WHAT’S COMING IN ANNALS • JUNE 2013
Annals of Emergency Medicine
HEALTH POLICY Effect of Emergency Department Crowding on Outcomes of Admitted Patients (Original Research) ● BC Sun, R Hsia, R Weiss, et al Emergency Department Crowding in California: A Silent Killer? (Editorial) ● JM Pines An Early Look at Performance on the Emergency Care Measures Included in Medicare’s Hospital Inpatient Value-Based Purchasing Program (Original Research) ● M McHugh, J Neimeyer, E Powell, et al Future of Emergency Medicine 2: Proceedings From the Second Summit (Special Contribution) ● AF Gardner, SM Schneider THE PRACTICE OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE Physician Email and Telephone Contact After Emergency Department Visit Improves Patient Satisfaction: A Crossover Trial (Original Research) ● DS Huckins, HK Simon, K Copeland, et al Emergency Department Physician-Level and Hospital-Level Variation in Admission Rates (Brief Research Report) ● J Abualenain, WJ Frohna, R Shesser, et al The Impact of Computerized Provider Order Entry on Clinical Care and Work Processes in Emergency Departments: A Systematic Review of the Quantitative Literature (Review Article) ● A Georgiou, M Prgomet, R Paoloni, et al PALLIATIVE CARE Hospital Administrators’ Views on Barriers and Opportunities to Delivering Palliative Care in the Emergency Department (Original Research) ● CR Grudzen, LD Richardson, H Major ●Monfried, et al Demonstrations of Clinical Initiatives to Improve Palliative Care in the Emergency Department: A Report From the IPAL-EM Initiative (Concepts) ● T Quest, S Herr, S Lamba, et al DISASTER MEDICINE Head-to-Head Comparison of Disaster Triage Methods in Pediatric, Adult and Geriatric Patients (Original Research) ● KP Cross, MX Cicero Systematic Review of Strategies to Manage and Allocate Scarce Resources During Mass Casualty Events (Review Article) ● JW Timbie, JS Ringel, S Fox, et al Pain Control in Disaster Settings: A Role for Ultrasound-Guided Nerve Blocks (Concepts) ● SC Lipper, A Nagdev, M Stone, et al CLINICAL CONTROVERSIES Continuous Capnography Should Be Used For Every Emergency Department Procedural Sedation (Clinical Controversies) ● NM Mohr, B Wessman Routine Capnographic Monitoring Is Not Indicated for All Patients Undergoing Emergency Department Procedural Sedation (Clinical Controversies) ● S Terp, D Schriger INJURY PREVENTION A Call to Action: Gun Violence, Public Health, and Emergency Medicine (Editorial) ● ML Ranney, J Sankoff, DH Newman, et al Not-in-Traffic Surveillance–Non-Crash Injuries (NHTSA Notes)
12A Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume , . : May