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Journal Article

Citation

Becker BM, Woolard R, Nirenberg TD, Minugh A, Longabaugh R, Clifford PR. Acad. Emerg. Med. 1995; 2(9): 784-790.

Affiliation

Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, RI, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7584764

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the incidence of alcohol use in subcritically injured patients presenting to the ED, by using a saliva alcohol test (SAT) at ED triage during the ED initial assessment; to compare the incidence of alcohol use revealed by the SAT with documentation of alcohol use by ED nurses and emergency physicians (EPs) blinded to the SAT results; and to describe the demographics of the SAT-positive, subcritically injured population. METHODS: A blinded, prospective, observational evaluation of ED patients presenting with subcritical injuries was performed. The patients were tested for alcohol use with an SAT, and a subsequent record review was conducted for extraction of demographic data and evidence of documentation of alcohol use by ED nurses and EPs blinded to the SAT results. RESULTS: During the study, 791 subcritically injured patients had SATs performed. Twenty-one percent of these patients were found to be alcohol-positive by SAT. Either the ED nurse or the EP documented a clinical impression of alcohol use for 52% of the SAT-positive patients. There were higher SAT-positive rates among men (24%), victims of assault (47%), and patients arriving at night (41%). CONCLUSIONS: While the SAT identified 21% of the subcritically injured patient population as alcohol-positive, ED nurse and EP documentation did not identify half of these alcohol-positive patients. Many of these patients may be at risk for additional injuries related to their drinking behavior.


Language: en

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