1.Critical care in Emergency Department.
Sung Woo LEE ; Jeung Min JEUN ; Sung Hyuk CHOI ; Chul Gu MOON ; Yun Sik HONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1997;8(2):172-178
STUDY OBJECT: To date, the study of critical illness in the emergency department has been limited. The purpose of this study was to determine the length of stay and procedures performed on critical care patient in ED, and to be help to establish Emergency physicians' education program. METHOD: We reviewed patient's medical record, who visited ED, Korea Univ. Hospital from Jan. 1996 to Jun. 1996 and admitted to ICU. We analyzed data to age, sex, clinical diagnosis, length of stay, and critical procedures in ED. RESULTS: The 12,721 patients visited ED during the study period, the 441 of 12,721 (3.50%) patients admitted to ICU. 56 patients were excluded whose medical re cords were incomplete. The study populations consisted of 165 women and 220 men. The mean age were 52 year old (median,58 year old). The mean length of stays were 606.1 (1445.9 minutes (median, 180 minutes)). One hundred sixty one of these patients (41.8 %) received one or more critical procedures. The medical critical patients were 252 cases, and surgical critical patients were 133 cases. The mean length of stay of medical critical patients was 738.8 (1748.9 minutes (median, 177.5 minutes)) in medical department,44.0% of them received critical procedures in ED. The surgical critical patients averaged 354.9 (410.7 minutes (median, 190 minutes)) and 37.6% received critical procedures. CONCLUSION: Critical ill patients stay in the ED with a substantial amount of time, before addition to the ICU. Critical ill patients who have hemodynamiccal unstable conditions, compromised cardiopulmonary functions, and neurologic deficities, were managed in ED frequently. Typical critical care procedures are commonly performed by emergency physicians. Therefore, it is important for emergency physician to prepare to critical ill patients.
Critical Care*
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Critical Illness
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Diagnosis
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Education
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Emergencies*
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Emergency Service, Hospital*
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Female
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Humans
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Korea
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Length of Stay
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Male
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Medical Records
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Middle Aged
2.Clinical Analysis of Domestic Violence in Emergency Department.
Chul Kyu MOON ; Sung Hyuk CHOI ; Jeung Min JEUN ; Sung Woo LEE ; Yun Sik HONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1998;9(2):311-316
BACKGROUND: Domestic violence once considered an infrequently occurring event existing only in deviant relationships, it has been more recently recognized as a widely distributed phenomenon resulting from multiple cultural, social, psycological factors. According to declining world economics, family violence rises with a simultaneous curtailment of agencies available to assist battered persons and there is increasing pressure on emergency departments to serve those who might otherwise have sought help from public agency. In Korea, we don't have any clinical data about domestic violence, and authors analysed clinical pictures of domestic violence victims who came to the emergency department of Korean University medical center. METHOD: We reviewed the victims of the domestic violence retrospectively, who visited in ED, Korean Univ. Hospital from Jan. 1996 to the Dec. 1996. We Analysed data to Age, sex, Injury severity score, location of injury, mechanism, perpetrator. RESULTS: During the study period, total 134 domestic violence victims were identified. The young, females were predominantly victimized. And married women were more commonly violated. (about 70%). ISS was relatively mild (2.491), face and head were mainly injured by punching and objects throwing. The Prevalence of domestic violence victims almost presented at Emergency department between 6:00/P.M. and 8:00 A.M.. CONCLUSION: Emergency physicians suspect domestic violence victims who injured at face and head by punching or hitted would. In these patients, we need more detail history and physical exam. And in case of repeated domestic violence, refer to neuropychatry dept and social workers with perpetratrs, and need mere concerte social programs for domestic violence.
Academic Medical Centers
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Domestic Violence*
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Emergencies*
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Emergency Service, Hospital*
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Female
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Head
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Humans
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Injury Severity Score
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Korea
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Prevalence
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Retrospective Studies
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Social Workers