eLetters

860 e-Letters

  • HIRT - the pain of prehospital research
    Minh Le Cong

    Dear editor I wish to congratulate the authors of the HIRT trial on finally publishing their results. Whilst a negative trial for primary outcomes, to me it highlighted the major challenges in conducting high quality RCTs in prehospital setting. Few countries have been able to perform this level of prehospital research and it can only advance the future planning of prehospital studies trying to examine the very same questi...

    Show More
  • Re: A simple tool to predict admission at the time of triage. More ammunition in the fight against blaming patients.
    Luke A Evans

    We congratulate the authors on this excellent piece of work and are particularly pleased to see method of arrival in their tool as a predictor of admission. In a similar piece of work to predict surgical admissions in our institution we found the same effect (1). At a time when it seems to be politically expedient to scapegoat patients for the overcrowding in our departments and lack of available beds on the wards it is...

    Show More
  • Communicating Pain and Suffering: The PENS Acronym.
    Mark J. Greenwood

    Communicating Pain and Suffering: The PENS Acronym.

    We would like to thank the authors of this study both for reminding us of what is our primary objective as healthcare providers -- to relieve pain and suffering; and for providing the evidence that suggests that we often are failing in this objective. As medical crewmembers in helicopter EMS, we appreciate the need to elicit accurately, and to relay effective...

    Show More
  • Teamwork in paediatric emergency medicine
    Fenella J. Corrick

    I read with interest the study by Bloch and Bloch demonstrating the effectiveness of observation-based simulation training. As they discussed, simulation training not only improves attendees' knowledge and skills but can also improve teamwork and communication[1].

    As reflected in this article, simulation training is typically run on a departmental basis. However, increasingly emergency medicine involves a multidi...

    Show More
  • Serious about change
    Eva F Howard

    I agree with Antrum and Ho (EMJ 2015;32:171-172) that formal Pre- Hospital Training should be included in all Undergraduate Medical Curriculums. They will be pleased to hear that a nationwide Faculty of Pre -Hospital Care Undergraduate Committee has been set-up, aiming to springboard ideas and information about events, funding and training in pre-hospital care, to all healthcare students. Antrum and Ho quite rightly realis...

    Show More
  • ANTRUM AND HO (EMJ 2015;32:171-172)
    Colville Laird

    Dear Editor

    ANTRUM AND HO (EMJ 2015;32:171-172)

    Antrum and Ho (EMJ 2015;32:171-172) identify an important issue in identifying the deficiency in medical education due to the lack of formal training in pre-hospital medical care at most medical schools in the UK.

    There are obvious benefits of increasing the number of trained professionals able to provide pre-hospital care it is important that all medical gradua...

    Show More
  • Dear Mr. Brody (correct salutation?)
    Steven L. Joffe, M.D.

    Your article on ED patients' suffering came to me only this week through Medscape.com. I would like to thank you for your analysis and for bringing this topic to the surface.

    I have been waiting thirty years for this concept to be treated in the scientific literature. When I started practice in 1983 in a busy urban academic Emergency Department in Baltimore, Maryland, and for the next twenty-five years, THIS was...

    Show More
  • Alternative to the use of an LMA bite guard
    Andrew Mason

    An alternative to the use of a bite guard in conjunction with the LMA would be to employ the intubating laryngeal mask airway (iLMA), since the single-use version of the iLMA has a rigid plastic airway tube which resists occlusion by biting, as does the silicone-coated stainless steel tube with the reusable version. Additional benefits would be that the iLMA can facilitate seamless progression to blind tracheal intubation...

    Show More
  • Precision of paediatric weight estimates
    Giles N Cattermole

    Editor,

    Skrobo and Kelleher rightly stress the importance of accurate, rapid weight estimation in children when the situation precludes actual measurement of their weight.[1] They also rightly emphasise the need for estimation tools to be validated locally.

    The CORKSCREW study convincingly demonstrates that the mean bias of weight estimates using the Luscombe formula (3xage+7) is much smaller than that...

    Show More
  • Increasing the use of the fascia iliaca compartment block for patients with a fractured neck of femur: a quality improvement project
    Andrew J. Tabner
    We read with interest the article by Rashid et al (1) documenting current UK practice with regards to hip fractures (HF) and regional analgesia (RA); only 44% of their respondents reported local use of RA for this indication. The two main reasons highlighted were lack of equipment availability and lack of staff training; they therefore suggest that an appropriate protocol, a "Hip Block Box", audit and staff training may i...
    Show More

Pages