PRIMARY SURVEY
Primary survey
Thinking, not doing (for once)
Its good, once in a while, to take a moment to explore the philosophical issues that often lurk unseen in our rather frenetic specialty. Rick Body and Bernard Föex provide the basis for many such moments in their thoughtful piece on diagnosis and utilitarianism. Starting with a description of our positivist approach to diagnosis they argue that it is an untenable proposition. Passing by Oslers ageless wisdom they touch on Baysean concepts and discuss whether "doing no harm" is possible in a world of false positives and false negatives. Then they describe utilitarianism and explore its place in modern medicine. If you didnt know that the Greeks had three different terms for knowledge and if you want to indulge in a bit of thinking and reflection then read this excellent article (see page 238).
3 minute predictor
In an interesting preliminary paper Andy Pan and colleagues, from Ottawa, report on the predictive value of a simple 3 minute walk test as a predictor for the need for admission in patients with dyspnoea or stable chest pain. In the small numbers of patients studied it certainly seems that this simple test had some predictive value and that it deserves more investigation. A multicentre study is planned (see page 278).
Prediction
Prediction is a bit of a theme this month with two other papers seeking to see if the future can be predicted. In the first Susanna Au-Yeung and colleagues from the Departments of Computing and Mathematics at Imperial College London use historical data to build a predictive model for walk-in and ambulance attenders. They find that their model has more success in the former than the latter and they discuss possible reasons for this. They conclude that their predictions for walk-in patients can have value for emergency department managers seeking the holy grail of matching resources with demand in an efficient way. Read the paper and decide for yourself (see page 241). Our second predictive paper is clinical rather than operational. Christine Vorwerk and co-workers from Leicester explore the efficacy of a number of physiological scores and measures at predicting 28-day mortality in patients with sepsis. They find that the abbreviated Mortality in Emergency Department Sepsis score is the best performer and go on to suggest that it may aid clinical decision making in sepsis—see whether you agree (see page 254).
Calculation
Staying with a mathematical theme we also have a couple of papers this month that look at calculation. Marianne Toftegaard and colleagues from Denmark seek to explore whether a mathematical treatment of venous blood gas results in better correlation with arterial sample values. They find that both pH and PCO2 can be calculated precisely but PO2 cannot (see page 268). In another paper Andrew Lindford and co-workers look at the accuracy of healthcare professionals at calculating fluid resuscitation requirements in burnt patients. It seems that the simpler you make it for people the more likely they are to get the calculation right (see page 245).
Patients from care homes
In a paper from Scotland, Lisa Carter and others report the results of their study into the old chestnut of patients brought to emergency departments from care homes (a generic term covering both nursing and social care environments). They looked at consecutive attendees at the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh arriving over one month. They asked three practicing general practitioners to review the case records and to say whether they thought the patient could have been cared for out of hospital. The wide disparity of opinion among these doctors is, to me, the most interesting finding in this study. These decisions really arent either easy or clear cut (see page 259).
Improvised rockets and mass casualties
In a topical paper from Israel, Dagan Schwartz and colleagues give a structured report into a mass casualty incident caused by an improvised rocket. This paper is interesting not only for the description of the incident and the response (and the lessons that can be learnt by us all from that), but also for the structured reporting methodology itself. Major incidents are rare and structured reports, such as this, help planners and responders to maximise the learning (see page 293).
...and finally
Just to remind us all that conditions that we worry about actually do exist, Hoon Lim and co-workers from South Korea report the case of a middle-aged woman who suffered from ricin poisoning. This patient had eaten five castor beans for constipation, not been poisoned by terrorists, and fortunately did well with general supportive therapy (see page 301).
Relevant Articles
- On the philosophy of diagnosis: is doing more good than harm better than "primum non nocere"?
- R Body, B Foex
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 238-240.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Predicting patient arrivals to an accident and emergency department
- S W M Au-Yeung, U Harder, E J McCoy, W J Knottenbelt
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 241-244.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Prediction of mortality in adult emergency department patients with sepsis
- C Vorwerk, B Loryman, T J Coats, J A Stephenson, L D Gray, G Reddy, L Florence, N Butler
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 254-258.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Patients from care homes who attend the emergency department: could they be managed differently
- L Carter, J Skinner, S Robinson
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 259-262.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Evaluation of a method for converting venous values of acid-base and oxygenation status to arterial values
- M Toftegaard, S E Rees, S Andreassen
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 268-272.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- Feasibility of a structured 3-minute walk test as a clinical decision tool for patients presenting to the emergency department with acute dyspnoea
- A M Pan, I G Stiell, C M Clement, J Acheson, S D Aaron
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 278-282.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- A single, improvised "Kassam" rocket explosion can cause a mass casualty incident: a potential threat for future international terrorism?
- D Schwartz, I Ostfeld, Y Bar-Dayan
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 293-298.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
- A case of ricin poisoning following ingestion of Korean castor bean
- H Lim, H J Kim, Y S Cho
Emerg. Med. J. 2009 26: 301-302.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
Register for free content
The full back archive is now available for all BMJ Journals. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006 right back to volume 1 issue 1. Register here to access the free archive of all BMJ Journals.
Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.
