© 2003 BMJ Publishing Group, British Association for Accident & Emergency Medicine, & Faculty of Accident & Emergency Medicine
Primary Survey
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Papers in this issue from Australia and the United States are comforting to those of us in the UK who sometimes feel that long waits for hospital admission are a problem of the National Health Service, especially when other health systems are held up as examples of how it could be better. Equally stunning is the experience from Toronto during the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic. Paradoxically the ED seemed to be quiet. On reflection it is perhaps not such a surprise. Patients are often very astute assessing risks and benefits and if the hospital appears more dangerous than their symptoms, they will seek help from other sources. Equally when a health system focuses all its resources on emergency demand and reduces routine elective work it can cope with most disasters in the short term.
Unfortunately quick fixes do not work in the long term. The papers on this
Relevant Articles
- Sex, SARS, and the Holy Grail
- M J Schull
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 400-401.[Extract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Emergency department overcrowding in the United States: an emerging threat to patient safety and public health
- S Trzeciak, E P Rivers
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 402-405.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Entry overload, emergency department overcrowding, and ambulance bypass
- D M Fatovich, R L Hirsch
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 406-409.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Nurse administered relative analgesia using high concentration nitrous oxide to facilitate minor procedures in children in an emergency department
- A Frampton, G J Browne, L T Lam, M G Cooper, L G Lane
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 410-413.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Mapping the range and scope of emergency nurse practitioner services in the Northern and Yorkshire Region: a telephone survey
- S Marr, K Steele, V Swallow, S Craggs, S Procter, J Newton, B Sen, A McNabb
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 414-417.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Nurse initiated thrombolysis in the accident and emergency department: safe, accurate, and faster than fast track
- S M Heath, R J I Bain, A Andrews, S Chida, S I Kitchen, M I Walters
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 418-420.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Predictors of falls in a high risk population: results from the prevention of falls in the elderly trial (PROFET)
- J C T Close, R Hooper, E Glucksman, S H D Jackson, C G Swift
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 421-425.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- How well does decision support software perform in the emergency department?
- M A Graber, D VanScoy
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 426-428.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- How evidence based are therapeutic decisions taken on a medical admissions unit?
- R D Hardern, F T Leong, A-V Page, M Shepherd, R C M Teoh
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 447-448.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Comparison of a long spinal board and vacuum mattress for spinal immobilisation
- M D Luscombe, J L Williams
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 476-478.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Review of prehospital sodium bicarbonate use for cyclic antidepressant overdose
- T Calkins, T C Chan, R F Clark, B Stepanski, G M Vilke
Emerg. Med. J. 2003 20: 483-486.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
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