Emergency department (ED) presentation with chest pain accounts for approximately 20% of acute hospital admissions, and delays in the investigation and management of these patients increase the pressure on emergency and medical departments. We implemented a pathway within our trust to improve the efficiency of acute chest pain management. This included the development of a chest pain management algorithm, a short-stay heart assessment centre and a policy to immediately transfer acute coronary syndrome patients to cardiology. The introduction of the chest pain pathway resulted in fewer admissions from the ED with chest pain (34.2% vs 19.0%; p<0.0001), a reduction in time from ED attendance to cardiology transfer (9.3 hours vs 5.7 hours; p<0....
Background Chest pain is the top reason for hospitalization/observation in the USA, but it is unc...
Emergency physicians can feel pressured by opposing forces of clinical reality and the need to publi...
Introduction: Chest pain, which can be cardiac or non-cardiac and either benign or life-threatening,...
Emergency department (ED) presentation with chest pain accounts for approximately 20% of acute hospi...
Patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain require prompt identification and re...
peer reviewedThis paper provides an update on the European Society of Cardiology task force report o...
Chest pain is a common reason for presentation in hospital emergency departments and general practic...
Objective\ud \ud Chest pain is one of the most common complaints in patients presenting to an emerge...
Background: Symptoms concerning for acute coronary syndromes (ACS) such as chest pain and dyspnea ar...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.Patients p...
Abstract Objective To determine whether introducing chest pain unit care reduces emergency admission...
NHS Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments see 0.5 million patients presenting witha cardiac condi...
BACKGROUND: Most of the patients presenting to emergency department with chest pain are at low risk ...
Objective: To determine whether introducing chest pain unit care reduces emergency admissions witho...
Patients with chest pain represent 5% of the total Emergency Department (ED) presentations and among...
Background Chest pain is the top reason for hospitalization/observation in the USA, but it is unc...
Emergency physicians can feel pressured by opposing forces of clinical reality and the need to publi...
Introduction: Chest pain, which can be cardiac or non-cardiac and either benign or life-threatening,...
Emergency department (ED) presentation with chest pain accounts for approximately 20% of acute hospi...
Patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain require prompt identification and re...
peer reviewedThis paper provides an update on the European Society of Cardiology task force report o...
Chest pain is a common reason for presentation in hospital emergency departments and general practic...
Objective\ud \ud Chest pain is one of the most common complaints in patients presenting to an emerge...
Background: Symptoms concerning for acute coronary syndromes (ACS) such as chest pain and dyspnea ar...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.Patients p...
Abstract Objective To determine whether introducing chest pain unit care reduces emergency admission...
NHS Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments see 0.5 million patients presenting witha cardiac condi...
BACKGROUND: Most of the patients presenting to emergency department with chest pain are at low risk ...
Objective: To determine whether introducing chest pain unit care reduces emergency admissions witho...
Patients with chest pain represent 5% of the total Emergency Department (ED) presentations and among...
Background Chest pain is the top reason for hospitalization/observation in the USA, but it is unc...
Emergency physicians can feel pressured by opposing forces of clinical reality and the need to publi...
Introduction: Chest pain, which can be cardiac or non-cardiac and either benign or life-threatening,...