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Psychosocial Care for Injured Children: Worldwide Survey among Hospital Emergency Department Staff.
(Elsevier, 2015-12-17)To examine emergency department (ED) staff's knowledge of traumatic stress in children, attitudes toward providing psychosocial care, and confidence in doing so, and also to examine differences in these outcomes according ... -
ED, email, emess!
(BMJ, 2013-01)Email has transformed communication in the National Health Service. Handling a torrent of unfocused communication is a potential burden on the clinician's time and a source of stress at work. A prospective study of the ... -
Book Reviews
(MAG Online Library, 2016-02-02) -
Care rounds: hot patient feedback enabling team care education.
(MAG Online Library, 2016-05-02) -
Seconds out: time to beat the clock in A&E.
(Health Service Journal, 2013-09-06) -
Managing frostbite in a South African patient.
(Wiley, 2013-08)This report focuses on a 23-year-old man of African-Caribbean origin who presented to a Burns unit with soft-tissue loss following a road traffic collision (RTC) in an extremely cold weather. Having been involved in the ... -
Improving paediatric pain management: introducing the 'Pain Passport'.
(BMJ, 2013-01)The 'Pain Passport' is a novel method of improving the management of pain in children. It consists of a leaflet carried by the patient which records serial pain scores. It attempts to empower patients and prompt medical ... -
Coma due to cannabis toxicity in an infant.
(Wolters Kluwer, 2006-06)In young children, cannabis ingestion resulting in coma is very rare. Only nine cases have been reported in the literature and most have occurred in inquisitive toddlers. We review the cases to date and report the youngest ... -
The psychological health and well-being of emergency medicine consultants in the UK.
(BMJ, 2016-10-13)To explore the experience of psychological distress and well-being in emergency medicine (EM) consultants. -
Capnography for procedural sedation in the ED: a systematic review.
(BMJ, 2016-08-26)Procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA) is commonplace in the ED. Previous studies have identified capnography as a reliable indicator of PSA-induced respiratory depression. This review investigates the potential effect ...