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1 les, mean age 52 years, 30% admitted through emergency room).
2 a clinical suspicion of appendicitis at the emergency room.
3 in all patients shortly after arrival to the emergency room.
4 mon reason for visits to the pediatrician or emergency room.
5 ty of infections that result in trips to the emergency room.
6 primarily through other product lines or the emergency room.
7 had reopened, another 71 persons went to the emergency room.
8 1.2% (305) of patients were evaluated in the emergency room.
9 of the most common reasons for visiting the emergency room.
10 cute alcohol intoxication, especially in the emergency room.
11 d or discharged into home quarantine via the emergency room.
12 re diagnosed with conjunctivitis in the SUMC emergency room.
13 ients with suspected AA who presented to the emergency room.
14 e repair; 1 patient underwent removal in the emergency room.
15 multiple organ failure up on presentation to emergency room.
16 tial diagnosis of the epigastric pain in the emergency room.
17 in intensive care units, surgical wards, or emergency rooms.
18 ce and there are increasing presentations to emergency rooms.
19 from cultures of blood collected in the DUMC emergency room, 26 (48%) were identified as skin contami
22 tions occurred in those who presented to the emergency room (73.1% vs 63.9%, p=<0.017), but the numbe
23 In acute-care settings such as clinics and emergency rooms, a desirable chlamydia screening assay s
25 tratum (patients who were discharged from an emergency room), admission stratum (patients who were ad
26 number of hospital, intensive care unit, and emergency room admissions decreased from 2.56, 0.87, and
27 t was 8 years (range, 0-38) for hospital and emergency room admissions with infections (n = 20 394) u
29 ntigraphy within 12 h of presentation in the emergency room, after abdominal helical CT showed findin
31 g during their third trimester to clinics or emergency room and collected 143 unique vaginal samples
33 t with such a "bundle-based approach" in the emergency room and in preoperative and postoperative sce
35 cal and imaging work-up of chest pain in the emergency room and provide a framework for understanding
36 two occasions, the patient presented to the emergency room and urine specimens were sent to the clin
38 o a statewide database documenting hospital, emergency room, and ambulatory surgery visits and invest
39 ges for initial and repeat hospitalizations, emergency room, and day surgery stays and the costs of a
43 from the time of initial presentation to the emergency room, and it provided 16% improvement in avera
44 the operating room and 0.96 (SD 0.06) in the emergency room, and mean paired differences (yi - xi) we
45 f health care utilization (eg, primary care, emergency room, and mental health visits) and the daily
47 nsisting of academic medical centre clinics, emergency rooms, and private physician offices in the US
51 80 students and 19 staff members went to the emergency room at the local hospital; 38 persons were ho
52 than the cultures of blood collected in the emergency rooms at MNH and LCH combined (26/332 versus 1
54 ings may help community clinics and hospital emergency rooms better predict conjunctivitis cases and
55 resenting to the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute Emergency Room between 2021 and 2022 with XEN stent-rela
56 lthcare (23.8% versus 2.5%; P < 0.001), more emergency room care (14.2% versus 2.5%; P = 0.02), and m
59 mmon pediatric emergency, accounting for 150 emergency room dental consultations per year at Children
60 l corticosteroid (LTOCS) use, asthma-related emergency room (ER) attendance, and hospital admissions.
61 respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the emergency room (ER) is distinguishing between cardiac vs
62 in the final 30 days of life, more than one emergency room (ER) or hospital admission in the final 3
63 microbiologists but also by primary care and emergency room (ER) physicians, infectious disease speci
65 entiated by care pathway and assigned to the emergency room (ER) stratum (patients who were discharge
66 head CT scans of patients admitted from the emergency room (ER) to the Radiology Department due to s
67 The primary composite outcome was all-cause emergency room (ER) visit, hospitalization, or death at
68 11.1-24.0% of patients had a hospitalisation/emergency room (ER) visit, median stay range: 1.5-12.0 d
69 Ab therapy in decreasing hospitalizations or emergency room (ER) visits among kidney transplant recip
70 onitoring on system-level outcomes including emergency room (ER) visits and hospitalizations remains
71 Main Results: Overall healthcare spending on emergency room (ER) visits and hospitalizations were a m
72 an increase in reoperation, readmission, or emergency room (ER) visits at 30 or 90 days (30D reopera
73 sociation between heavy rainfall and rate of emergency room (ER) visits for gastrointestinal (GI) ill
74 evels, we examined the relationship of daily emergency room (ER) visits for respiratory illnesses (25
75 vestigate association between SSO events and emergency room (ER) visits with a primary diagnosis of g
76 d based on healthcare professional (HCP) and emergency room (ER) visits, hospitalizations in the past
79 pneumonia (PCP) in AIDS patients seen in the emergency room (ER), aiming to guide empirical treatment
82 thunderstorm-affected patients presenting to emergency rooms (ERs), we investigated risk factors pred
85 ide or sotalol presenting to the hospital or emergency room for any reason, rates of ventricular arrh
86 A 28-year-old man was transferred to our emergency room for dyspnea and wheals on the entire body
87 o-esophageal reflux disease presented to the emergency room for evaluation of one week of severe odyn
89 be seen by a general practitioner or in the emergency room for their SLE, and reported more visits t
90 ts presented to its tertiary-care ophthalmic emergency room for treatment, and 3 additional patients
91 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)
93 The places of death were categorized as the emergency room, hospice/nursing home, inpatient medical
94 ubjects admitted to Oulu University Hospital emergency room in 1999 with an acute head trauma (n = 73
95 aph (CXR) examination rates in the pediatric emergency room in southern Israel before and after PCV i
96 diograph (CXR) examination in the pediatrics emergency room in southern Israel before and after PCV i
98 aged <5 years who visited the only pediatric emergency room in the district during a 6-year period (2
99 se in the number of visits to physicians and emergency rooms in the 6 months after ablation compared
100 wo hundred adult (>18 yrs) patients from the emergency room, intensive care units, and general medici
101 nts for one third of angioedema cases in the emergency room; it is usually manifested in the upper ai
102 lability of portable CT scan machines in the emergency room, may improve the speed and accuracy of th
103 ards to PPE, N95 masks were available in the emergency room (n = 40 [64.5%]), office (n = 35 [56.5%])
104 s to be admitted to the hospital through the emergency room (odds ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval
105 ciations were also strong for high levels of emergency room (odds ratio, 2.73; P < .0001) and primary
106 goal of this study is to compare ophthalmic emergency room (OER) visits during the Coronavirus disea
107 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
108 ty rates of psychiatric patients seen in the emergency room of a large Department of Veterans Affairs
109 thma in Soba or Ahmed Gasim hospitals or the Emergency room of Ahmed Gasim or Ibrahim Malik hospital
111 a from 806 COVID-19 patients admitted to the emergency room of Chungbuk National University Hospital,
112 en <2 years old attended for mild TBI in the emergency room of our tertiary hospital over a 4-year pe
113 rates for cultures of blood obtained in the emergency rooms of Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH) in
114 aths occurring out of the hospital or in the emergency room or as "dead on arrival" with an underlyin
117 ed strategy of immediate thrombolysis in the emergency room or in the ambulance followed by angioplas
118 her early administration of tirofiban in the emergency room or later administration in the catheteriz
119 he sponge group were more likely to visit an emergency room or surgeon's office owing to a wound-rela
121 5 respirator mask in the clinic (P < 0.001), emergency room (P < 0.001), or operating room (P = 0.002
122 ime from onset of symptoms to arrival at the emergency room (patient interval) and from arrival to th
124 aging, particularly in low-intermediate-risk emergency room patients who are a population likely to h
125 value chain") of critical care patients: the emergency room, patients who are admitted for other prob
128 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)
129 NS-AMI) trial had BNP levels measured in the emergency room prior to primary percutaneous coronary in
130 to 1.15) and hospital admissions through the emergency room (rate ratio, 1.19; 95 percent confidence
131 nition tool-the Recognition of Stroke in the Emergency Room (ROSIER) scale-for use by ER physicians.
132 ons were performed on those evaluated in the emergency room setting versus those evaluated in the out
137 es for culture are obtained in U.S. hospital emergency rooms should help mitigate blood culture conta
138 healthcare role the individual is in (Nurse, Emergency Room Staff, Surgeon, etc.), followed by the am
139 used steroid and to have attended a hospital emergency room; the size of the effect upon steroid use
141 hundred patients evaluated by the chest pain emergency room to rule out AMI underwent IETT using a mo
144 m (patient interval) and from arrival to the emergency room to the operating room (hospital interval)
145 care, and 17 focused on acute care including emergency room, trauma, and management of patients with
148 re buccal midazolam with rectal diazepam for emergency-room treatment of children aged 6 months and o
149 outcome of expanding TS coverage from acute emergency room triage to incorporate inpatient consultat
150 lab draws; radiology, increasing the use of emergency room ultrasound and accepting outside x-rays;
151 to an urban tertiary care hospital from the emergency room under the care of noninvasive or invasive
152 d the relationship between SES and increased emergency room/urgent care visits and worse asthma contr
153 ar before enrollment (corticosteroid bursts, emergency room/urgent care visits, or hospitalizations),
155 volunteer-administered outreach program with emergency room utilization and hospitalization among old
157 d more in patients who were evaluated in the emergency room versus those who were not (91.8% vs 70.8%
158 confidence interval [95% CI], 3.93 to 4.04), emergency room visit (OR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.87 to 2.14), o
159 CI, 0.30-0.80; P = .004) and hospitalization/emergency room visit (relative rate, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.33-
160 .8) people with asthma reported at least one emergency room visit and 7.2% (4.9-10.5) at least one ho
161 utcome was a composite of hospitalization or emergency room visit for congestive heart failure (CHF),
162 gh to result in a second outpatient visit or emergency room visit for musculoskeletal pain within 30
163 d/or antibiotics (moderate to severe) and/or emergency room visit or hospitalization (severe), were a
164 augmentation of heart failure therapy or an emergency room visit or hospitalization for increased he
166 re hospitalization or hospitalization and/or emergency room visit rates in patients with severe eosin
167 ncy (ascertained by psychiatric admission or emergency room visit), a proxy measure of severe exacerb
168 lization of health resources (odds ratio>/=2 emergency room visit, 1.41 [95% confidence interval, 1.0
169 tions and time to severe psychiatric events (emergency room visit, hospitalization, and suicide).
170 We assessed the risk of hospitalization, emergency room visit, or intensive-coronary care unit (I
171 ne burdensome intervention (hospitalization, emergency room visit, parenteral therapy, or tube feedin
176 icosteroids, or admission to hospital, or an emergency-room visit, or a combination of these occurren
177 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 = .
178 lization (5.6 more events per patient-year), emergency room visits (1.1 more visits), and ICU-CCU adm
180 escriptions, the frequency of asthma-related emergency room visits (ARERs), and asthma-related hospit
182 t home care recipients had 21% fewer overall emergency room visits [95% confidence interval (CI): 3%-
184 The authors estimated that approximately 90 emergency room visits and 9 admissions per month were av
187 lled case series study design, they examined emergency room visits and hospital admissions occurring
188 SA use, (3) healthcare resource utilization: emergency room visits and hospital stays, and (4) total
189 n (SBO) remains one of the leading causes of emergency room visits and is still associated with high
190 red home care might be effective in reducing emergency room visits and non-acute hospitalization, as
192 r from the index hospital also had increased emergency room visits and were more likely to be readmit
193 mportant events such as hospitalizations and emergency room visits are rare and difficult to characte
195 acerbations requiring hospitalization and/or emergency room visits compared with placebo in patients
196 medication (OR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.2 to 3.7) or emergency room visits during the previous year (OR, 3.4;
198 entrations were consistently associated with emergency room visits for all respiratory illnesses.
202 , 1.33-7.45) were positively associated with emergency room visits for asthma in the past 12 months.
207 he composite end point of rehospitalization, emergency room visits for HF, and mortality through 60 d
208 between airborne allergen concentrations and emergency room visits for myocardial infarction (MI) in
209 ve potential modified the impact of PM2.5 on emergency room visits for respiratory illnesses (P = 0.0
210 onths, wheeze during exercise, doctor and/or emergency room visits for wheeze, and use of prescriptio
211 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
212 ian electronic order entry for chemotherapy, emergency room visits or hospitalizations during chemoth
213 reaction results performed in adults during emergency room visits or hospitalizations were reviewed.
214 avert 30% more hospitalizations and 39% more emergency room visits overall, and 44% and 44%, respecti
215 positively and significantly associated with emergency room visits related to asthma (incident rate r
216 eported fewer and shorter AF episodes, fewer emergency room visits secondary to AF, and fewer hospita
217 ac-related unplanned hospital admissions and emergency room visits than the control group at 6-month
218 inic visits and a higher rate of urgent care/emergency room visits than whites, although these differ
219 his case-crossover study, the records of all emergency room visits to Soroka University Medical Cente
220 d RR 1.59 (95% CI 1.21-2.09), respectively); emergency room visits was increased by 80% (RR 1.79 (95%
222 medication (OR, 1.4; 95% CI, 1.1 to 1.8) or emergency room visits within the previous year (OR, 1.9;
223 ,000/year) and accounts for more than 56,000 emergency room visits, 2,600 hospitalizations, and an es
224 ons between air pollution concentrations and emergency room visits, adjusting for time-varying covari
225 e of acute exacerbation of COPD resulting in emergency room visits, admission to hospital, or need to
226 ed on the number of doctor visits, all-cause emergency room visits, all-cause hospitalizations, and P
228 er PCI, clopidogrel adherence, physician and emergency room visits, and hospitalization were similar
229 ence of influenza-related outpatient visits, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations, along with
230 alization, readmissions, physician services, emergency room visits, and postdischarge ancillary care
231 ograms did not reduce hospital admissions or emergency room visits, as compared with usual care.
233 urce use (hospital/intensive care unit days, emergency room visits, chemotherapy in last 14 days, and
234 , 5 utilization variables (physician visits, emergency room visits, chiropractic visits, physical the
235 Outcomes of interest included freedom from emergency room visits, hospitalization, and survival in
236 V-related outcomes included primary care and emergency room visits, hospitalizations including intens
237 were significant reductions in the number of emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and severe acut
239 treatments very near death; a high number of emergency room visits, inpatient hospital admissions, or
240 ant differences in total mortality, syncope, emergency room visits, or unscheduled outpatient visits.
241 were evaluated for hospital inpatient stays, emergency room visits, outpatient visits, office-based m
242 te of dislodgement of up to 30% resulting in emergency room visits, repeat hospitalizations, and cath
243 with reduced all-cause hospitalizations and emergency room visits, severe acute exacerbations, and h
244 s had 103% more outpatient visits, 177% more emergency room visits, were hospitalised 4-times more fr
254 dmissions to hospital were one and four; and emergency-room visits were 11 and 16, respectively.
255 er of hospitalized days admitted through the emergency room was 10% higher among home care recipients
257 Cultures of blood collected in the DUMC emergency room were significantly more likely to yield g
258 nded-spectrum dominant exposure patterns (an emergency room where patients were exposed to one type o
260 all, 27.8% of consultations were called from emergency rooms, whereas the rest occurred afterward.
261 on maintenance hemodialysis presented to the emergency room with abdominal discomfort, rectal pain, a
262 ntial diagnosis in patient presenting to the emergency room with abrupt onset focal neurological defi
263 tudy with 20 patients included, presented to emergency room with acute abdominal pain diagnosed as pr
265 eveloped anaphylaxis or were admitted to the emergency room with anaphylaxis in the training and teac
266 68 +/- 15 years, 54% men) presenting to the emergency room with chest pain, we studied the relations
269 mellitus under poor control presented to our emergency room with fever, sore throat, cough and poor a
270 We present a rare case presenting to our emergency room with the complaint of bloody vomiting, at
271 years, visiting the only regional Pediatric Emergency Room, with radiologically proven CAAP were enr
272 hemodialysis will be readmitted or visit an emergency room within 30 days of an acute hospitalizatio
273 out heparin) and the other presenting to the emergency room without prior hospitalization, heparin ex
274 fields of imaging, thrombectomy devices, and emergency room workflow management, as well as improveme