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1 if development occurs during a public health emergency.
2  1981, and it quickly became a public health emergency.
3 eclaration of an international public health emergency.
4 wed after the declaration of a public health emergency.
5 rs reported in Brazil a global public health emergency.
6 ing of countermeasures in infectious disease emergencies.
7 e upon mortality from upper gastrointestinal emergencies.
8  environment during response to fire-related emergencies.
9 ation in response to metabolically demanding emergencies.
10 se including the development of the National Emergency Action Plan, improved partner coordination and
11  in patients presenting to EDs with possible emergency acute coronary syndrome.
12  70) of the excess mortality associated with emergency admission on Saturdays compared with Wednesday
13 tients from New York State with an urgent or emergency admission to the hospital for obstruction seco
14 and 6070 (5.1%) patients admitted as weekend emergency admissions died within 30 days (p<0.0001).
15              9347 individuals underwent 9707 emergency admissions on public holidays.
16                       We analysed unselected emergency admissions to four Oxford University National
17 15 and was declared a national public health emergency after local researchers and physicians reporte
18 involving human subjects after public health emergencies and disasters may pose ethical challenges.
19 to review protocols related to public health emergencies and disasters.
20 d the declaration of Zika as a public health emergency and designated the viral outbreak and related
21 rticipated in the trial, which included both emergency and elective surgery.
22 ulted in ZIKV being declared a public health emergency and has greatly accelerated the pace of ZIKV r
23 ema due to a low osmolar state, is a medical emergency and often encountered in the ICU setting.
24  presenting with anaphylaxis were treated in emergency and whether treatment followed the European Ac
25 re categorized as elective, 22592 (13.0%) as emergency, and 20816 (12.0%) as nonelective and nonemerg
26                                              Emergency C-section was not associated with childhood AL
27 ensuses on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Rec
28 nsensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Rec
29 ective analysis of the prospective Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) head in
30 ypassing rural emergency departments to seek emergency care in larger hospitals, and to measure the a
31 n among nonechocardiographers (intensivists, emergency care physicians, internists, and medical stude
32 urgent cases compared with both elective and emergency cases.
33 plication rate (consisting mainly of preterm emergency cesarean section) of 11% per treated pregnancy
34  versus 3.0% in the intervention group among emergency cesareans (adjusted OR 0.58, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.
35 tral amygdala, which constitute part of the 'emergency circuit' that shapes feeding responses to stre
36 atients with end-stage renal disease use the emergency department (ED) at a 6-fold higher rate than d
37 ent of severe sepsis/septic shock (SS/SS) in Emergency Department (ED) has yet to be assessed.
38                                 Although the emergency department (ED) is an opportune setting for in
39                                          The emergency department (ED) is used to manage cancer-relat
40 oice of analgesic to treat acute pain in the emergency department (ED) lacks a clear evidence base.
41                            Physicians in the emergency department (ED) need additional tools to strat
42 ional study using patients admitted from the emergency department (ED) of a large urban hospital with
43 onnaire for adult patients presenting at the emergency department (ED) of the St. Pierre hospital in
44                   Patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) represent a heterogeneous popu
45                 The effect of vaccination on emergency department (ED) utilization for herpes zoster
46                        Primary outcomes were emergency department (ED) visit or hospitalization for s
47 thma was defined by at least 1 outpatient or emergency department (ED) visit with a primary diagnosis
48 ource-specific PM2.5 and respiratory disease emergency department (ED) visits and examined between-ci
49                To determine the frequency of emergency department (ED) visits for nonurgent and urgen
50                                      Data on emergency department (ED) visits for selected cardioresp
51 e childhood acute wheezing conditions in the emergency department (ED), and there is variation within
52 omographic (CT) pulmonary angiography in the emergency department (ED).
53  risk factors were inpatient boarding in the emergency department (odds ratio, 2.67; CI, 1.74-4.09),
54 cute kidney injury, altered gas exchange, or emergency department (vs inpatient) presentation.
55 ood sampled from ischemic stroke patients at emergency department admission, and BBB permeability was
56  was randomly selected from 1100 consecutive emergency department admissions for minor injury.
57 capacity, estimated by adjusting for routine emergency department admissions, was about 50% (range, 4
58 33-year-old male patient was admitted to the emergency department after a car accident.
59           PTSD symptoms were assessed in the emergency department and 1, 3, and 6 months posttrauma.
60                                              Emergency department and ICUs of an academic center.
61 ith suspected infection who presented to the emergency department and were admitted to the hospital b
62 nts who presented to a level 1 trauma center emergency department and who underwent dual-energy CT fo
63 k, afebrile patients received lower rates of emergency department antibiotic administration, lower me
64 ate greater than or equal to 24 breaths/min, emergency department antibiotics, and emergency departme
65 charge, return of spontaneous circulation on emergency department arrival, and favorable neurologic s
66 ransferred, received antimicrobials prior to emergency department arrival, or were treated by an atte
67 4% received antimicrobials within 3 hours of emergency department arrival.
68 could serve as an initial triage tool in the emergency department as well as a method of determining
69 rial pressure </=65 mm Hg) presenting to the emergency department at a 1500-bed referral hospital in
70          Adult patients admitted through the emergency department at risk for acute respiratory distr
71  patients treated with antimicrobials in the emergency department between 2009 and 2015 for fluid-ref
72  an outside facility (45%-70%; P<0.001), and emergency department bypass for emergency medical servic
73                                              Emergency department bypass was also associated with sho
74 ivation, single call transfer protocols, and emergency department bypass.
75 n = 731) bypassed a rural hospital for their emergency department care.
76 admissions, and in some cases, visits to the emergency department compared with those produced by sus
77 se series analysis using data from the State Emergency Department Database and State Inpatient Databa
78               Both total medical contact and emergency department delay in antibiotic administration
79 ween total medical contact, prehospital, and emergency department delays in antibiotic administration
80           We defined serious infection as an emergency department diagnosis of a serious infection or
81 ut underlying medical conditions came to the emergency department for evaluation of persistent pain o
82 dard criteria including: presentation to the emergency department for medical care within 24h of a ph
83 welve centers evaluated 1282 patients in the emergency department for possible AMI from 2011 to 2013.
84 corticoids and methotrexate presented to the emergency department in December with worsening shortnes
85 s/min, emergency department antibiotics, and emergency department IV fluids volume, being afebrile re
86                 To evaluate the impact of an emergency department mechanical ventilation protocol on
87         Participants were recruited from the emergency department of a large level I trauma center wi
88                                              Emergency department of an academic medical center.
89 ain and hs-cTnT analyzed concurrently in the emergency department of Karolinska University Hospital,
90 /=18 years) within 24 h of presenting to the emergency department or acute medical unit of a large UK
91    Participants were all patients seen in an emergency department or admitted to a hospital from 2004
92               Patients evaluated through the emergency department or as inpatient consults were exclu
93                                        Adult emergency department patients with moderate to severe ac
94 ng into a clinical risk model for evaluation emergency department patients with possible acute myocar
95                                           In emergency department patients with septic shock, afebril
96                                              Emergency department patients with suspected infection a
97  determine suicide risk from the language of emergency department patients.
98 n exposure was TTA, defined as the time from emergency department presentation to appendectomy.
99 cies often require immediate transport to an emergency department regardless of the patient's conditi
100 sure was antibiotics given within 6 hours of emergency department registration.
101  some settings, and their added value in the emergency department remains unknown.
102                               The Nationwide Emergency Department Sample data set was examined for te
103                          Previous studies of emergency department sedation are limited by their singl
104 2) quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment emergency department sepsis 318,832 (0.31%; 95% CI, 0.26
105 t sepsis visits were as follows: 1) original emergency department sepsis 665,319 (0.64%; 95% CI, 0.57
106 2 (0.31%; 95% CI, 0.26-0.37); and 3) revised emergency department sepsis 847,868 (0.82%; 95% CI, 0.74
107 sifications may impact national estimates of emergency department sepsis epidemiology.
108                       Adult (age, >/= 18 yr) emergency department sepsis patients.
109                      The estimated number of emergency department sepsis visits were as follows: 1) o
110  in patients undergoing blood cultures in an Emergency Department setting.
111  and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3) criteria in the emergency department setting.
112 HF (Multiple Estimation of risk based on the Emergency department Spanish Score In patients with AHF)
113                                        In an emergency department study we recruited 31 patients with
114        Secondary outcomes included time from emergency department to operating room, length of surger
115 es, the use of imaging techniques, time from emergency department to operating room, percentage of co
116 evere wheezing episode (90% hospitalized/10% emergency department treated) were followed for 7 years.
117                                           An emergency department ventilator protocol which targeted
118 ajor bleeding, defined as hospitalization or emergency department visit with a primary diagnosis of i
119  Hematuria-related complications, defined as emergency department visit, hospitalization, or a urolog
120 , 30-day postdischarge mortality, and 30-day emergency department visit.
121 otherapy < 14 days from death; more than one emergency department visit; and more than one hospitaliz
122 rin use accounts for more medication-related emergency department visits among older patients than an
123  departments, affecting up to nearly 850,000 emergency department visits annually.
124     We may amend these approaches to include emergency department visits as a further outcome.
125 h that categorizes hospital readmissions and emergency department visits as separate event types is p
126 and statins), and adverse clinical outcomes (emergency department visits for hypoglycemia or hypergly
127                                              Emergency department visits for MVCs.
128  source-specific fine particulate matter and emergency department visits for respiratory disease in f
129 porary estimates of the epidemiology of U.S. emergency department visits for sepsis.
130                                              Emergency department visits for skin infections in the U
131 whether the patient has experienced multiple emergency department visits or hospitalizations, particu
132 as calculated by summing costs for avoidable emergency department visits using the Billings algorithm
133 o produce national estimates of annual adult emergency department visits using updated sepsis classif
134                                              Emergency department visits were only significantly high
135 icare, components of cost, and resource use (emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and inten
136 f hematuria-related complications (including emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and urolo
137 e, and preenrollment characteristics (costs, emergency department visits, hospitalizations, intensive
138  Demonstration sites had larger increases in emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, and M
139  in early discharge, readmissions, recurrent emergency department visits, outpatient visits, or visit
140 time-series study of ozone effects on asthma emergency department visits.
141 lems with after-hours care and inappropriate emergency department visits.
142 09-2011, there were 103,257,516 annual adult emergency department visits.
143 eek or more, and (5) oral corticosteroid use/emergency department visits.
144 zing heart failure hospital readmissions and emergency department visits.
145   History A 30-year-old man presented to the emergency department with epigastric pain.
146 tal admissions of children presenting to the emergency department with moderate to severe asthma.
147 g difficulties presented to the Accident and Emergency Department with right ankle pain after an inve
148 ed from pediatric patients presenting to the emergency department with signs and symptoms of pharyngi
149 selected patients (N=1954) presenting to the emergency department with symptoms suggestive of AMI, co
150 cation sample, n = 31) were recruited in the emergency department within 24 hours of trauma exposure.
151             The patient elected to leave the emergency department without undergoing treatment, and h
152 ved head computed tomographic imaging in the emergency department, 839 (5.5%) had ICI.
153 ry, retail pharmaceutical, nursing facility, emergency department, and dental care increased by $933.
154             Radiography was performed in the emergency department, and the patient was released with
155 septic shock receiving antimicrobials in the emergency department, door-to-antimicrobial times varied
156  shock who were admitted to the ICU from the emergency department, other wards, or directly from out
157 gment elevation myocardial infarction to the emergency department, we assessed the diagnostic perform
158 t be able to be directly discharged from the emergency department.
159 nts with community-acquired pneumonia in the emergency department.
160 he study was conducted in an urban, academic emergency department.
161 ife pharmacotherapies and who boarded in the emergency department.
162 acute chest pain in patients admitted to the emergency department.
163 nd 64% of hospitalizations originated in the emergency department.
164                A challenge for clinicians in emergency departments (EDs) is rapid identification of t
165  are prescribed inappropriately in pediatric emergency departments (PEDs), but little data are availa
166                            Increasing use of emergency departments among older patients with palliati
167 luded patients enrolled in 25 North American emergency departments from 2004 to 2006.
168 tem-wide efforts affecting multiple hospital emergency departments have ever been evaluated.
169 ected patients with chest pain presenting at emergency departments in 2013 and 2014.
170                                              Emergency departments in 9 Dutch hospitals.
171 tal of 105 patients evaluated for AMI in the emergency departments of 2 teaching hospitals in the Hen
172                                              Emergency departments of a rural Midwestern state.
173 njuries of any severity who presented to the emergency departments of ten Australian and New Zealand
174  with rural sepsis patients' bypassing rural emergency departments to seek emergency care in larger h
175 g painful procedures is standard practice in emergency departments worldwide.
176  continues to present a major burden to U.S. emergency departments, affecting up to nearly 850,000 em
177 ural patients with sepsis seek care in local emergency departments, but demographic and disease-orien
178 ading cause for drug-abuse-related visits to emergency departments, most of which are due to cardiova
179 egimen suitable for prompt administration in emergency departments.
180 d with communication barriers, can result in emergency dialysis and avoidable hospitalizations.
181                                              Emergency doctors completed a questionnaire for adult pa
182 s (aged 10-19 years) who were admitted as an emergency for adversity-related or accident-related inju
183 ion of poliovirus eradication a programmatic emergency for global public health and called for a comp
184 ble on type of C-section (i.e., elective vs. emergency) for a subset of 1,552 cases and 5,688 control
185 olvement by local Rotarians, the program for emergency funding, innovative tactics, and additional ap
186  adult (18-64 yr) and older adult (>/=65 yr) emergency general surgery (EGS) patients; (2) vary by di
187 repressor, ZBTB11, as critical for basal and emergency granulopoiesis.
188 atory network operates in mammals to control emergency hematopoiesis is an open question.
189 an important role in homeostatic as well as "emergency" hematopoiesis and are involved in the pathoge
190 colorectal resection and patients undergoing emergency hip fracture repair.
191                                              Emergency hospital admission with adversity-related inju
192 rointestinal bleeding is a common reason for emergency hospital admission, and identification of pati
193 ospital, of which 10 045 (97.1%) followed an emergency hospital admission.
194 children with asthma (ages 3-17 yr) after an emergency hospital attendance with an asthma exacerbatio
195                           The annual rate of emergency hospital attendance with exacerbations was 27%
196 icantly associated with an increased risk of emergency hospital visits at lag 0-2 days (cumulative re
197 ological study, we collected daily counts of emergency hospital visits from the 28 largest hospitals
198                     The mean daily number of emergency hospital visits in all hospitals was 278 (SD 1
199 CI 2.05-6.79) and 5.05% (2.23-7.75) of daily emergency hospital visits in China could be attributed t
200  last 4 decades and the recent public health emergency in West Africa, there are still no approved va
201 patient's pain is life-threatening requiring emergency intervention/surgery or due to some less-urgen
202 tality thresholds, both the baseline and the emergency, is recommended.
203  of the all-cause 30-day mortality following emergency laparotomy between populations from New York S
204                          Patients undergoing emergency laparotomy in England had significantly higher
205 uncil Regulation 2016/52/Euratom updates the emergency limits on radionuclides in foods including (21
206 ders (firefighters/police) dispatched by the Emergency Medical Dispatch Center (EMDC), or lay first r
207  by differences in coordinating care between emergency medical services (EMS) and hospitals.
208 d cardiac arrests that were not witnessed by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, the rate of
209     We review the incident reports logged by emergency medical services (EMS) technicians arriving wi
210 ality among injured patients served by 9-1-1 emergency medical services (EMS).
211                  Nine hospitals served by 21 emergency medical services agencies in southwestern Penn
212 <0.001), and emergency department bypass for emergency medical services direct presenters (48%-59%; P
213 an first medical contact-to-device times for emergency medical services direct presenters (84 versus
214                                          All emergency medical services encounters with community acq
215                         Paramedics providing emergency medical services followed a protocol that incl
216 matic external defibrillation) and timing of emergency medical services personnel on OHCA outcomes ac
217 ac cause of arrest that was not witnessed by emergency medical services personnel.
218 logistic regression accounting for age, sex, emergency medical services response time, clustering of
219 xty-two (86%) of 72 transported patients met emergency medical services transport criteria.
220 lopments in public health insurance schemes, emergency medical services, and health information techn
221 atient care with additional data provided by emergency medical services, police departments and surro
222 f drowning research, resuscitation research, emergency medical services, public health, and developme
223     One large county with a single system of emergency medical services.
224 including avoidance advice, patient specific emergency medication and an emergency treatment plan and
225 tment plan and training in administration of emergency medication.
226 Fifty qualitative interviews of surgeons and emergency medicine physicians were conducted at 10 hospi
227 essionals (eg, physicians in intensive care, emergency medicine, neurology, neurosurgery, pulmonology
228 namic behaviour of GMPs in situ, which tunes emergency myelopoiesis and is hijacked in leukaemia.
229 r of myelopoiesis in the steady state and of emergency myelopoiesis during demand conditions.
230 V) infection an epidemic and a public health emergency of global concern due to its association with
231 rganization of Zika virus as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, multiple vaccine can
232                            The public health emergency of Zika virus, and the threat of global spread
233                    The results indicate that emergency, on-shift fire suppression is associated with
234 e District Health Information System and the Emergency Operations Center, demonstrating the value of
235 engagement, and the establishment of a Polio Emergency Operations Centre.
236 ing this information in the event of medical emergency or pregnancy and patient safety and regulatory
237  older age, smoking, liver disease, ascites, emergency or semiurgent repair, and need for intraoperat
238 estinal surgery and 1523 patients undergoing emergency orthopedic surgery.
239 morrhagic stroke, and management of cerebral emergencies other than stroke.
240                        After identifying the emergency physicians within a hospital who cared for the
241 d program reports, United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) Country Operatio
242 g within the catchment area of a President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief-supported HIV clinic.
243 al countries supported by the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.
244             In response to the global health emergency posed by the Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak, brain
245 ent of appendicitis as an urgent rather than emergency procedure has become an increasingly common pr
246 be safely performed as an urgent rather than emergency procedure.
247 .0%] vs 206 [0.3%]; P < .001) and to undergo emergency procedures (4852 [21.3%] vs 4954 [7.3%]; P < .
248  Outcomes for weekend hospital admissions or emergency procedures have become a topical and controver
249                     Hybrid, transhiatal, and emergency procedures were excluded.
250 , our data demonstrate that the blebbishield emergency program drives evasion of chromosomal instabil
251                                 Blebbishield emergency program evaded genomic instability checkpoint,
252 sion that is coordinated by the blebbishield emergency program.
253 and, therefore, how to incorporate them into emergency programmes to maximise their success in terms
254 tients were candidates to salvage IAT during emergency relaparotomy because of postpancreatectomy sep
255                   Thirty-day mortality after emergency repair was 39.4%.
256 he aftermath of the derailment accident, the emergency response entailed the deployment of 33000 L of
257 AED in schools should be implemented with an emergency response plan that trains staff in the recogni
258  in the final 30 days of life, more than one emergency room (ER) or hospital admission in the final 3
259         However, 68 subjects had visited the emergency room and had likely received a vaccination boo
260 re hospitalization or hospitalization and/or emergency room visit rates in patients with severe eosin
261 lization of health resources (odds ratio>/=2 emergency room visit, 1.41 [95% confidence interval, 1.0
262 e hospitalization and hospitalization and/or emergency room visit, respectively.
263 e of exacerbations requiring hospitalization/emergency room visit.
264 SA use, (3) healthcare resource utilization: emergency room visits and hospital stays, and (4) total
265 acerbations requiring hospitalization and/or emergency room visits compared with placebo in patients
266 red in the gastroenterology clinic, hospital emergency room, and endoscopy suite.
267 nsisting of academic medical centre clinics, emergency rooms, and private physician offices in the US
268  significance in prophylactic, surgical, and emergency scenarios.
269             No fistulas resulted in surgical emergencies, sepsis, or death.
270 suture material or suturing technique in the emergency setting is lacking.
271 h consent for standard-of-care trials in the emergency setting.
272  All patients had a midline laparotomy in an emergency setting.
273 ing populations in conflict and humanitarian emergency settings may save lives.
274 imulated extracorporeal membrane oxygenation emergency (Sim1-recirculation) then randomized into simu
275 imulated extracorporeal membrane oxygenation emergencies (Sim2-pump failure and Sim3-access insuffici
276 table for alpha spectrometry measurements in emergency situations.
277 e planning of future vaccination efforts and emergency stockpiling.
278 ervention in specific upper gastrointestinal emergencies such as EP and PEH, which in turn reduces mo
279              Tamponade occurred in 16.6% and emergency surgery in 3.4% of cases.
280 MARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Mortality following emergency surgery is a key quality improvement metric in
281 o intraprocedural deaths, cardiac tamponade, emergency surgery, stroke, myocardial infarction, or maj
282  a nitinol cardiac occluder without death or emergency surgical rescue) occurred 98 of 99 patients; 1
283  Association Get With The Guidelines-Medical Emergency Team database between 2005 and 2015 were analy
284                     Five years after medical emergency team implementation across study sites, there
285                               Before medical emergency team implementation, hospital mortality decrea
286 examined whether implementation of a medical emergency team was associated with lower-than-expected m
287                    Implementation of medical emergency teams in a large sample of pediatric hospitals
288  and Nigeria (Borno) represent public health emergencies that require aggressive response.
289           Status epilepticus (SE), a medical emergency that is typically terminated through antiepile
290 idemic in the Americas poses a public health emergency that requires a swift response.
291 patient specific emergency medication and an emergency treatment plan and training in administration
292 hma-related event (SARE; hospital admission, emergency treatment, or death) and change from baseline
293 ng the recent epidemic, tests authorized for emergency use have been utilized by public health labora
294 C1-INH-HAE information card and medicine for emergency use.
295 ve channel (MscL), acts as an osmoprotective emergency valve in bacteria by opening a large, water-fi
296 couraging vulnerable communities to perceive emergency warnings of volcanic activity as false alarms.
297 Flint children in September 2015, a state of emergency was declared and public health interventions (
298 bleeding (UGIB) is a common gastrointestinal emergency, which is potentially fatal.
299 rk suggests that clinical criteria (National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study [NEXUS] Head C
300 ant PPC risk factors included nonmodifiable (emergency [yes vs no]: odds ratio [OR], 4.47, 95% CI, 1.

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