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1 ion safety and change practices in pediatric emergency medicine.
2 oundational elements of medical reasoning in emergency medicine.
3 olled cooling is used in transplantation and emergency medicine.
4  20 states; 62 (86%) were board certified in emergency medicine.
5 el to improve equity in imaging in pediatric emergency medicine.
6 h that is relevant to the field of pediatric emergency medicine.
7 hese purposes may be beneficial in pediatric emergency medicine.
8 tion of the field of international pediatric emergency medicine.
9 n making with regard to critical outcomes in emergency medicine.
10 bstetrics-gynecology, surgery, medicine, and emergency medicine.
11 by Family Medicine (8.3%), Optometry (4.4%), Emergency Medicine (0.62%), Ophthalmology (4.2%), Others
12 ntinence (2.44, 1.46-4.06); admission to the emergency medicine (1.71, 1.06-2.74); length of stay (1.
13 e: cardiology (52%), general medicine (96%), emergency medicine (12%), and orthopedic surgery (14%).
14  specialty, the most common specialties were emergency medicine (1446 physicians [4%]) and preventive
15 ncluded surgery (32.1%), anesthesia (18.1%), emergency medicine (18.1%), orthopedics (7.9%), otolaryn
16 1.07 to 3.29, P=0.03), and people working in emergency medicine (2.10, 1.09 to 3.56, P=0.02).
17 ysicians with at least 1 report, followed by emergency medicine (204 [10.9%]), nonsurgeon procedurali
18 ed critical care (35%), cardiology (20%), or emergency medicine (22%).
19 ers (312 [39%]), and were board-certified in emergency medicine (673 [84%]).
20 specialty category, with the lowest odds for emergency medicine (87.4% vs 73.6%; AOR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1
21 cal departments, major increases occurred in emergency medicine (a 10.6% increase in full-time facult
22 l departments, the largest increases were in emergency medicine (a 29% increase from 1995-1996) and f
23 nit is staffed with a neurologist trained in emergency medicine, a paramedic, and a technician.
24 physicians at the Denver Health Residency in Emergency Medicine, a postgraduate year 1-4 training pro
25 could effectively help MRI to play a role in emergency medicine and acute conditions such as trauma o
26                        Collaboration between emergency medicine and allergy departments may be helpfu
27 on education for pediatric critical care and emergency medicine and assess its potential for future g
28 is emerging as a powerful tool for pediatric emergency medicine and critical care education through b
29 ed on strengthening the relationship between emergency medicine and critical care medicine.
30 nout across specialties, and particularly in emergency medicine and for physicians in training or res
31                          Although studies in emergency medicine and general surgery showed mixed find
32 scripts under consideration by the Annals of Emergency Medicine and had received final editorial deci
33 (2.41, 1.02 to 5.64, P=0.04), and working in emergency medicine and intensive care (2.16, 0.98 to 4.7
34 s and because-unlike related fields, such as emergency medicine and intensive care--its birth was str
35 in general medical specialties, surgery, and emergency medicine and lower rates in urology and obstet
36 tiple disciplines, including anesthesiology, emergency medicine and neonatology, have adapted key pri
37 ch abstracts were submitted from programs in emergency medicine and other specialties affiliated with
38                     During this same period, emergency medicine and plastic surgery increased as a ma
39  for >20 yrs is described in relation to its emergency medicine and surgical origins.
40                 Its use has grown rapidly in emergency medicine and the range of diagnostic and proce
41 alth interventions should be integrated into emergency medicine and trauma care responses.
42  P < .001) and staffing with board-certified emergency medicine and/or pediatric emergency medicine p
43                                              Emergency-medicine and intensive-care providers are regu
44 rticipants included residents in pediatrics, emergency medicine, and anesthesiology.
45 n psychiatry, internal medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, and family medicine.
46 lines of internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, and infectious diseases to develop a
47 ascular disease, infection, admission to the emergency medicine, and more extended hospital stay were
48  in the fields of cardiology, critical care, emergency medicine, and neurology.
49 n top cardiology, selected general medicine, emergency medicine, and orthopaedic surgery journals.
50  and is rich with experiences from surgical, emergency medicine, and other practices.
51 atology, plastic surgery, surgical oncology, emergency medicine, and physiatry, using photographs and
52              Specialties such as anesthesia, emergency medicine, and psychiatry have higher rates of
53 , orthopedic surgery, obstetrics/gynecology, emergency medicine, and radiology eliciting information
54  surgery (aOR, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.36-1.67), and emergency medicine (aOR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.32-1.39) and le
55  inappropriate: 20.2% to 12.5%; p < 0.0001), emergency medicine (appropriate: 83.6% to 91.6%; inappro
56 ioners, and physician delivered pre-hospital emergency medicine are re-defining the scope of pre-hosp
57                                  Internal or emergency medicine as the primary specialty was associat
58 hese obstacles are not specific to pediatric emergency medicine, but reflect overall disparities betw
59  combined efforts of both anesthesiology and emergency medicine can hopefully contribute to improving
60 ademic medical centers through the Pediatric Emergency Medicine Collaborative Research Committee of t
61 tments were determined through the Pediatric Emergency Medicine Collaborative Research Committee.
62 o participated in the 2020 American Board of Emergency Medicine computer-based In-training Examinatio
63                                 Pre-hospital emergency medicine consists of not only clinical care, b
64 d a respiratory therapist with experience in emergency medicine, critical care medicine, anesthesiolo
65 us process that included pediatric and adult emergency medicine, critical care, cardiac critical care
66            Several cases were treated at the emergency medicine department (ED) of the Government Med
67 (age >= 18 years) patients presenting to the Emergency Medicine Department of Muhimbili National Hosp
68  States-based critical care, cardiology, and emergency medicine directories and critical care network
69 ed on strengthening the relationship between emergency medicine (EM) and critical care medicine (CCM)
70 ctive physicians who self-reported pediatric emergency medicine (EM) as their primary or secondary sp
71     Approximately 60% of women physicians in emergency medicine (EM) experience gender-based discrimi
72                                           An emergency medicine (EM) handoff note generated by a larg
73                                              Emergency medicine (EM) physicians experience tremendous
74 t and its association with the well-being of emergency medicine (EM) residents is unclear.
75 disparities in performance assessments among emergency medicine (EM) residents.
76  clinical competency committee assessment of emergency medicine (EM) residents.
77                                              Emergency medicine (EM) surgical critical care (SCC) tra
78       Three recently recognized specialties--emergency medicine, family practice, and critical care--
79                                  Also in the emergency-medicine field, evidence is emerging that fast
80 erate to deep sedation is becoming common in emergency medicine for many reasons, including progressi
81 ude international dissemination of pediatric emergency medicine guidelines, pediatric-specific disast
82 eral surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, and emergency medicine has increased disproportionately fast
83 the areas of global health and international emergency medicine has increased dramatically in recent
84    Interview participants were physicians in emergency medicine, hospital medicine (hospitalist), int
85  critical care, hematology, cardiac surgery, emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and pharmacology.
86  imaging-based triage is a critical tool for emergency medicine in both civilian and military setting
87    Current trends in international pediatric emergency medicine include international dissemination o
88 ce of 35 pediatric experts in critical care, emergency medicine, infectious diseases, general pediatr
89 ediatric experts from neurology, cardiology, emergency medicine, intensive care medicine, and nursing
90 llowing medical specialties: anesthesiology, emergency medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics and gy
91 ny recent advances in the state of pediatric emergency medicine internationally, there still exist ma
92              The development of pre-hospital emergency medicine into a sub-specialty in its own right
93 ially within limited resource settings where emergency medicine is a new specialty.
94                                              Emergency Medicine Journal 2024;41:276-282.To read the f
95 t per week; SE, 0.2; P < .001), and being in emergency medicine (linear regression coefficient, -18;
96      In internal-medicine subspecialties and emergency medicine, men earned more than women (ratio, 1
97 nvestigators representing internal medicine, emergency medicine, microbiology, critical care, surgery
98 essionals (eg, physicians in intensive care, emergency medicine, neurology, neurosurgery, pulmonology
99 ology, endocrinology, neurology, hematology, emergency medicine, nursing, trialists, and advocacy exp
100  of medical oncology, neurology, hematology, emergency medicine, nursing, trialists, and advocacy exp
101 ort study was conducted in the Department of Emergency Medicine of the Medical University of Vienna,
102  with internal medicine, planned training in emergency medicine (OR, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.40-0.84) or surg
103  representing internal medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, otolaryngology, public health, epide
104 ients filled 22.0% of initial prescriptions, emergency medicine patients 13.0%, and dental patients 4
105                   Its use has been proven in emergency medicine, pediatrics, and the military.
106 rk has investigated the ability of pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) physicians to perform a wide ar
107                                United States emergency medicine physician adoption of cooling was sig
108  Radiologists (task experts) and internal or emergency medicine physicians (task nonexperts) received
109             These strategies included having emergency medicine physicians activate the catheterizati
110 are was independently rated by two pediatric emergency medicine physicians applying a previously vali
111                                  Five junior emergency medicine physicians assessed chest radiographs
112                                     Although emergency medicine physicians have claimed to be activel
113                                              Emergency medicine physicians performed 1,551 (0.7%) of
114 chocardiographic examinations were excluded, emergency medicine physicians performed 458 (0.2%) of th
115                                              Emergency medicine physicians routinely employ airway de
116 ertified emergency medicine and/or pediatric emergency medicine physicians vs none (median [IQR] WPRS
117 Fifty qualitative interviews of surgeons and emergency medicine physicians were conducted at 10 hospi
118 %) nonsurgeon nonproceduralists, 1876 (5.3%) emergency medicine physicians, 6743 (19.2%) nonsurgeon p
119 ture care (orthopedic surgeons or residents, emergency medicine physicians, hospitalists, anesthesiol
120                            Pediatric-focused emergency medicine physicians, nonsurgeon proceduralists
121 ach specialty (nonsurgeon nonproceduralists, emergency medicine physicians, nonsurgeon proceduralists
122 ercentage of those studies were performed by emergency medicine physicians, radiologists, or other ph
123  were most pronounced among primary care and emergency medicine physicians.
124 sound (POCUS) has become an integral part of emergency medicine practice.
125       One first step to overcoming pediatric emergency medicine practiced in isolation is a formal or
126  clinicians-including general practitioners, emergency medicine providers, and infectious diseases sp
127 e by primary care clinicians, obstetricians, emergency medicine providers, hospitalists, laboratorian
128 is a necessary but often a daunting task for emergency medicine providers.
129 rature and a preponderance of citations from emergency medicine, radiology and pediatrics journals.
130 ogists and orthopedists; senior residents in emergency medicine, radiology, and orthopedics.
131  of experts in allergy and/or immunology and emergency medicine rated their level of agreement with t
132 (MDP) tools, and the Recognizing Delirium in Emergency Medicine (REDEEM) score.
133                      International pediatric emergency medicine refers to the spectrum of care provid
134 ef training, increasing numbers of pediatric emergency medicine research collaboratives, interest gro
135 udy was performed from 2018 to 2020 in which emergency medicine residency faculty assessed procedural
136 edicine-pediatric programs and 37 (52%) from emergency medicine residency programs, participated in o
137  March 30, 2023, in 7 geographically diverse emergency medicine residency programs.
138 nderwent intubation that was performed by an emergency medicine resident or a critical care fellow),
139                                              Emergency medicine resident physicians at the Denver Hea
140 PANTS: This quality improvement study of all emergency medicine resident physicians at University of
141         In this quality improvement study of emergency medicine resident physicians, an automated sys
142 [70%]; 48 anesthesiology residents [16%]; 42 emergency medicine residents [14%]) were not statistical
143 students and first-, second-, and third-year emergency medicine residents at Wayne State University.
144 mulated performance by internal medicine and emergency medicine residents from two academic centers.
145 ticipants were postgraduate year 1 through 4 emergency medicine residents masked to the hypothesis.
146                                 Surgical and emergency medicine residents rotating through the trauma
147 ile apps available for handheld devices: the Emergency Medicine Residents' Association's (EMRA's) Ant
148 offering critical care training positions to emergency medicine residents, and partnerships with hosp
149 ing physicians and 143 internal medicine and emergency medicine residents.
150                                        Given emergency medicine's role in caring for medically unders
151 elines and value of care and applications to Emergency Medicine scenarios where diagnostic accuracy i
152 age, Rapid Acute Physiology Score, and Rapid Emergency Medicine Score.
153 ege of Chest Physicians/Society for Academic Emergency Medicine/Society of Cardiovascular Computed To
154 ege of Chest Physicians/Society for Academic Emergency Medicine/Society of Cardiovascular Computed To
155 departments (EDs) in rural Australia with no emergency medicine specialists, which were randomized to
156 .16, 1.46 to 3.19, P<0.001), specifically in emergency medicine specialty (1.48, 1.01 to 2.34, P=0.04
157 shed articles originally submitted to a 1991 emergency medicine specialty meeting.
158        Optimal preoxygenation is critical in emergency medicine to prevent desaturation during airway
159         There is an opportunity in pediatric emergency medicine to reduce practice variability, decre
160                                              Emergency medicine-trained clinicians conducted (61%) an
161  as well as representatives from hematology, emergency medicine, transplant surgery, and community pr
162 for skin burn assessment in settings such as emergency medicine triage and low resource environments.
163  virus vaccine (rVSV-ZEBOV) as an unlicensed emergency medicine was obtained from the relevant author
164  virus (rVSV-ZEBOV) vaccine as an unlicensed emergency medicine was obtained from the relevant author
165 icians in anesthesiology, critical care, and emergency medicine was reviewed.
166 referred from the departments of surgery and emergency medicine were examined for suspected acute app
167 ng in family medicine, internal medicine, or emergency medicine were recruited.

 
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