Abstract Background Canadian Emergency Medical Services annually transport 1.3 million patients with potential neck injuries to local emergency departments. Less than 1% of those patients have a c-spine fracture and even less (0.5%) have a spinal cord injury. Most injuries occur before the arrival of paramedics, not during transport to the hospital, yet most patients are transported in ambulances immobilized. They stay fully immobilized until a bed is available, or until physician assessment and/or X-rays are complete. The prolonged immobilization is often unnecessary and adds to the burden of already overtaxed emergency medical services systems and crowded emergency departments. ...
IntroductionUnnecessary spinal cord immobilisation is a common problem in South Africa, even though ...
Introduction: The consequences of spinal injury as a result of trauma can be devastating. Spinal imm...
Approximately 2% of all injuries that present to EDs are spinal cord injuries (SCIs). While overall ...
Prehospital cervical spine (c-spine) immobilisation is common, despite c-spine injury being relative...
Background: Validated criteria are included in the algorithm used in the UK prehospital setting to s...
Each year, Canadian emergency departments treat 1.3million patients who have suffered blunt traumafr...
Purpose: To determine the degree of adherence to a cervical spine (c-spine) clearance protocol by pr...
Introduction: We wanted to compare 3 existing emergency medical services (EMS) immobilization protoc...
Each year, Canadian emergency departments treat 1.3million patients who have suffered blunt traumafr...
Background: In 2015, the National Protocol Ambulance version 7 (LPA7) revised to version 8 (LPA8). T...
Background: Approximately 1.3 million Canadians present to the Emergency Department (ED) annually wi...
Contains fulltext : 176936.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Pre...
Abstract Background Physicians in Canadian emergency ...
Background: Recent studies demonstrate an association between spinal immobilization and neck pain, i...
IntroductionPrehospital spine immobilization has long been applied to victims of trauma in the Unite...
IntroductionUnnecessary spinal cord immobilisation is a common problem in South Africa, even though ...
Introduction: The consequences of spinal injury as a result of trauma can be devastating. Spinal imm...
Approximately 2% of all injuries that present to EDs are spinal cord injuries (SCIs). While overall ...
Prehospital cervical spine (c-spine) immobilisation is common, despite c-spine injury being relative...
Background: Validated criteria are included in the algorithm used in the UK prehospital setting to s...
Each year, Canadian emergency departments treat 1.3million patients who have suffered blunt traumafr...
Purpose: To determine the degree of adherence to a cervical spine (c-spine) clearance protocol by pr...
Introduction: We wanted to compare 3 existing emergency medical services (EMS) immobilization protoc...
Each year, Canadian emergency departments treat 1.3million patients who have suffered blunt traumafr...
Background: In 2015, the National Protocol Ambulance version 7 (LPA7) revised to version 8 (LPA8). T...
Background: Approximately 1.3 million Canadians present to the Emergency Department (ED) annually wi...
Contains fulltext : 176936.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Pre...
Abstract Background Physicians in Canadian emergency ...
Background: Recent studies demonstrate an association between spinal immobilization and neck pain, i...
IntroductionPrehospital spine immobilization has long been applied to victims of trauma in the Unite...
IntroductionUnnecessary spinal cord immobilisation is a common problem in South Africa, even though ...
Introduction: The consequences of spinal injury as a result of trauma can be devastating. Spinal imm...
Approximately 2% of all injuries that present to EDs are spinal cord injuries (SCIs). While overall ...