Continuous Glucose Monitoring for Emergency Laparotomy
PeritonitisSurgical Site Infection3 moreCLUE trial aims to determine the feasibility and predictive value for surgical site infection (SSI) of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in emergency laparotomy patients with diffuse peritonitis.
Geriatric Transitional Care for Older Patients Discharged From the Emergency Department: Impact...
Hospital Readmissions of Elderly PatientsElderly adults have high rates of emergency department (ED) visits. Specificities of this population challenge organizations of care in the ED, and older adults are at risk of pejorative outcomes after an ED stay. Numerous interventions have been designed to improve quality of care and outcomes for the older population in these settings, with a specific attention to concerning discharge from the ED. These interventions are interdisciplinary, bridging emergency and geriatric care. The wide range and complexity of these interventions make them difficult to assess and compare, as highlighted by several reviews in the past ten years. Prior analyses helped to categorize different intervention strategies and three main designs: inhospital, community and transitional interventions started in the ED and pursued in collaboration with community primary care professionals . Theses analyses show that the use of multiple strategies and transitional models of care tend to lead to better outcomes, and underline that more robust studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis. In France a majority of EDs collaborate with Geriatric Mobile Teams (GMT) to improve quality of care for older patients. GMTs are dedicated to patients over 75 years old, and interventions in EDs are targeted on patients at risk of worse outcome. When ED physicians detect older patients at risk they may call for the GMT for further assessment and management. GMTs either work in a inhospital standard approach or with a transitional care management. This second strategy, less common in France, is thought to be be efficient and has never been assessed. We have designed a study to compare these methods, with the hypothesis that among at-risk older adults, hospital-community transition care initiated by GMTs during an ED visit with direct discharge home will be associated with a reduction in the risk of early readmission within 30 days, and lower risk of loss of independence at 3 and 6 months. It is a french multicentric study, with a quasi-experimental design, comparing hospitals without transitional care management to hospitals with hospital-community transitional intervention. We aim at enrolling 1322 patients aged 75 and more at risk of pejorative outcomes as determined by the Triage Risk Screening Toll (TRST). The main outcome is a revisit to the ED between day 7 and day 30, secondary outcomes are autonomy, mortality, use of hospital services and caregiving at home at 6 months.
The Use of a Monitoring Device by General Practitioners During Out-of-hours Care
EmergenciesHeart Failure13 moreAll calls that end up on the out-of-hours general practitioners' service (OHGPS), which contain a demand for an urgent home visit, are passed on to the on-call general practitioner (GP). These calls are randomized into two arms: after the patient's informed consent, they are assigned either to one arm where the monitoring device, PICO, is applied together with the GP's general care or to the other arm where only the usual care is provided. All data such as suspected diagnosis, treatment or referral, influence of the parameters, ECG and/or alarms on the management and the user-friendliness are recorded. After 30 days, the diagnosis and evolution is requested from the patient's own GP or, if referred to a hospital, in the hospital in order to be able to compare the effect of the approach by the GP between both arms. The aim is to investigate if 1/ the use of the PICO monitoring device could improve GPs' decisions to refer to hospital or not in urgent cases; 2/ there is a difference between the diagnosis with and without the use of the monitoring device using the final diagnosis by the electronic health record of the own GP of the patient; 3/ the call to send a GP for an emergency contained sufficient information for the OHGPS phone operator to take an appropriate decision; 4/ the build-in alarms help the GP during his intervention; 5/ the PICO is easy to use during an emergency; 6/ the use of the device makes them feel more confident in transmitting the information to the Medical Emergency Team.
The Holographic Standardized Patient
Medical EmergenciesEducational Problems1 moreThe current pandemic has revealed in-person simulation training and evaluation is vulnerable to disruption, and alternatives are needed which allow remote evaluation. The recently developed Microsoft Hololens headset device allows interactable holograms to be inserted into a user's workspace (mixed reality) - permitting the augmentation of existing clinical and training spaces with holographic (i.e. virtual) patients via the prototype HoloSIM software. This study is the first known research initiative aiming to demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of mixed reality for acute medicine training and assessment at a distance. Space, time, personnel, pandemic, and cost constraints limit opportunities for high-fidelity simulation exercises for post-graduate trainees at Sunnybrook. By developing and demonstrating the effectiveness of this new training modality, increased simulation exercises will lead to a higher quality education experience, better functioning teams, and better patient outcomes.
Telehealth-Enhanced Asthma Care for Home After the Emergency Room
Asthma in ChildrenThe investigators propose a randomized controlled trial of Telehealth-Enhanced Asthma Care for Home After the Emergency Room (TEACH-ER) vs. enhanced care (EC). TEACH-ER includes: 1) brief, pictorial, and health literacy-informed asthma education in the ED, with color- and shape-coded labels provided for home asthma medications; 2) virtual primary care follow-up within 1 week of discharge using in-home telemedicine (Zoom), featuring provider prompts for guideline-based preventive therapy and home delivery of prescribed medications with pictorial action plans; 3) two additional in-home virtual visits to reinforce teaching, review treatment plans, label medications, and support effective management practices. The investigators will enroll 430 children (ages 3-12 yrs) from the two dedicated pediatric EDs in our region, and follow all participants for a 12-month period. The investigators will call caregivers to complete blinded follow-up telephone surveys at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after discharge. The investigators will assess the effectiveness of TEACH-ER in reducing the need for additional asthma-related ED visits or hospitalizations in the 1-months after enrollment. Additional outcomes of interest include asthma symptoms, medication adherence, absenteeism from work and school, quality of life, and the delivery of care consistent with national asthma care guidelines.
Evaluation of Mobile App to Assist in Pediatric Triage
Pediatric Triage in a Pediatric Emergency DepartmentEach ED manages a wide variety of pathologies ranging from a simple general consultation to a life-threatening emergency. Patients require prioritization and triaging as soon as they reach the ED and cannot be seen purely in the order of arrival. This triage is mostly carried out by a nurse at the triage zone who must quickly identify high-emergency patients requiring immediate care and organize their care pathway. The triage nurse uses a decision support tool known as a triage tool. In 2000, the PED of the University Hospital of Nice (France) created a 5-level pediatric triage tool - the pediaTRI - based on clinical items of inspection, interview, and analysis of vital signs. In a pediatric ED (PED) setting, a high-level emergency corresponds to a child presenting an immediate life-threatening risk that could lead to cardio-respiratory arrest or a related emergency, and thus requires rapid intervention. These patients, for whom a Level 1 or 2 is usually assigned by commonly used pediatric triage tools, can also be screened using warning scores that are predictive of clinical deterioration within 24 hours after visiting the PED. Among them, the Pediatric Early Warning System (PEWS) system, created in 2001, is considered to be efficient, easy to use, and reliable. According to the literature, the optimal cutoff level to calculate the sensitivity and specificity for admission to an ICU, defined as a high-level emergency, is ≥ 4/9. Vitals signs used to calculate the PEWS are usually collected by the nurse at the triage zone. However, new technology such as mobile application may be also used to capture those vital signs (i-Virtual). Since the parameters of the PEWS system may be evaluate by parents using the application, the investigators want to analyze their ability to assess the level of severity of their children by scoring PEWS in a pediatric emergency department using the mobile application Caducy® (i-Virtual)
Impact of a Protocol for Announcing Decision of Withholding and Withdrawing Life-sustaining Treatments...
End of LifeDeath is a daily reality in the emergency department. Deaths represent 0.3 to 0.5% of emergency admissions, i.e. approximately 26,000 per year for the whole of France. For 80% of these deceased patients, a decision of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments was made in the emergency departments. The announcement of death and decision of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments in this context is complex because of the lack of time and the inappropriate places for the announcement. In addition, the short delay in the occurrence of these events may increase the stress and anxiety of families who are unprepared for the announcement. However, there is little data in the literature on the impact on families in terms of their experience of announcements in the emergency context. It has been established that symptoms of anxiety and depression are correlated with the onset of posttraumatic stress disorder and that the latter is more important in the families of deceased patients and after a decision to undergo decision of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments in the intensive care unit. In order to identify it, several tools have been developed, including the Impact Event Scale (IES), which has been widely used to detect symptoms related to PTSD. It has also been shown that training nursing staff in communication skills or the use of written support in dealing with the families of patients who have died in intensive care reduces the appearance of post-traumatic stress symptoms. Human simulation is a pedagogical technique for learning interpersonal skills through role playing. It is used, among other things, in announcement situations in medicine. Nevertheless, its impact in emergency medicine has not been evaluated. Moreover, it has been shown that the involvement of the patient-partner in the care process must be improved and encouraged and that its impact has yet to be evaluated. Therefore, the objective is to evaluate the impact of a model protocol for announcing decision of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments, with human simulation and the intervention of partner families in a simulation center and in situ, on the reduction of family stress following the announcement of a decision of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments in the emergency departments. Hypothesis is that training all emergency department caregivers in the use of a model announcement protocol with the support of human simulation, combining training of pairs in a simulation center and in situ training, and the participation of partner families, would allow for a better understanding of announce of withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatments decision in the emergency department and reduce their impact on families in terms of the occurrence of acute stress and post-traumatic stress symptoms.
The P-KIDs CARE Health Systems Intervention in Tanzania
Accidental InjuriesGlobal Child Health4 moreThe objective of the proposed research is to develop and pilot a locally-relevant, multicomponent intervention to streamline the triage process (e.g. patient assessment, stabilization, and disposition) for pediatric injury patients in Tanzania. This health systems intervention will work at the first level of medical contact (e.g., health center and district hospital), in order to facilitate timely disposition and referrals, and subsequently decrease time to definitive care. The proposed study has three aims: 1) With a mixed methods approach, describe the barriers to pediatric injury care at the first medical contact; 2) Iteratively develop the P-KIDs CARE intervention using a nominal group technique and conduct a pre-implementation assessment and refinement; 3) Pilot the P-KIDs CARE intervention and perform an implementation-focused formative evaluation. The proposed study focuses on pediatric injury patients and the family members and healthcare providers that care for them in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. The investigators will recruit pediatric injury patients, family members, and healthcare providers from 2 health facilities in the Kilimanjaro Region.
Hospital Implementation of a Stroke Protocol for Emergency Evaluation and Disposition
StrokeAcute3 moreMost stroke patients are initially evaluated at the closest hospital but some need to be transferred to a hospital that can provide more advanced care. The "Door-In-Door-Out" (DIDO) process at the first hospital can take time making transferred patients no longer able to get the advanced treatments. This study will help hospitals across the US "stand up" new ways to evaluate stroke patients, decide who needs to be transferred, and transfer them quickly for advanced treatment.
The Effect Of Animal-Assisted Intervention
Animal ModelPediatric3 moreThe aim of the study is to examine the effect of animal-assisted practice on fear in children admitted to the emergency room.