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1 primarily through other product lines or the emergency room.
2 had reopened, another 71 persons went to the emergency room.
3 tial diagnosis of the epigastric pain in the emergency room.
4  a clinical suspicion of appendicitis at the emergency room.
5 in all patients shortly after arrival to the emergency room.
6 mon reason for visits to the pediatrician or emergency room.
7 ty of infections that result in trips to the emergency room.
8  in intensive care units, surgical wards, or emergency rooms.
9 ce and there are increasing presentations to emergency rooms.
10 from cultures of blood collected in the DUMC emergency room, 26 (48%) were identified as skin contami
11  samples were obtained at presentation to an emergency room 4 hours, 8 hours and 16 hours later.
12 have their condition first documented in the emergency room (69% vs. 30%, p = 0.0377).
13   In acute-care settings such as clinics and emergency rooms, a desirable chlamydia screening assay s
14 nancy, moderate to severe liver disease, and emergency room admission.
15 number of hospital, intensive care unit, and emergency room admissions decreased from 2.56, 0.87, and
16 ple attempters who came to an urban hospital emergency room after a suicide attempt.
17 ntigraphy within 12 h of presentation in the emergency room, after abdominal helical CT showed findin
18         However, 68 subjects had visited the emergency room and had likely received a vaccination boo
19 t with such a "bundle-based approach" in the emergency room and in preoperative and postoperative sce
20                 Point-of-care testing in the emergency room and operating room.
21 cal and imaging work-up of chest pain in the emergency room and provide a framework for understanding
22  two occasions, the patient presented to the emergency room and urine specimens were sent to the clin
23         Participants were recruited from the emergency rooms and inpatient units of local psychiatric
24 ges for initial and repeat hospitalizations, emergency room, and day surgery stays and the costs of a
25 e conventional treatment in the prehospital, emergency room, and early intensive care unit.
26 red in the gastroenterology clinic, hospital emergency room, and endoscopy suite.
27 simulate treatment in a typical prehospital, emergency room, and intensive care unit.
28 the operating room and 0.96 (SD 0.06) in the emergency room, and mean paired differences (yi - xi) we
29 f health care utilization (eg, primary care, emergency room, and mental health visits) and the daily
30 graphy diagnoses in the intensive care unit, emergency room, and newborn nursery.
31 nsisting of academic medical centre clinics, emergency rooms, and private physician offices in the US
32 primary care provider and reduces use of the emergency room as a source of care.
33                   Agreement was high between emergency room assessments and semistructured interview
34 80 students and 19 staff members went to the emergency room at the local hospital; 38 persons were ho
35  than the cultures of blood collected in the emergency rooms at MNH and LCH combined (26/332 versus 1
36 ion when patients are given tirofiban in the emergency room before primary angioplasty.
37 lthcare (23.8% versus 2.5%; P < 0.001), more emergency room care (14.2% versus 2.5%; P = 0.02), and m
38 ation on adverse events: hospitalizations or emergency room consultations.
39                 Goal-directed therapy in the emergency room demonstrates that protocolized care could
40 mmon pediatric emergency, accounting for 150 emergency room dental consultations per year at Children
41  in the final 30 days of life, more than one emergency room (ER) or hospital admission in the final 3
42 sociation between heavy rainfall and rate of emergency room (ER) visits for gastrointestinal (GI) ill
43 evels, we examined the relationship of daily emergency room (ER) visits for respiratory illnesses (25
44 vestigate association between SSO events and emergency room (ER) visits with a primary diagnosis of g
45                 Secondary endpoints included emergency room (ER) visits, hospitalizations, and surviv
46 heir first contact with medical staff in the emergency room (ER).
47 were recovered by venipuncture from an adult emergency room (ER).
48 r dementia first hospitalized or visiting an emergency room for AMI in 1999 to 2009.
49 more visits to general practitioners and the emergency room for SLE.
50  be seen by a general practitioner or in the emergency room for their SLE, and reported more visits t
51 ts presented to its tertiary-care ophthalmic emergency room for treatment, and 3 additional patients
52 l [95% CI], 1.4 to 1.9), going to a hospital emergency room for wheeze (OR = 1.6; 95% CI, 1.2 to 2.2)
53 table to decreased referrals to hospital and emergency rooms for diagnosis and management.
54 ubjects admitted to Oulu University Hospital emergency room in 1999 with an acute head trauma (n = 73
55 er than 5 years old and attended a pediatric emergency room in southern Israel.
56 se in the number of visits to physicians and emergency rooms in the 6 months after ablation compared
57 wo hundred adult (>18 yrs) patients from the emergency room, intensive care units, and general medici
58 nts for one third of angioedema cases in the emergency room; it is usually manifested in the upper ai
59 lability of portable CT scan machines in the emergency room, may improve the speed and accuracy of th
60 s to be admitted to the hospital through the emergency room (odds ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval
61 ciations were also strong for high levels of emergency room (odds ratio, 2.73; P < .0001) and primary
62 CI 1.35 to 4.07), time from symptom onset to emergency room of <or=180 min (OR 2.63, 95% CI 1.42 to 4
63 ty rates of psychiatric patients seen in the emergency room of a large Department of Veterans Affairs
64 n from a sample of patients evaluated at the emergency room of an urban psychiatric hospital.
65  rates for cultures of blood obtained in the emergency rooms of Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH) in
66 aths occurring out of the hospital or in the emergency room or as "dead on arrival" with an underlyin
67  >4 hours, the protocol was activated in the emergency room or clinic.
68 ed strategy of immediate thrombolysis in the emergency room or in the ambulance followed by angioplas
69 her early administration of tirofiban in the emergency room or later administration in the catheteriz
70 he sponge group were more likely to visit an emergency room or surgeon's office owing to a wound-rela
71  in 93% of patients in a children's hospital emergency room (p < .00001; odds ratio, 7.199).
72 ime from onset of symptoms to arrival at the emergency room (patient interval) and from arrival to th
73                                  None of the emergency room patients had indwelling intravascular dev
74 aging, particularly in low-intermediate-risk emergency room patients who are a population likely to h
75 value chain") of critical care patients: the emergency room, patients who are admitted for other prob
76 ria were performed in intensive care unit or emergency room populations.
77 pain issues, as well as general surgical and emergency-room precautions.
78 R 1.9; 95% CI, 1.3 to 2.7), symptom onset to emergency room presentation (OR 1.1; 95% CI, 1.1 to 1.2)
79 NS-AMI) trial had BNP levels measured in the emergency room prior to primary percutaneous coronary in
80 to 1.15) and hospital admissions through the emergency room (rate ratio, 1.19; 95 percent confidence
81 nition tool-the Recognition of Stroke in the Emergency Room (ROSIER) scale-for use by ER physicians.
82                                   Yet in the emergency room setting, the D-dimer test may be useful i
83 es for culture are obtained in U.S. hospital emergency rooms should help mitigate blood culture conta
84 used steroid and to have attended a hospital emergency room; the size of the effect upon steroid use
85 , 24-hour in-house attending staff to reduce emergency room time.
86 hundred patients evaluated by the chest pain emergency room to rule out AMI underwent IETT using a mo
87 ransport of critically ill patients from the emergency room to the intensive care unit.
88 f critically ill pediatric patients from the emergency room to the intensive care unit.
89 m (patient interval) and from arrival to the emergency room to the operating room (hospital interval)
90 care, and 17 focused on acute care including emergency room, trauma, and management of patients with
91  less psychiatric inpatient care and reduced emergency room treatment.
92 choconstriction requiring hospitalization or emergency room treatment.
93 re buccal midazolam with rectal diazepam for emergency-room treatment of children aged 6 months and o
94  lab draws; radiology, increasing the use of emergency room ultrasound and accepting outside x-rays;
95  to an urban tertiary care hospital from the emergency room under the care of noninvasive or invasive
96 all and mental health-specific inpatient and emergency room utilization and costs increased.
97 confidence interval [95% CI], 3.93 to 4.04), emergency room visit (OR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.87 to 2.14), o
98 CI, 0.30-0.80; P = .004) and hospitalization/emergency room visit (relative rate, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.33-
99 utcome was a composite of hospitalization or emergency room visit for congestive heart failure (CHF),
100  augmentation of heart failure therapy or an emergency room visit or hospitalization for increased he
101 re hospitalization or hospitalization and/or emergency room visit rates in patients with severe eosin
102 lization of health resources (odds ratio>/=2 emergency room visit, 1.41 [95% confidence interval, 1.0
103     We assessed the risk of hospitalization, emergency room visit, or intensive-coronary care unit (I
104 ne burdensome intervention (hospitalization, emergency room visit, parenteral therapy, or tube feedin
105 e hospitalization and hospitalization and/or emergency room visit, respectively.
106 psychiatric hospitalization 5 years after an emergency room visit.
107 e of exacerbations requiring hospitalization/emergency room visit.
108 ificant adverse clinical event; 19.8% had an emergency room visit.
109 icosteroids, or admission to hospital, or an emergency-room visit, or a combination of these occurren
110  days (0.68; 95% CI, 0.23 to 2.02; P = .49), emergency room visits (0.73; 95% CI, 0.45 to 1.19; P = .
111 lization (5.6 more events per patient-year), emergency room visits (1.1 more visits), and ICU-CCU adm
112 escriptions, the frequency of asthma-related emergency room visits (ARERs), and asthma-related hospit
113 y, impaired health status, and more frequent emergency room visits (P < 0.05).
114 use, and higher rates of hospitalization and emergency room visits among depressed patients.
115  The authors estimated that approximately 90 emergency room visits and 9 admissions per month were av
116                   Epidemiological studies on emergency room visits and hospital admissions for asthma
117 lled case series study design, they examined emergency room visits and hospital admissions occurring
118 SA use, (3) healthcare resource utilization: emergency room visits and hospital stays, and (4) total
119                              At 30 days, the emergency room visits and repeat catheterization (16% vs
120 r from the index hospital also had increased emergency room visits and were more likely to be readmit
121 mportant events such as hospitalizations and emergency room visits are rare and difficult to characte
122 acerbations requiring hospitalization and/or emergency room visits compared with placebo in patients
123  medication (OR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.2 to 3.7) or emergency room visits during the previous year (OR, 3.4;
124 bidity and mortality results in thousands of emergency room visits every year.
125 entrations were consistently associated with emergency room visits for all respiratory illnesses.
126 ngs for both preventable hospitalization and emergency room visits for angina.
127 ts of albuterol nebulized with heliox during emergency room visits for asthma exacerbations.
128                                    Pediatric emergency room visits for asthma were studied in relatio
129 nfidence interval, 4.2-10) increased risk of emergency room visits for asthma.
130 he composite end point of rehospitalization, emergency room visits for HF, and mortality through 60 d
131 between airborne allergen concentrations and emergency room visits for myocardial infarction (MI) in
132 ve potential modified the impact of PM2.5 on emergency room visits for respiratory illnesses (P = 0.0
133 onths, wheeze during exercise, doctor and/or emergency room visits for wheeze, and use of prescriptio
134 ing medication (OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.4-3.4), and emergency room visits in the past year (OR 3.7, 95% CI 1
135 ian electronic order entry for chemotherapy, emergency room visits or hospitalizations during chemoth
136  reaction results performed in adults during emergency room visits or hospitalizations were reviewed.
137 positively and significantly associated with emergency room visits related to asthma (incident rate r
138 inic visits and a higher rate of urgent care/emergency room visits than whites, although these differ
139 d RR 1.59 (95% CI 1.21-2.09), respectively); emergency room visits was increased by 80% (RR 1.79 (95%
140  medication (OR, 1.4; 95% CI, 1.1 to 1.8) or emergency room visits within the previous year (OR, 1.9;
141 ,000/year) and accounts for more than 56,000 emergency room visits, 2,600 hospitalizations, and an es
142 ons between air pollution concentrations and emergency room visits, adjusting for time-varying covari
143 adults, increased use, CUD, cannabis-related emergency room visits, and fatal vehicle crashes.
144 er PCI, clopidogrel adherence, physician and emergency room visits, and hospitalization were similar
145 alization, readmissions, physician services, emergency room visits, and postdischarge ancillary care
146 ograms did not reduce hospital admissions or emergency room visits, as compared with usual care.
147     They are a leading reason for clinic and emergency room visits, as well as hospital admissions.
148 urce use (hospital/intensive care unit days, emergency room visits, chemotherapy in last 14 days, and
149 , 5 utilization variables (physician visits, emergency room visits, chiropractic visits, physical the
150   Outcomes of interest included freedom from emergency room visits, hospitalization, and survival in
151 treatments very near death; a high number of emergency room visits, inpatient hospital admissions, or
152 ant differences in total mortality, syncope, emergency room visits, or unscheduled outpatient visits.
153 etic usage, confusion, hospitalizations, and emergency room visits.
154 ions as those leading to hospitalizations or emergency room visits.
155 confidence interval, 0.55-0.83) but not with emergency room visits.
156 rus-related hospitalizations and has reduced emergency room visits.
157 ts had elevated liver enzyme levels and more emergency room visits.
158 dmissions to hospital were one and four; and emergency-room visits were 11 and 16, respectively.
159      Cultures of blood collected in the DUMC emergency room were significantly more likely to yield g
160 all, 27.8% of consultations were called from emergency rooms, whereas the rest occurred afterward.
161 on maintenance hemodialysis presented to the emergency room with abdominal discomfort, rectal pain, a
162  68 +/- 15 years, 54% men) presenting to the emergency room with chest pain, we studied the relations
163 care admission in patients presenting to the emergency room with chest pain.
164 roponin I (sTNI) in patients admitted to the emergency room with CP.
165 mellitus under poor control presented to our emergency room with fever, sore throat, cough and poor a
166  hemodialysis will be readmitted or visit an emergency room within 30 days of an acute hospitalizatio
167 out heparin) and the other presenting to the emergency room without prior hospitalization, heparin ex
168 fields of imaging, thrombectomy devices, and emergency room workflow management, as well as improveme

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