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Informationen zum Autor John Burton, M.D., has been the Residency Program Director in Emergency Medicine and a Professor of Emergency Medicine at Albany Medical College in Albany, NY, since 2006. From 1999 to 2003, Dr. Burton was the Medical Director for Maine Emergency Medical Services and, from 1995 to 2006, he worked in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine. He was the founding Research Director in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Maine Medical Center. Dr Burton's areas of research interest are procedural sedation and analgesia, emergency medical services, and management of cardiovascular emergencies. He has published extensively in the emergency medicine literature on these and related topics. He has received awards and peer recognition throughout his academic career noting a commitment to the specialty of emergency medicine. Dr Burton completed medical school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1992, and residency training at the University of Pittsburgh Affiliated Residency in Emergency Medicine in 1995. Klappentext This book is a comprehensive medical text addressing emergency sedation and analgesia in the emergency department. Zusammenfassung This book is a comprehensive medical text addressing emergency sedation and analgesia with specific emphasis on treatment of the emergency department patient. It presents a clinical approach to the treatment of pain in emergency patients! including pediatric and adult populations. Analgesia! sedation! and anesthetic techniques are presented in an informative! authoritative! and concise format. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I. Overview and Principles in Emergency Analgesia and Procedural Sedation: 1. Emergency analgesic principles James Miner and John Burton; 2. Emergency procedural sedation principles John Burton and James Miner; 3. Analgesic and procedural sedation principles unique to the pediatric emergency department Susan Fuchs; 4. Pain and analgesia in the infant Michelle P. Tomassi; 5. Provider bias and patient selection for emergency department procedural sedation and analgesia Knox Todd; 6. Federal and hospital regulatory oversight in emergency department procedural sedation and analgesia Sharon Roy; 7. Nursing considerations in emergency department procedural sedation and analgesia Tania Strout and Dawn Kendrick; Part II. Analgesia for the Emergency Patient: 8. Pharmacology of commonly utilized analgesic agents Eustacia Su; 9. Patient assessment: pain scales and observation in clinical practice Tania Strout and Dawn Kendrick; 10. Pathways and protocols for the triage patient with acute pain Paula Tanabe; 11. Patients with acute pain: patient expectations and desired outcomes David Fosnocht; 12. Analgesia for the adult and pediatric multi-trauma patient Wayne Triner; 13. Analgesia for the emergency department isolated orthopedic extremity trauma patient Michael Turturro; 14. Analgesia for selected emergency head, eye, and ear patients Matthew Dunn; 15. Analgesia for the emergency headache patient James Miner; 16. Analgesia for the emergency chest pain patient Carl Germann and Andrew Perron; 17. Analgesia for the emergency back pain patient Donald Jeanmonod; 18. Analgesia for the acute abdomen patient Martha L. Neighbor; 19. Analgesia for the renal colic patient Allan Wolfson and David Newman; 20. Analgesia for the biliary colic patient Allan Wolfson and David Newman; 21. Analgesia for the chronic pain patient James Miner; 22. Outpatient analgesia following acute musculoskeletal injury John Southall; Part III. Procedural Sedation for the Emergency Patient: 23. Patient assessment and pre-procedure considerations Baruch Krauss and Steve Green; 24. Monitoring for procedural sedation Baruch Krauss; 25. Pharmacology of commonly utilized sedative agents Eustacia Su; 26. Procedural sedation for pediatric laceration repair Mark Roback; 27. Procedural sedat...