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1.
Acad Emerg Med ; 16(8): 782-94, 2009 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19673715

RESUMO

There is scientific consensus that the climate is changing, that human activity plays a major role, and that the changes will continue through this century. Expert consensus holds that significant health effects are very likely. Public health and health care systems must understand these impacts to properly pursue preparedness and prevention activities. All of medicine will very likely be affected, and certain medical specialties are likely to be more significantly burdened based on their clinical activity, ease of public access, public health roles, and energy use profiles. These specialties have been called on to consider the likely impacts on their patients and practice and to prepare their practitioners. Emergency medicine (EM), with its focus on urgent and emergent ambulatory care, role as a safety-net provider, urban concentration, and broad-based clinical mission, will very likely experience a significant rise in demand for its services over and above current annual increases. Clinically, EM will see amplification of weather-related disease patterns and shifts in disease distribution. In EM's prehospital care and disaster response activities, both emergency medical services (EMS) activity and disaster medical assistance team (DMAT) deployment activities will likely increase. EM's public health roles, including disaster preparedness, emergency department (ED)-based surveillance, and safety-net care, are likely to face increasing demands, along with pressures to improve fuel efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Finally, EM's roles in ED and hospital management, particularly related to building and purchasing, are likely to be impacted by efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance energy efficiency. Climate change thus presents multiple clinical and public health challenges to EM, but also creates numerous opportunities for research, education, and leadership on an emerging health issue of global scope.


Assuntos
Medicina de Emergência , Efeito Estufa , Saúde Global , Necessidades e Demandas de Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Técnicas de Planejamento , Saúde Pública , Opinião Pública , Fatores de Risco
2.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 22(4): 276-80, 2007.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18019092

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Open-source information consists of a range of publicly available material, including various periodicals, news reports, journal publications, photographs, and maps. Although intelligence agencies regularly use open-source information in developing strategically important intelligence, the disaster community has yet to evaluate its use for planning or research purposes. This study examines how open-source information, in the form of Internet news reports and public access disaster databases, can be used to develop a rapid, 72-hour case report. METHODS: Open-source information was extrapolated from several news reports on a terrorist bombing that occurred in Russia on 05 December 2003, using a self-devised "data" collection sheet, and background information collected on the nature of similar disasters using three public access databases. RESULTS: The bulk of health-related information was collected in the first 13 hours after the event, including casualty demographics, immediate dead, total dead, admitted, and treated-and-released. The complex and prolonged rescue of casualties was identified, as well as the presence of unexploded ordnance. This incident also was identified as the first publicly reported suicide terrorist bombing of a commuter train. CONCLUSIONS: Open-source information has the potential to be a helpful tool in reconstructing a chain of events and response. However, its use must be validated further and used appropriately. Standards for collection and analysis also must be developed.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados Factuais/normas , Planejamento em Desastres , Explosões/estatística & dados numéricos , Disseminação de Informação , Incidentes com Feridos em Massa/estatística & dados numéricos , Informática em Saúde Pública/normas , Medidas de Segurança , Terrorismo/estatística & dados numéricos , Bibliometria , Bombas (Dispositivos Explosivos) , Humanos , Internet , Meios de Comunicação de Massa , Estudos de Casos Organizacionais , Estudos Prospectivos , Ferrovias , Federação Russa/epidemiologia
3.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 21(2): 108-12, 2002 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11840076

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: A World Health Organization (WHO) case management approach has been used to identify and treat children with pneumonia worldwide since 1987. Many children are treated repeatedly: 23% of children with pneumonia in our rural Haitian district had met the WHO criteria on two or more occasions; but underlying disease in such children has not been systematically studied. METHODS: We enrolled 103 children who had been diagnosed with pneumonia on 3 or more occasions by community health workers using WHO criteria. We compared them with 138 children similarly evaluated but never diagnosed with pneumonia, matching by health worker and age. We administered questionnaires to parents and performed complete physical examinations, tuberculin skin tests and serologic testing for HIV on all subjects and chest radiographs on case children. RESULTS: Two percent of case children and 1.5% of controls had positive tuberculin skin test reactions. None of the children tested was HIV-seropositive. Ninety-four case children had normal baseline chest radiographs and three had focal infiltrates. A history of wheezing was reported for 79% of case children and 61% of controls (P = 0.002), and wheezing with exercise was reported for 36% and 22%, respectively (P = 0.02). DISCUSSION: Most children in Haiti with recurrent pneumonia diagnosed by WHO criteria do not have evidence of tuberculosis, HIV infection or pulmonary anomalies, but they may be more likely to have asthma, and this should be considered as an alternative diagnosis. This information should help direct evaluation of such children in other settings and prompt further study of asthma in developing countries.


Assuntos
Proteção da Criança , Países em Desenvolvimento , Pneumonia/patologia , Organização Mundial da Saúde , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Guias como Assunto , Infecções por HIV/complicações , Haiti/epidemiologia , Inquéritos Epidemiológicos , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Masculino , Pneumonia/diagnóstico , Recidiva , Sons Respiratórios/etiologia , Fatores de Risco , População Rural , Tuberculose Pulmonar/complicações
4.
Ann Emerg Med ; 31(2): 264-273, 1998 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28139995

RESUMO

See editorial, p 274. Variations in the way that data are entered in emergency department record systems impede the use of ED records for direct patient care and deter their reuse for many other legitimate purposes. To foster more uniform ED data, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control is coordinating a public-private partnership that has developed recommended specifications for many observations, actions, instructions, conclusions, and identifiers that are entered in ED records. The partnership's initial product, Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems, Release 1.0 (DEEDS), is intended for use by individuals and organizations responsible for ED record systems. If the recommended specifications are widely adopted, then problems-such as data incompatibility and high costs of collecting, linking, and using data-can be substantially reduced. The collaborative effort that led to DEEDS, Release 1.0 sets a precedent for future review and revision of the initial recommendations. [DEEDS Writing Committee: Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems, Release 1.0 (DEEDS): A summary report. Ann Emerg Med February 1998;31:264-273.].

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