Palliative care-
- Who- patients w/ end stage diseases, AIDs, malignancy, multi-organ failure, devastating injuries.
- Benefits to patients- improves quality of life, avoids undesired interventions.
- Benefits to providers- aids with burnout and staying focused on what patient would want.
- Symptom management- pain, dyspnea (opioids are first line, delirium, constipation.
DNR/DNI-
- Advanced directive indicating what patient would want from a care perspective.
- Otherwise consider POAs and next of kin.
Special Populations in the ED-
- Patient’s with intellectual disability: Consider barriers to health including physical, communicational, attitudinal, transportation, financial.
- Patient’s whose primary language is another language.
- Patient’s involved human trafficking. Always be mindful of red flag signs.
- Elderly patient’s or those affected by dementia/cognitive decline.
- Patient’s affected by housing insecurity.
Systemic infections in children-
- Measles (Rubeola): symptom 10-14 days after exposure with cough, coryza, conuctivitis, Koplik spots. Rash starts on face, spreading down, including palms and soles. First vaccine at 12 mo. Treatment = supportive.
- German measles (Rubella): symptoms include low grade fever, headache, sore throat and lymphadenopathy (post auricular). First vaccine 12 mo. Treatment = supportive.
- Varicella: symptoms include fever, cough, rash with vesicular lesions at different stages of healing. First vaccine at 12 mo. Treatment = supportive.
- Erythema infectiosum: nonspecific viral prodrome with slapped cheek rash caused by parvo. Treatment = supportive. Most dangerous for sickle cell patients and pregnant patients.
- Roseola: characteristic pattern of high fever followed by rash, starting on trunk and spreading outward, caused by HHV6. Treatment = supportive.
- Hand- foot- mouth disease: non specific viral symptoms with rash, caused by cocksackie. Treatment = supportive.
- Papular acrodermatitis: immunologic response resulting in pruritic, popular rash in acral distribution often caused by EBV or hep B. Treatment = supportive.
- Scarlet Fever: sandpaper rash which is blanching and popular in the setting of Group A strep. Treatment = amoxicillin x 10 days.
- SSSS/TSS: peeling beefy red skin around moth, armpits, groin.
- Pediatic sepsis: consider the incredible ability to compensate in children. Be wary of tachycardia not improved by bolus (up to 60 ml/kg of isotonic crystalloid).
Operations updates-
- East wing annex transitions to come May/June.
- Obs unit within the next year.
- 85% on sepsis compliance.