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Journal Article

Citation

Shalley MJ, Cross AB. Br. Med. J. (Clin. Res. Ed.) 1984; 289(6442): 419-421.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1984, British Medical Association, Publisher BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

6432126

PMCID

PMC1442421

Abstract

Four hundred and eighty-eight deaths occurring in an accident and emergency department over five years were analysed. Their causes were categorised as medical, surgical, or traumatic. Medical causes accounted for 87% of the deaths, of which 60% were from cardiac conditions. Blood loss was an important factor in over half the deaths from surgical and traumatic causes. Lives might have been saved by considering infectious disease in patients with medical conditions and by undertaking more rapid blood transfusion, earlier chest drainage, and lateral cervical spine x rays in appropriate surgical or traumatic cases. The admission to casualty departments of people with terminal neoplasms should be discouraged. The management of medical emergencies should be emphasised when training accident and emergency department staff.


Language: en

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