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Dive into the research topics where Bradley Kaufman is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley Kaufman.


Critical Care | 2009

Success of organ donation after out-of-hospital cardiac death and the barriers to its acceptance.

Bradley Kaufman; Stephen P. Wall; Alexander J Gilbert; Nancy Neveloff Dubler; Lewis R. Goldfrank

It is well documented that transplants save lives and improve quality of life for patients suffering from kidney, liver, and heart failure. Uncontrolled donation after cardiac death (UDCD) is an effective and ethical alternative to existing efforts towards increasing the available pool of organs. However, people who die from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest are currently being denied the opportunity to be organ donors except in those few locations where out-of-hospital UDCD programs are active, such as in Paris, Madrid, and Barcelona. Societies have the medical and moral obligation to develop UDCD programs.


Journal of Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2015

Prehospital Stroke Identification: Factors Associated with Diagnostic Accuracy

Ethan S. Brandler; Mohit Sharma; Flynn McCullough; David Ben-Eli; Bradley Kaufman; Priyank Khandelwal; Elizabeth Helzner; Richard Sinert; Steven R. Levine

BACKGROUND Stroke patients misdiagnosed by emergency medical services (EMS) providers have been shown to receive delayed in-hospital care. We aim at determining the diagnostic accuracy of Fire Department of New York (FDNY) EMS providers for stroke and identifying potential reasons for misdiagnosis. METHODS Prehospital care reports of all patients transported by FDNY EMS to 3 hospitals from January 1, 2010, to December 31, 2011, were compared against the American Heart Association Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) database (reference standard) for the diagnosis of stroke. Age-adjusted logistic regression models were generated to explore prehospital patient characteristics which are associated with stroke misdiagnosis. RESULTS Of 72,984 patient transports during the study period, 750 had a GWTG diagnosis of stroke, 468 (62%) of which were identified correctly in the field and 282 (38%) were missed. An additional 268 patients were misdiagnosed as stroke when in fact they had an alternative diagnosis. Overall sensitivity was 62.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 58.9-65.8) and specificity was 99.6% (95% CI, 99.6-99.7). No patients who presented with unilateral weakness, facial weakness, or speech problems were missed, whereas patients with atypical complaints like general malaise, dizziness, and headache were more likely to be missed. Seizures led the EMS providers to both overcall a stroke and miss the diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS FDNY EMS care providers missed more than a third of stroke cases. Seizures and other atypical presentations contribute significantly to stroke misdiagnosis in the field. Our findings highlight the need for better prehospital stroke identification methods.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2013

Accuracy of weight estimates in pediatric patients by prehospital Emergency Medical Services personnel

C. Anthoney E. Lim; Bradley Kaufman; John O’Connor; Sandra J. Cunningham

OBJECTIVES Most medications administered to children are weight-based, and inaccurate weight estimation may contribute to medical errors. Previous studies have been limited to hypothetical patients and those in cardiopulmonary arrest. We aim to determine the accuracy of weight estimates by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel of children receiving medications and to identify factors associated with accuracy. METHODS EMS records of children <18 years old receiving weight-based medications were merged with EMS staffing data and hospital records. The rate of accurate weight estimates, defined as a value within 20% of the actual weight, was evaluated as the primary outcome. Factors associated with patients and prehospital personnel were also evaluated. RESULTS 29233 transports occurring during the study period were reviewed, and 199 transports of 179 children were analyzed. The average experience of EMS personnel was 35.8 months (SD ±30.7). EMS personnel accurately estimated weights in 164/199 (82.4%) patients; estimated weights were within 10.8% (SD ±10.5) of the actual weights. Underestimated weights were associated with receiving doses outside of the therapeutic range. Inaccurate weight estimates were associated with age less than 10 years or cardiopulmonary arrest. There was a trend toward inaccurate weight estimates among children who presented with seizures. CONCLUSIONS EMS personnel are generally accurate in estimating weights of children. There was an association between underestimated weights and inaccurate medication dosing. Younger children or those presenting with seizure or cardiopulmonary arrest were more likely to have inaccurate weight estimates.


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2006

Pediatric nerve agent poisoning: medical and operational considerations for emergency medical services in a large American city.

George L. Foltin; Michael G. Tunik; Jennifer Curran; Lewis Marshall; Joseph Bove; Robert Van Amerongen; Allen Cherson; Yedidyah Langsam; Bradley Kaufman; Glenn Asaeda; Dario Gonzalez; Arthur Cooper

Abstract: Most published recommendations for treatment of pediatric nerve agent poisoning are based on standard resuscitation doses for these agents. However, certain medical and operational concerns suggest that an alternative approach may be warranted for treatment of children by emergency medical personnel after mass chemical events. (1) There is evidence both that suprapharmacological doses may be warranted and that side effects from antidote overdosage can be tolerated. (2) There is concern that many emergency medical personnel will have difficulty determining both the age of the child and the severity of the symptoms. Therefore, the Regional Emergency Medical Advisory Committee of New York City and the Fire Department, City of New York, Bureau of Emergency Medical Services, in collaboration with the Center for Pediatric Emergency Medicine of the New York University School of Medicine and the Bellevue Hospital Center, have developed a pediatric nerve agent antidote dosing schedule that addresses these considerations. These doses are comparable to those being administered to adults with severe symptoms and within limits deemed tolerable after inadvertent nerve agent overdose in children. We conclude that the above approach is likely a safe and effective alternative to weight-based dosing of children, which will be nearly impossible to attain under field conditions.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 2015

A modified simple triage and rapid treatment algorithm from the New York City (USA) Fire Department

Faizan H. Arshad; Alan Williams; Glenn Asaeda; Douglas Isaacs; Bradley Kaufman; David Ben-Eli; Dario Gonzalez; John Freese; Joan Hillgardner; Jessica Weakley; Charles B. Hall; Mayris P. Webber; David J. Prezant

INTRODUCTION The objective of this study was to determine if modification of the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START) system by the addition of an Orange category, intermediate between the most critically injured (Red) and the non-critical, non-ambulatory injured (Yellow), would reduce over- and under-triage rates in a simulated mass-casualty incident (MCI) exercise. METHODS A computer-simulation exercise of identical presentations of an MCI scenario involving a 2-train collision, with 28 case scenarios, was provided for triaging to two groups: the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY; n=1,347) using modified START, and the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) providers from the Eagles 2012 EMS conference (Lafayette, Louisiana USA; n=110) using unmodified START. Percent correct by triage category was calculated for each group. Performance was then compared between the two EMS groups on the five cases where Orange was the correct answer under the modified START system. RESULTS Overall, FDNY-EMS providers correctly triaged 91.2% of cases using FDNY-START whereas non-FDNY-Eagles providers correctly triaged 87.1% of cases using unmodified START. In analysis of the five Orange cases (chest pain or dyspnea without obvious trauma), FDNY-EMS performed significantly better using FDNY-START, correctly triaging 86.3% of cases (over-triage 1.5%; under-triage 12.2%), whereas the non-FDNY-Eagles group using unmodified START correctly triaged 81.5% of cases (over-triage 17.3%; under-triage 1.3%), a difference of 4.9% (95% CI, 1.5-8.2). CONCLUSIONS The FDNY-START system may allow providers to prioritize casualties using an intermediate category (Orange) more properly aligned to meet patient needs, and as such, may reduce the rates of over-triage compared with START. The FDNY-START system decreases the variability in patient sorting while maintaining high field utility without needing computer assistance or extensive retraining. Comparison of triage algorithms at actual MCIs is needed; however, initial feedback is promising, suggesting that FDNY-START can improve triage with minimal additional training and cost.


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2017

Acuity Prediction Using Emergency Medical Services Prenotifications in a Pediatric Emergency Department

Kristy Williamson; Robert Gochman; Francesca M. Bullaro; Bradley Kaufman; William Krief


Stroke | 2013

Abstract WP243: Identification of Common Confounders in the Prehospital Identification of Stroke in Urban, Underserved Minorities

Ethan Brandler; Mohit Sharma; Priyank Khandelwal; David Kinraich; John Freese; James Braun; David Ben-Eli; Toby Gropen; Bradley Kaufman; Steven R. Levine


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2013

Comparison of Disaster Triage Methods

Bradley Kaufman; David Ben-Eli; Glenn Asaeda; Dario Gonzalez; Doug Isaacs; John Freese; David J. Prezant


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011

123 Utilization Patterns by Socioeconomic Status in a Large Urban Emergency Medical Service

K. Munjal; S. Goldberg; J. Braun; John Freese; Robert Silverman; C. Hall; Bradley Kaufman; D. Isaacs; A. Werner; David J. Prezant


Resuscitation | 2010

Comparison of VF waveform characteristics and EMS response time as predictors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes

John Freese; Dawn Jorgenson; P.Y. Liu; J. Innes; L. Matallana; Krishnakant Nammi; R.T. Donohoe; Mark Whitbread; R.A. Silverman; Bradley Kaufman; Doug Isaacs; David J. Prezant

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John Freese

New York City Fire Department

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David J. Prezant

New York City Fire Department

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Doug Isaacs

New York City Fire Department

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L. Matallana

New York City Fire Department

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Dario Gonzalez

New York City Fire Department

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Glenn Asaeda

New York City Fire Department

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P.Y. Liu

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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