et al. Emergency department image interpretation services at private community hospitals. Radiology 2004; 231:190-197. Lyons MS, Lindsell CJ, Trott AT. Emergency department pelvic examination and Pap testing: Addressing patient misperceptions. Acad Emerg Med 2004; 11:405-408.
  • Mental illness taxing EDs, affecting other patients

    If it seems youre seeing more patients with mental illnesses recently, youre not imagining it. The number of people with mental illness seeking care in the ED has surged recently, and the increase is taking a toll on other ED care, says J. Brian Hancock, MD, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) in Irving, TX.
  • Radiology’s point of view: Work with us on CT scans

    When working with your radiology department to reduce the time it takes to get abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans for emergency patients, be sure to look at the issue from their perspective, suggests the nations leading radiologist.
  • Timing and diplomacy are keys to CT scans in the emergency department

    Your ED is overflowing with patients, the wait time is heading toward double-digit hours, and youre short-staffed again. So when you walk by an exam room and see a patient sitting there sipping contrast fluid the same contrast he was drinking an hour ago your blood pressure goes through the roof.
  • Full June 1, 2004 Issue in PDF

  • EMTALA Q&A

    Question: I know EMTALA signs are to be placed in registration areas, EDs, and public entrances. Right now we have signs in each of our four ED rooms, in the front hospital entrance, and the registration area. But I need to know if I should hang a sign in our back entrance leading to the ED. This entrance is not considered a public entrance, so do I need to put a sign there?