Search results for "Emergency Nursing"
showing 10 items of 117 documents
European Resuscitation Council Guidelines for Resuscitation 2015
2015
Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Royal United Hospital, Bath, UK School of Clinical Sciences, University of Bristol, UK Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital of Cologne, Germany Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK Department of Anesthesiology, University Medical Center, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany SAMU de Paris, Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Necker University Hospital, Paris, France Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency Medical Service, Santa Maria degl…
Recommendations for uniform reporting of data following major trauma — the Utstein style
1999
Members: W.F. Dick (Co-Chairman) (Germany); P.J.F. Baskett (Co-Chairman) (UK); C.M. Grande (USA); H. Delooz (Belgium); W. Kloeck (South Africa); C. Lackner (Austria); M. Lipp (Germany); W. Mauritz (Austria); M. Nerlich (Germany); J. Nicholl (UK); J.P. Nolan (UK); P. Oakley (UK); M.J.A. Parr (UK), A. Seekamp (Belgium); E. Soreide (Norway); P.A. Steen (Norway); Luc van Camp (Belgium); B. Wolcke (Germany); D. Yates (UK).
Anesthesia for Victims of the Earthquake in Iran 1978
1985
Anesthesia in disaster medicine, especially as practiced in developing countries, is fundamentally different from the anesthesia that is practiced during normal situations. Anesthetic procedures suitable for disaster situations must often take place under minimal conditions of instrumental availability and in a setting of less than modern technology. Such conditions, of course, limit the use of inhalatory anesthetics.The key factor present in disaster situations is the disturbed relationship between the number of injured, on the one hand, and the available resources to treat them, on the other. This includes medical personnel—both professional and para-professional. This has been substantia…
Friedrich Wilhelm Ahnefeld
2013
Effectiveness and safety of electrical cardioversion for acute-onset atrial fibrillation in the emergency department: a real-world 10-year single cen…
2019
OBJECTIVE Despite limited evidence, electrical cardioversion of acute-onset atrial fibrillation (AAF) is widely performed in the emergency department (ED). The aim of this study was to describe the effectiveness and safety of electrical cardioversion of AAF performed by emergency physicians in the ED. METHODS All episodes of AAF electrically cardioverted in the ED were retrieved from the database for a 10-year period. Most patients not already receiving anticoagulants were given enoxaparin before the procedure (259/419). Procedural complications were recorded, and the patients were followed-up for 30 days for cardiovascular and hemorrhagic complications. RESULTS Four hundred nineteen eligib…