Volume: 6 Issue: 1

1. Free open access medical education applications: a critical appraisal of techniques for quality assessment and content discovery Page:93—95
2. Role of ascorbic acid in dapsone induced methemoglobinemia Page:91—92
3. Rare cause of seizures: ruptured intracranial dermoid cyst Page:89—90
4. Metoprolol treatment of dual cocaine and bupropion cardiovascular and central nervous system toxicity Page:84—88
5. Quick Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment score is not sensitive enough to predict 28-day mortality in emergency department patients with sepsis: a retrospective review Page:77—83
6. Prognostic value of a modified surprise question designed for use in the emergency department setting Page:70—76
7. Effectiveness and safety of electrical cardioversion for acute-onset atrial fibrillation in the emergency department: a real-world 10-year single center experience Page:64—69
8. Epidemiology of sepsis in Korea: a population-based study of incidence, mortality, cost and risk factors for death in sepsis Page:49—63
9. Effect of rapid influenza diagnostic tests on patient management in an emergency department Page:43—48
10. Change in peak expiratory flow rate after the head-tilt/chin-lift maneuver among young, healthy, and conscious volunteers Page:36—42
11. Variations in chest compression time, ventilation time and rescuers' heart rate during conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation in trained male rescuers Page:31—35
12. Pilot study on a rewarming rate of 0.15°C/hr versus 0.25°C/hr and outcomes in post cardiac arrest patients Page:25—30
13. The difference of Use of CT in the general versus pediatric emergency departments for adolescent patients in the same tertiary hospital Page:19—24
14. Assessment of serum biomarkers and coagulation/fibrinolysis markers for prediction of neurological outcomes of out of cardiac arrest patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia Page:9—18
15. Efficacy of quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment with lactate concentration for predicting mortality in patients with community-acquired pneumonia in the emergency department Page:1—8