Potentially Missed Diagnosis of Ischemic Stroke in the Emergency Department in the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study
Academic Emergency Medicine2016Vol. 23(10), pp. 1128–1135
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2016 papers
Tracy E. Madsen, Jane Khoury, Rhonda Cadena, Opeolu Adeoye, Kathleen Alwell, Charles J. Moomaw, Erin McDonough, Matthew L. Flaherty, Simona Ferioli, Daniel Woo, Pooja Khatri, Joseph P. Broderick, Brett Kissela, Dawn Kleindorfer
Abstract
In a large population-based sample of AIS cases, one in seven cases were not diagnosed as AIS in the ED, but the impact on acute treatment rates is likely small. Missed diagnosis was more common among those with decreased LOC, suggesting the need for improved diagnostic approaches in these patients.
Related Papers
- → Emergency Department Crowding is Associated with Reduced Satisfaction Scores in Patients Discharged from the Emergency Department(2013)126 cited
- → 166 Assessing the Costs and Clinical Characteristics Associated With Frequent Emergency Department Users in a Suburban Emergency Department(2011)1 cited
- Analysis of Complaints from Parents of Children in Outpatient Department and Emergency Department(2008)
- → Medicaid and Moral Hazard: Covering Emergency Department Visits Increases Emergency Department Visits…or Not?(2018)
- → POLYEMBOLOKOILAMANIA IN THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT.(2023)