9 results
#Management #CAP #CommunityAcquiredPneumonia #Pneumonia #Risk #Stratification  #Admission #PSI #CURB65 #Algorithm #Score
CommunityAcquiredPneumonia #Pneumonia #Risk ... #Stratification ... #Admission #PSI ... #CURB65 #Algorithm ... #Score
Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) as a site-of-care tool. BUN, blood urea nitrogen; CHF, chronic heart failure;
Severity Index (PSI ... pressure #Management #EM ... IM #Pneumonia #Risk ... #Stratification ... #Criteria
Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) as a site-of-care tool. BUN, blood urea nitrogen; CHF, chronic heart failure;
Severity Index (PSI ... pressure #Management #EM ... IM #Pneumonia #Risk ... #Stratification ... #Criteria
Chest Pain / ACS Evaluation Algorithm
Algorithm that attempts to the use history taking (guided by LRs),
Chest Pain / ACS Evaluation ... and the HEART score ... 2.6) - Cardiac risk ... findings - Age - Risk ... #cardiology #Angina
How should the modified Sgarbossa Criteria be used in initial evaluation of patients with suspected AMI
modified Sgarbossa Criteria ... emergent primary PCI ... Validated) - Sgarbossa score ... Validated) #Diagnosis #Cardiology ... #Algorithm #RebelEM
Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI)  - The PSI was developed from an administrative data set of
) - The PSI was ... populations #Management #EM ... IM #Pneumonia #Risk ... #Stratification ... #Criteria #AAFP
In July 2015 the ACC/AHA proposed and published an algorithm to help stratify cardiac arrest patients
and published an algorithm ... angiography and possible PCI ... NSTEMI #Activation #Risk ... #Stratfication ... #Management #Cardiology
Preoperative Risk Evaluation

Major Pre-Op Questions:
1. Does the patient have any modifiable risk factors that could be
Preoperative Risk ... Evaluation Major ... event, follow ACC algorithm ... one post op Cardiology ... #Evaluation #stratification
If the patient has a HEART Score of 0-3 and a negative initial troponin, have a
informed that the risk ... knowledge of the < 2% risk ... further testing for risk ... stratification ... judged higher risk