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1  for rapid replies to prevent and combat the emergency.
2 Aortic dissection (AD) is a life-threatening emergency.
3 esents a rare but life-threatening endocrine emergency.
4 sting platforms available in a public health emergency.
5 asing its potential to cause a public health emergency.
6                    The world faces a climate emergency.
7 ogether to address the ongoing public health emergency.
8 se trials are carried out in future epidemic emergencies.
9  posed by the ongoing extinction and climate emergencies.
10  emerging pathogens to prevent public health emergencies.
11  population to consider during public health emergencies.
12 s well as future epidemics and public health emergencies.
13 ifts in the region and two national state of emergency (2016 and 2019) in response to concerns for wi
14 neas with ECD > 1600/mm were also usable for emergency, 58% of ASM corneas were usable versus 33% in
15 recent hospitalizations, recent accident and emergency (A&E) attendances, recent antibiotic prescribi
16             Sensitivity for SMI recording in emergency admissions increased from 47.8% (95% CI 43.1-5
17 years, male to female ratio 1:2 and 75% were emergency admissions.
18  infant immunisation programme, alongside an emergency adolescent meningococcal ACWY (MenACWY) progra
19 turation, and cardiovascular collapse during emergency airway management.
20 sity and type 2 diabetes mellitus are global emergencies and long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are regula
21 ent engagement in primary HIV care to reduce emergency and inpatient care (e.g., care coordination).
22 rescriptions for patients receiving surgery, emergency, and dental care increased by 15.8% from 2010
23 l controls included chest CTs from oncology, emergency, and pneumonia-related indications.
24 e impact of SMI on nonpsychiatric inpatient, emergency, and primary care service use in adults.
25 ental illness (SMI) on the use of inpatient, emergency, and primary care services for nonpsychiatric
26 t diagnosis of diseases in prehospital care, emergency, and remote settings.
27 rically, acute appendicitis was treated with emergency appendectomy.
28                           Nontrauma surgical emergencies are an underappreciated public health crisis
29  in the United States; redefining where such emergencies are managed may improve outcomes.
30 ing the presidential declaration of national emergency because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
31 elines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care is based on the extensive
32 nsensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Rec
33 s on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Rec
34 October 2010, the American Heart Association/Emergency Cardiovascular Care updated cardiopulmonary re
35 mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, or emergency cardiovascular hospitalization); and 2) self-r
36 tion of catchments is important for planning emergency care delivery and in the use of hospital data
37            Over time, the delivery of timely emergency care has improved significantly among emergenc
38 ional Health Service is the sole provider of emergency care in Scotland.
39 ble to admission, readmission, ambulatory or emergency care; monthly spending 6 months before and fol
40                             No other similar emergency case and successful surgical intervention have
41 This enabled greater capacity for urgent and emergency cases, and a reduced length of stay was seen f
42 m and their hemodynamic instability prevents emergency catheter ablation.
43 be employed as a surveillance system for the emergency caused by SARS-CoV-2.
44 world is being challenged by a public health emergency caused by the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19).
45                       Snakebite is a medical emergency causing high mortality and morbidity in rural
46 e risk of life-threatening complications and emergency colectomy is particularly high among those pat
47 mulated routine conditions and public health emergency conditions (based on the 2013-16 west African
48 ment after intubating patient manikins under emergency conditions.
49 In metformin-treated patients admitted in an emergency context, a plasma metformin concentration grea
50 f a supply of the progestogen-only pill with emergency contraception from a community pharmacist, alo
51 ridging interim method of contraception with emergency contraception plus an invitation to a sexual a
52  with a spontaneous onset had lower rates of emergency CS (nulliparous: rho = -0.62) and higher rates
53                                Prelabour and emergency CS were positively correlated (nulliparous: rh
54                                   Both later emergency declaration (adjusted mortality rate ratio [aM
55                              Later statewide emergency declarations and school closure were associate
56                                              Emergency declarations and school closures were two earl
57  We tested the association between timing of emergency declarations and school closures with 28-day m
58 t social distancing following US state-level emergency declarations substantially varies by income.
59 ted States particularly hard with a state of emergency declared on March 13, 2020.
60 Human studies examining the effectiveness of emergency decontamination procedures have primarily focu
61 r respiratory tract specimens (n = 200) from emergency department (ED) and intensive care unit (ICU)
62 ngside aerobic blood cultures in a pediatric emergency department (ED) and sought to determine change
63 ncy Department Sample, the largest all-payer emergency department (ED) database, between 2013 and 201
64                                    Prolonged emergency department (ED) dwell time before admission to
65  and/or ARI symptoms were recruited from the emergency department (ED) or inpatient settings at Vande
66 on, and protein-carbonyls were measured from emergency department (ED) presentation vs discharge.
67                              Rates of direct emergency department (ED) referral were compared between
68  peptides provide prognostic information for emergency department (ED) syncope.
69 c sequelae (APNS) among participants seeking emergency department (ED) treatment in the aftermath of
70 age patterns on social media change prior to emergency department (ED) visits and inpatient hospital
71 d information exists regarding the burden of emergency department (ED) visits due to scabies in the U
72 ific PM and the rate of hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) visits for influenza or cultur
73 e gastroenteritis (AGE) hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) visits in 3 United States coun
74 s (AOR) for hospital admissions, procedures, emergency department (ED) visits, and outpatient clinic
75 art failure among patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with acute dyspnea is challeng
76 une parameters in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with an acute asthma exacerbat
77 d detections were classified into community, emergency department (ED), and hospital levels to estima
78  predicting surges of influenza cases in the emergency department (ED).
79 with COVID-19 at initial presentation to the emergency department (ED); outcomes of interest included
80 2 = 83%), and were more likely to attend the emergency department (pooled OR = 1.97, 95% CI 1.41-2.76
81 ed within 24 hours after presentation to the emergency department (study baseline).
82 ctice of caring for admitted patients in the emergency department after hospital admission, and board
83 for nonhealing peptic ulcer presented to the emergency department and reported a 1-month history of a
84 pectively collected data from two cohorts of emergency department and ward patients.
85 e this presentation, she had presented to an emergency department at another institution, where imagi
86 f of patients (42.1%-49.9%) were seen in the emergency department at least once.
87  Methods Imaging of patients admitted at the emergency department between February 17 and March 10, 2
88  the U.S. literature on (1) the frequency of emergency department boarding among the critically ill,
89                             A definition for emergency department boarding is proposed.
90                                              Emergency department boarding is the practice of caring
91                                              Emergency department boarding of critically ill patients
92 ed multiple mitigation strategies to address emergency department boarding of critically ill patients
93 Task Force to understand the implications of emergency department boarding of the critically ill.
94 ess the real-life performance of radiologist emergency department chest CT interpretation for diagnos
95 rategies developed to mitigate the impact of emergency department critical care boarding on patient o
96 ation for CVD was defined as an inpatient or emergency department discharge diagnosis of acute myocar
97 -year-old female patient was admitted to the Emergency Department due to complaints in the right ingu
98 reviewed brain CT studies requested from the emergency department during October and November 2018.
99  call; p < 0.001) and more frequently in the emergency department during the targeted temperature man
100 diation (CRT) frequently require acute care (emergency department evaluation or hospitalization).
101  nanophthalmos after first presenting to the emergency department for a frontal headache, eye pain, e
102 e persistent or recurrent convulsions in the emergency department for at least 5 min and no more than
103 phy angiography (CTA) was requested from the emergency department for suspected acute pulmonary embol
104 n (Sepsis-3) on timing of recognition in the emergency department has not been evaluated.
105 rs measured in blood samples collected in an emergency department immediately after trauma exposure w
106 xis as the primary diagnosis who visited the emergency department in our hospital from January 2015 t
107 tality from abdominal pain in an established emergency department of a tertiary hospital in Tanzania.
108    HistoryA 34-year-old man presented to the emergency department of our hospital for progressive sho
109 e syndrome-first a median of 26 minutes post-emergency department presentation (interquartile range,
110  significant difference in the likelihood of emergency department presentation for chest pain or hosp
111 rapies for CAD as well as clinical outcomes (emergency department presentation for chest pain, hospit
112            The primary outcome was time from emergency department presentation to meeting greater tha
113  appropriate antibiotics within 1 hour after emergency department presentation, each additional hour
114               Using data from the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample, the largest all-payer emerg
115 of home health (66% versus 73%, P=0.016) and emergency department services (13% versus 17%, P=0.034).
116 f inpatient rehabilitation, home health, and emergency department services.
117 ed on critically ill patients in the ICU and emergency department settings.
118     Most brain CT studies requested from the emergency department showed no findings that would modif
119                                    Also, all emergency department staff participated in a designated
120 aureus bacteremia admitted directly from the emergency department to the ICU from January 1, 2003, to
121 tal transfer, mechanical ventilation, and an emergency department triage score.
122 istically significantly associated with less emergency department use (9 trials [n = 2712]; 20% vs 24
123                        Among BPCI hospitals, emergency department use differentially increased for pa
124  Acute health care use (hospitalizations and emergency department use), disease-generic and disease-s
125 ce of severe psychiatric events (psychiatric emergency department visit, psychiatric hospitalization,
126  days (aOR = 1.36 [95% CI = 1.00-1.83]), and emergency department visits (aOR = 2.12 [95% CI =1.28-3.
127 nths (N=931) had significantly lower odds of emergency department visits (odds ratio=0.75, 95% CI=0.6
128 oad and the frequency of hospitalizations or emergency department visits among outpatients with coron
129 ignificant differences in hospitalization or emergency department visits at 30 days between groups.
130 os we estimated 10 times more avoided asthma emergency department visits in low-income neighborhoods
131 ons (HR, 1.71 [CI, 1.17 to 2.52]), 2 or more emergency department visits in the past 6 months (HR, 1.
132 measure scores of unplanned hospital visits (emergency department visits, observation stays, and unpl
133 id-19-related hospitalization or visit to an emergency department was 1.6% in the LY-CoV555 group and
134               Head CT scans performed in the emergency department were assessed for the presence of a
135             Patients commonly present to the Emergency Department with a corneal foreign body (FB).
136          A 33-year-old male presented to the emergency department with a history of blurred vision in
137    A 37-year-old patient was admitted to the emergency department with acute abdominal pain.
138 drop in the number of patients attending the emergency department with acute coronary syndromes and a
139 om March 14 to 24, 2020, 192 patients in the emergency department with symptoms suggestive of COVID-1
140 is study enrolled patients presenting to the emergency department with symptoms suggestive of MI.
141  disease requiring dialysis presented to the emergency department with tender swelling of her neck, w
142  disease requiring dialysis presented to the emergency department with tender swelling of her neck, w
143 ratio, 2.82; 95% CI, 2.46-3.23 compared with emergency department).
144         Overall, 28 (20%) were treated in an emergency department, 1 (<1%) was hospitalized; none die
145 approximately 60000 patients who visited the emergency department, 181 subjects (mean age, 43.0; 44%
146 received antibiotics at a community hospital emergency department, a pharmacist-led penicillin allerg
147 ed within 24 hours after presentation to the emergency department, and 85.9% within 48 hours.
148                        We used birth, death, emergency department, and hospitalization data from Cali
149 symptoms were recruited from the outpatient, emergency department, and inpatient settings at Vanderbi
150 ent of COVID-19 infection in patients in the emergency department, in particular in patients with sym
151 re immediately after trauma exposure, in the emergency department, may help identify individuals most
152       We estimate that the incidence rate of emergency department-attending sepsis and severe sepsis
153                                              Emergency department-based boarding of the critically il
154 al criteria for analysis and benchmarking of emergency department-based boarding overall, with subseq
155 arding of critically ill patients, including emergency department-based interventions, hospital-based
156 rventions, hospital-based interventions, and emergency department-based resuscitation care units.
157 es of critically ill patients boarded in the emergency department.
158 ergo allergy testing after discharge from an emergency department.
159 diagnosed with anaphylaxis upon visiting our emergency department.
160  than half of antibiotic use occurred in the emergency department/urgent care centers and outpatient
161  has led to surges of patients presenting to emergency departments (EDs) and potentially overwhelming
162      Some studies across Europe suggest that emergency departments (EDs) are used more, and different
163 ic testing for pulmonary embolism (PE) in US emergency departments (EDs), and no data have examined c
164 rial, we recruited patients from 58 hospital emergency departments across the USA.
165        Of 195,607 patients admitted to these emergency departments during two 3-month periods, a tota
166             In the high prevalence area, the emergency departments had the highest seroprevalence (29
167 rgency care has improved significantly among emergency departments participating in this telestroke n
168 Centres in the UK (all tertiary centres with emergency departments).
169 for confounders, especially in inpatient and emergency departments, where the treatment intensity is
170 ning patient flow in acute hospitals through emergency departments.
171 dies retained in the wound are often seen in emergency departments.
172 eted the survey; 72 (54%) patients underwent emergency digestive resection and in 99 (74%) patients u
173 itation care for suspected opioid-associated emergencies, drowning, and harm from CPR to victims not
174 eased the risk of incidents and catastrophic emergencies during the transportation of unconventional
175 e of birth was categorised as vaginal or CS (emergency/elective).
176                          He was subjected to emergency endovascular treatment.
177                                              Emergency esophageal resection was significantly associa
178  and other scenarios such as team sports and emergency evacuations.
179  To reduce the risk of delayed IH diagnosis, emergency explorative laparoscopy in patients with a sco
180 itation care for suspected opioid-associated emergencies, feedback for CPR quality, and analysis of r
181 aluate secular trends in the epidemiology of emergency general surgery (EGS), by analyzing changes in
182 ors involved in hypoxic response (Hif1a) and emergency granulopoiesis (Cebpb).
183 ubiquitin ligase required for termination of emergency granulopoiesis and leukemia suppressor functio
184 ased TRIAD1 activity, impairs termination of emergency granulopoiesis during the innate immune respon
185 ent with this, we found aberrantly sustained emergency granulopoiesis in a murine model of MLL1-rearr
186 enin signaling compromised activation of the emergency granulopoiesis program, which requires mainten
187                                Mortality and emergency hospital admission data were obtained through
188 inked to English national records for 45,706 emergency hospital admissions.
189 s perhaps the most significant public health emergency in a century.
190 DKA) is the most common acute hyperglycaemic emergency in people with diabetes mellitus.
191 he use of the rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine given as an emergency intervention to individuals exposed to a patie
192 t studies have shown that early recognition, emergency interventional treatment of acute ischemic str
193 ents are being treated on an expanded-access emergency investigational new drug basis.
194 e study cohort, burst abdomen occurred after emergency laparotomy (P = 0.664).
195 o December 2017 using data from the National Emergency Laparotomy Audit was performed.
196 dy including patients undergoing elective or emergency major gastrointestinal surgery from September
197                             The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) recommends elevating
198  Adrenaline is regularly used for first-line emergency management of anaphylaxis but little robust re
199 gion model offers great potential to support emergency managers, public officials, citizens, first re
200 t of Health and Human Services Public Health Emergency Medical Countermeasures Enterprise.
201 renced opioid overdose event (OOE) data from emergency medical service responders and 311 service req
202 d clinical trial at 20 trauma centers and 39 emergency medical services agencies in the US and Canada
203 c education, implementation of protocols for emergency medical services for streamlining clinical inv
204 itation, episode location, epinephrine dose, emergency medical services response time, and duration o
205 are are successfully coordinating community, emergency medical services, and hospital efforts to impr
206 nt medical offices, correctional facilities, emergency medical services, etc., with the highest propo
207 t events; after excluding pediatric arrests, emergency medical services-witnessed arrests, or arrests
208 among the general public and the response of emergency medical services.
209              There is wide variability among emergency medical systems (EMS) with respect to transpor
210                        Collaboration between emergency medicine and allergy departments may be helpfu
211  of experts in allergy and/or immunology and emergency medicine rated their level of agreement with t
212 for skin burn assessment in settings such as emergency medicine triage and low resource environments.
213 ogists and orthopedists; senior residents in emergency medicine, radiology, and orthopedics.
214 tion living more than 2 h from comprehensive emergency obstetric and surgical care.
215   1255 (6%) were referred to a comprehensive emergency obstetric care facility, of whom 864 (82%) acc
216 mplications and improved access to essential emergency obstetric care interventions.
217 clared the COVID-19 pandemic a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, more than 20 million
218 hreat that has been declared a public health emergency of international concern.
219 OVID-19 in Wuhan turned into a public health emergency of international concern.
220              Therefore, it is a radiological emergency of vital importance.
221 shold will nearly all patients undergoing an emergency operation realize the average mortality risk?
222 ioritized as emergency, urgent with imminent emergency or oncologically urgent, or elective-were matc
223  and routine referral pathways to urgent and emergency pathways that are associated with more advance
224 , when combined with the judgment of trained emergency personnel, would help to improve clinical outc
225 -up data to calculate outpatient, inpatient, emergency, pharmaceutical, dialysis, and total health ca
226 e was left to the discretion of the treating emergency physician (n = 303).
227 al Care Medicine and the American College of Emergency Physicians convened a Task Force to understand
228  better education for primary healthcare and emergency physicians.
229                               US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief through the US Centers fo
230   National Institutes of Health, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, Bill & Melinda Gates Fou
231                               US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.
232 e Health Access, Information and Services in Emergencies (RAISE) Initiative, Columbia University, hav
233  and reliable method for nowcasting the post-emergency recovery status of economic activities could h
234 ation in ways not feasible with conventional emergency rescue kits.
235 = 0.59); results were similar after extended emergency resection.
236                                 The national emergency response appears to have delayed the growth an
237 te provides critical guidance for government emergency response teams to conduct orderly rescue and r
238 ne platforms are being leveraged for a rapid emergency response(1).
239 onal security missions involving inspection, emergency response, or war-fighters.
240 rsity leaders were ill-suited to mounting an emergency response.
241 for the provision of public services and for emergency response.
242 al role in treating injuries during disaster emergency responses.
243  respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the emergency room (ER) is distinguishing between cardiac vs
244 ards to PPE, N95 masks were available in the emergency room (n = 40 [64.5%]), office (n = 35 [56.5%])
245     A 28-year-old man was transferred to our emergency room for dyspnea and wheals on the entire body
246                                              Emergency room visits (2.4% [n/N = 7/296] vs 33.5% [n/N
247 n (SBO) remains one of the leading causes of emergency room visits and is still associated with high
248 there were no differences in readmissions or emergency room visits at 30 or 90 days.
249 le with no relevant history presented to the Emergency Room with acute right flank pain.
250     We present a rare case presenting to our emergency room with the complaint of bloody vomiting, at
251 o a statewide database documenting hospital, emergency room, and ambulatory surgery visits and invest
252 multiple organ failure up on presentation to emergency room.
253         Per-sample transport costs under the emergency scenario were $24.06 (95% CI 21.14-28.20) for
254 while conducting embedded IR in the Rohingya emergency setting in Cox's Bazar, which may have implica
255 sed by 35% soon after the nation entered the emergency situation, but recovered rapidly during the pa
256               However, in a rapidly evolving emergency situation, poor sanitation, malnutrition, over
257 series; however, surgery may be necessary in emergency situations or if medical treatment fails to st
258  universal donor O-type blood is crucial for emergency situations where time or resources for typing
259 morbidities, transfer from outside hospital, emergency status, and higher ACS NSQIP predicted risk sc
260 rgency Surgery Risk (POTTER) tool in elderly emergency surgery (ES) patients.
261 rformance of the Predictive OpTimal Trees in Emergency Surgery Risk (POTTER) tool in elderly emergenc
262 using chest CT and RT-PCR before elective or emergency surgery under general anesthesia.
263 ure, inability to consent for themselves, or emergency surgery.
264 e of the virus in peritoneal fluid during an emergency surgical procedure in a COVID-19 sick patient.
265          QOL issues should not influence the emergency surgical strategy but deserve discussion befor
266 eaching predefined trigger criteria, Medical Emergency Teams (MET) should be notified and directed to
267 n first responders, and an enhanced role for emergency telecommunicators.
268 F presents an acute and global animal health emergency that has the potential to devastate entire nat
269 Stroke is a complex, time-sensitive, medical emergency that requires well functioning systems of care
270 bral haemorrhage (ICH) is a life-threatening emergency, the incidence of which has increased in part
271                                              Emergency therapy still relies on antibody-based antiven
272 cohorts of trauma survivors from two level 1 emergency trauma centers, which uses routinely collectib
273                                          The emergency treatment of DNS with combined plasmapheresis,
274 ities to speed up the diagnosis, triage, and emergency treatment of people with acute stroke symptoms
275  questions in some settings about the use of emergency treatments like resuscitation care for in-hosp
276 ission, 21.7% in ambulatory clinics, 3.2% in emergency units, and only 0.5% in urgent care units.
277 ymptoms admitted to the hospital for medical emergencies unrelated to COVID-19.
278   Colorectal cancer surgeries-prioritized as emergency, urgent with imminent emergency or oncological
279                              Veritor met FDA emergency use authorization (EUA) acceptance criteria fo
280  2.95%) using the Abbott RealTime SARS-CoV-2 Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) assay on the Abbott m2
281 e detection of SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acids have emergency use authorization (EUA) from the FDA.
282     While Food and Drug Administration (FDA) emergency use authorization (EUA) is required for clinic
283 under the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) pathway.
284 RS-CoV-2 molecular diagnostic assays granted emergency use authorization by the FDA using nasopharyng
285 19 drugs and vaccines that have been granted emergency use authorization by the U.S. Food and Drug Ad
286  as a promising therapy and has been granted Emergency Use Authorization by the US Food and Drug Admi
287 nscription-PCR (RT-PCR) assays have received Emergency Use Authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug
288 VID-19 clinical trials and recently received Emergency Use Authorization from the US Food and Drug Ad
289 s, exclusively the ones that were issued an "Emergency Use Authorization" from the U.S. Food and Drug
290 ed through U.S. Food and Drug Administration Emergency Use Authorization.
291              We discuss, among other topics, Emergency Use Authorizations for medical devices and pri
292 among 4 SARS-CoV-2 IgG assays authorized for emergency use, regardless of antigen target or assay for
293 or Disease Control and Prevention to use the Emergency Utilization Authorization to allow clinical an
294 ectiveness, and context (Asia versus Africa; emergency versus food-secure settings).
295                       Compared to office and emergency visits, UTIs were increasingly diagnosed in vi
296        Survival rates for nontrauma surgical emergencies were improved when operations were performed
297  The COVID-19 pandemic is a worldwide health emergency which calls for an unprecedented race for vacc
298  addiction has been declared a public health emergency, with fatal overdoses following relapse reachi
299  global pandemic is an ongoing public health emergency, with over 4 million confirmed cases worldwide
300      Acute appendicitis is a common surgical emergency worldwide.

 
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