Results 211 to 220 of about 1,495,331 (245)

Pre-Hospital Stroke Triage and Research: Challenges and Opportunities.

open access: yesCerebrovasc Dis
Dhillon PS   +5 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Pre-Hospital Anaesthesia

Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 2010
This review presents the history of Pre-hospital anaesthesia, it’s evidence base, required training and examines current arguments focusing on best practice such as who should undertake the procedure and how identifying appropriate patients, utilizing new techniques and drugs may benefit the Pre-hospital practitioner in optimum delivery of this ...
RJ Dawes, Adrian Mellor
openaire   +3 more sources

Pre-hospital heparin with thrombolysis

Heart, 2009
To the editor: We read the MINAP analysis by Horne et al 1 with great interest. The authors speculated that the high rates of re-infarction might be related to the administration of the lytic and anti-thrombotic treatment within the pre-hospital environment. Data from our local audit of pre-hospital tenectaplase …
H. S. Lim, T Scott, J Glancy
openaire   +3 more sources

Pre-hospital thrombolysis

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 1999
The administration of thrombolytic drugs outside hospital by emergency physicians is becoming more common. However, few in Europe live in areas where such a service is provided. The data suggest that the advantages can be appreciable in some circumstances but that the strategy may not be universally applicable.
openaire   +3 more sources

Pre-hospital emergency medicine

The Lancet, 2015
Pre-hospital care is emergency medical care given to patients before arrival in hospital after activation of emergency medical services. It traditionally incorporated a breadth of care from bystander resuscitation to statutory emergency medical services treatment and transfer.
Chirstopher H E Imray   +6 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Pre-Hospital Antibiotic Administration

Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 2008
Email: paul.parker@stees.nhs.uk. Another Lesson from History? In our war fighting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, median pre-hospital transport times are currently 2 hours and 54 minutes. For the T1 casualty (the most critically injured subset) the time from wounding to admission to the Emergency Room is currently 1 hour 40 minutes [1].
openaire   +3 more sources

Pre-hospital trauma care

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2001
The chain of survival in outcome from major trauma is equally as important as its well established concept in survival from cardiac arrest. Preventive measures have been shown to be an effective means of reducing death from trauma, and the standard of pre-hospital care for those surviving the primary injury is improving in many trauma systems.
Charles D. Deakin, Eldar Søreide
openaire   +3 more sources

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