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Journal of Emergency Nursing
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    • Cover Image - Journal of Emergency Nursing, Volume 49, Issue 3
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  • Rapid Communication6

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  • Harding, Andrew2
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  • Clinical Notebook

    Time Out for Patient Safety

    Journal of Emergency Nursing
    Vol. 38Issue 1p51–53Published online: July 18, 2011
    • Anne Meginniss
    • Frances Damian
    • Francine Falvo
    Cited in Scopus: 2
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      For more than a decade, health care organizations have stepped up their efforts to promote patient safety. Nurses, as patient advocates, understand that critical communication and teamwork are key elements in moving toward a culture of patient safety.1,2 The value of sound communication is fundamental to the prevention of sentinel events.3 Yet, during critical situations, a nurse may not feel empowered to speak up when a patient is at imminent risk of harm.4 In an effort to improve communication, a standardized communication technique called “time out for patient safety” was developed to provide universally accepted critical language for these situations and empower nurses to assert themselves.
    • Clinical Notebook

      Situation, Background, Assessment, and Recommendation (SBAR) May Benefit Individuals Who Frequent Emergency Departments: Adults With Sickle Cell Disease

      Journal of Emergency Nursing
      Vol. 37Issue 6p559–561Published online: May 6, 2011
      • Coretta Jenerette
      • Cheryl Brewer
      Cited in Scopus: 8
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        Evidence-based research supports the use of situation, background, assessment, and recommendation (SBAR)—a collaborative communication strategy—to improve communication among health care providers.1-3 SBAR has been found to assist with structuring and standardizing communication and is considered an easy-to-remember technique that provides for consistent, structured communication between members of the health care team.4 However, there has been no published support for the usefulness of SBAR as a communication technique between health care providers and patients.
      • Clinical Notebook

        Education and Culture: Mitigation for Workplace Violence

        Journal of Emergency Nursing
        Vol. 37Issue 3p256–257Published online: October 1, 2010
        • Andrew D. Harding
        Cited in Scopus: 1
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          Workplace violence in the health care setting is 16 times greater than the general workplace.1 In Massachusetts, Norfolk County District Attorney William Keating has recorded the rate of assaults against health care workers as 4 times greater when compared with other industries.2 On June 3, 2010, The Joint Commission (TJC) released a sentinel event alert entitled “Preventing Violence in the Health Care Setting.”3 This TJC alert suggests that increased training and education be provided with regard to identifying potentially violent individuals, de-escalating anxious behaviors, and managing violence.
        • Clinical Notebook

          “I Want To See The Doctor”: Meeting Patients' Expectations in the Emergency Department

          Journal of Emergency Nursing
          Vol. 36Issue 6p562–567Published online: May 20, 2010
          • Monique Lott Roper
          Cited in Scopus: 5
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            One of the primary reasons a patient presents to the emergency department is to see a doctor. Patients expect rapid or immediate treatment for their symptoms. Many think there is a doctor waiting to immediately see them and take care of them once they arrive at the emergency department. When this expectation is not met, patient satisfaction significantly decreases. Waiting to see the doctor promotes aggravation, anxiety, and stress to the patient and his or her family and friends. Waiting room times for emergency departments across the country are at the highest levels ever.
          • Clinical Notebook

            Assessing Cranial Nerves With a Stick of Gum

            Journal of Emergency Nursing
            Vol. 36Issue 5p470–471Published online: December 25, 2009
            • Jeff Strickler
            • Alberto Bonifacio
            Cited in Scopus: 1
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              Most nurses recall the class in anatomy and physiology when we learned the great common memory aid, “On Old Olympus Towering Tops A Finn And German Viewed Some Hops” in an effort to learn the names of the 12 cranial nerves. For many of us, that moment was one of the last times we gave cranial nerves any thought. However, with diagnoses such as head injury and stroke continuing to rank highly on the morbidity and mortality charts, the ability of an emergency nurse to identify and monitor symptoms of neurologic dysfunction has become ever more critical.
            • Clinical Notebook

              Stroke Scales You Can Use

              Journal of Emergency Nursing
              Vol. 36Issue 1p40–52Published online: October 9, 2009
              • Andrew Harding
              Cited in Scopus: 0
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                Stroke is the third leading killer in the United States.1 Stroke is an emergency and has recently been an initiative for many quality teams, emergency departments, and public health education programs.2,3 The mantra “time is muscle” for myocardial infarctions has been adapted to “time is brain” for stroke. The crux of both of these ailments is tissue perfusion.
                Stroke Scales You Can Use
              • Clinical Notebook

                Checking Hospital-acquired Infections at the ED Door: Are We Missing a Significant Opportunity?

                Journal of Emergency Nursing
                Vol. 35Issue 6p548–550Published online: August 20, 2009
                • Eric M. Larsen
                Cited in Scopus: 2
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                  A fundamental purpose of the nation’s hospital system is to provide places for the treatment of disease. As such, patient acquisition of disease while hospitalized presents a disturbing health care dilemma. Approximately 37 million Americans are hospitalized annually,1 over 15 million of whom arrive through emergency departments.2 Of those hospitalized, 1.7 million acquire an infection during their stay, 99,000 of whom die from those infections,3 resulting in a mortality rate that is double the annual number of deaths on all of our nation’s highways combined.
                • Clinical Notebook

                  On the Origin of Nursing and the Social Conflicts of Emergency Health Care

                  Journal of Emergency Nursing
                  Vol. 36Issue 2p150–153Published online: June 26, 2009
                  • Keith Stephens-Borg
                  Cited in Scopus: 0
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                    The divide between doctors and nurses has always raised the question as to the proficiency of who should perform emergency surgical procedures, especially during extreme circumstances. By examining our past, we can explore and understand how, when, and why medicinal practices were ruled and restricted. I am constantly reminded by natural acts of bravery in these troubled times by unskilled bystanders together with EMS providers who put their lives foremost in the face of a new world of terrorist violence.
                    On the Origin of Nursing and the Social Conflicts of Emergency Health Care
                  • Clinical Notebook

                    The Increasing Geriatric Population and Overcrowding in the Emergency Department: One Hospital’s Approach

                    Journal of Emergency Nursing
                    Vol. 35Issue 5p447–450Published online: May 14, 2009
                    • Dori Rogers
                    Cited in Scopus: 4
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                      Next time you walk through your emergency department on a very busy day, stop for a moment and take in the bright lights, the sounds, and the smells. For the average adult patient anxiously awaiting test results, a ride to the radiology department, or a transfer to an inpatient bed, the ED atmosphere can be stressful. For a geriatric patient, the average ED activities can be frightening. Imagine a nurse educated for and dedicated to facilitating the care of geriatric ED patients. Someone who works with all team members to expedite care and reduce the length of the ED wait time, answers patient and family questions, and works with outside agencies and facilities.
                    • Clinical Notebook

                      Safe Haven Laws

                      Journal of Emergency Nursing
                      Vol. 35Issue 4p352–353Published online: March 13, 2009
                      • Andrew Harding
                      Cited in Scopus: 2
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                        Recent national news has persecuted the state of Nebraska for its handling of the safe haven law to protect children from parent abandonment, neglect, and most horribly, infanticide. Emergency departments are the largest gateway for parents to use the safe haven laws. The need to understand the state’s laws and hospital’s policies is very important to emergency nurses, especially the triage nurse. This article will provide a brief recent history of the safe haven efforts, along with practical tips for emergency nurses being asked to implement the laws.
                      • Clinical Notebook

                        Discharge Vital Signs: An Enhancement to ED Quality and Patient Outcomes

                        Journal of Emergency Nursing
                        Vol. 35Issue 2p138–140Published in issue: March, 2009
                        • Susan E. Domagala
                        Cited in Scopus: 7
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                          Hurried discharge of patients from emergency departments occurs at an overwhelming rate because teams are dedicated to reducing turnaround times and lessening overcrowding burdens. This practice, however, does not go without risk, because a growing body of evidence suggests that patients discharged from the emergency department with abnormal vital signs are at significantly greater risk for return to the emergency department, return with admission, or unexpected death.1,2 The response to this alarming trend necessitates re-evaluation of discharge processes in the ED setting.
                          Discharge Vital Signs: An Enhancement to ED Quality and Patient Outcomes
                        • Clinical Notebook

                          Development of a Certified Emergency Nurse Certification Initiative

                          Journal of Emergency Nursing
                          Vol. 35Issue 3p234–236Published online: February 27, 2009
                          • Terri Sullivan
                          Cited in Scopus: 1
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                            Specialty certification has long been known as a contributor to positive patient outcomes. The American Association of Critical-Care Nurses has published substantial evidence to this effect.1 ENA has long championed the same belief. In 2006 the American College of Emergency Physicians adopted a policy statement that “supports the efforts of the Emergency Nurses Association (ENA) and the Board of Certification for Emergency Nursing (BCEN) regarding defining standards of emergency nursing care and the provision of resources, support, and incentives for emergency nurses to be able to readily attain Certified Emergency Nurses (CEN) certification.”2 Certification is a primary component of 1 of the 14 Forces of Magnetism.
                            Development of a Certified Emergency Nurse Certification Initiative
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