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Dive into the research topics where C. James Holliman is active.

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Featured researches published by C. James Holliman.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1991

Is the anteroposterior cervical spine radiograph necessary in initial trauma screening

C. James Holliman; John S. Mayer; Richard T. Cook; J. Stanley Smith

The usefulness of the anteroposterior (AP) radiograph of the cervical spine in contributing to the diagnosis of cervical spine injuries in the acute trauma patient was examined in a retrospective study. All cases of cervical spine fracture or dislocation seen at a level I trauma center over a 3-year period and at a rehabilitation center over a 10-year period were reviewed. The lateral radiograph, open-mouth odontoid radiograph, and AP radiograph of each case were sequentially examined by a neuroradiologist (blinded to the original diagnosis) to determine the contribution of each view in making a diagnosis of cervical spine injury. Results of these reviews showed that there were no cases of cervical spine injury evident on the AP view without an obvious corresponding abnormality on the lateral or open-mouth view. It was concluded that the AP view could be dropped from the initial screening radiographic study of the cervical spine in the trauma patient. Only an adequate lateral view and open-mouth odontoid view would then be necessary to initially evaluate the cervical spine in the trauma patient, and decisions to obtain further studies could be based safely on only the lateral and open-mouth views.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 2003

A Proposed Universal Medical and Public Health Definition of Terrorism

Jeffrey L. Arnold; Per Örtenwall; Marvin L. Birnbaum; Knut Ole Sundnes; Anil Aggrawal; V. Arantharaman; Abdul Wahab Al Musleh; Yasufumi Asai; Frederick M. Burkle; Jae Myung Chung; Felipe Cruz Vega; Michel Debacker; Francesco Della Corte; Herman Delooz; Garth Dickinson; Timothy J. Hodgetts; C. James Holliman; Campbell MacFarlane; Ulkumen Rodoplu; Edita Stok; Ming Che Tsai

The lack of a universally applicable definition of terrorism has confounded the understanding of terrorism since the term was first coined in 18th Century France. Although a myriad of definitions of terrorism have been advanced over the years, virtually all of these definitions have been crisis-centered, frequently reflecting the political perspectives of those who seek to define it. In this article, we deconstruct these previously used definitions of terrorism in order to reconstruct a definition of terrorism that is consequence-centered, medically relevant, and universally harmonized. A universal medical and public health definition of terrorism will facilitate clinical and scientific research, education, and communication about terrorism-related events or disasters. We propose the following universal medical and public definition of terrorism: The intentional use of violence--real or threatened--against one or more non-combatants and/or those services essential for or protective of their health, resulting in adverse health effects in those immediately affected and their community, ranging from a loss of well-being or security to injury, illness, or death.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1994

Safety of prehospital nitroglycerin

Richard C. Wuerz; Greg Swope; Steven A Meador; C. James Holliman; Gregory S Roth

STUDY OBJECTIVE To define changes in vital signs and cardiac rhythm in prehospital patients given sublingual nitroglycerin. DESIGN A five-month prospective observational study with nitroglycerin administration as the independent variable. SETTING Five independent advanced life support services. TYPE OF PARTICIPANT Three hundred prehospital patients who were given nitroglycerin by advanced life support personnel for presumed myocardial ischemia or congestive heart failure; excluded were those without repeat vital signs or ECG monitoring and those given additional medications. INTERVENTION Nitroglycerin was administered by regional emergency medical services protocols or by the order of an on-line medical command physician. RESULTS Four study patients (1.3%) had adverse effects: One became asystolic and apneic for two minutes, two experienced profound bradycardia with hypotension, and one became hypotensive while tachycardic. All recovered. The 95% confidence interval for adverse effects was 0.5% to 3.4%. Mean fall in systolic blood pressure for the other 296 patients was 14 mm Hg for one dose (confidence interval, 11 to 16 mm Hg) and 8 mm Hg (confidence interval, 2 to 13 mm Hg) for a second dose. Heart rate changed minimally with nitroglycerin administration. The blood pressure drop was linearly correlated with initial systolic pressure (r = -.44; P < .001) but not correlated with number of prior doses of nitroglycerin, initial heart rate, advanced life support time interval, age, or sex. CONCLUSION Nitroglycerin seems to be a relatively safe advanced life support drug; however, a few patients experience serious adverse effects. Most of the adverse effects we observed were bradycardic-hypotensive reactions, which appeared to be unpredictable by pretreatment characteristics. Emergency personnel should have an increased awareness of this danger when considering the use of prehospital nitroglycerin.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1997

Guidelines for Evaluation of International Emergency Medicine Assistance and Development Projects

C. James Holliman; Thomas D. Kirsch; Gary B. Green; Allan B. Wolfson; Prentice A Tom

Interest in the development of the specialty of emergency medicine and of emergency health care systems has greatly increased worldwide in the last few years. The guidelines in this article were developed in an effort to assist others in design and evaluation of all types of emergency medicine projects.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 1995

On-line Medical Direction: A Prospective Study

Richard C. Wuerz; Gregory E. Swope; C. James Holliman; Gaspar Vazquez-de Miguel

OBJECTIVES To determine the frequency with which physician, on-line medical direction (OLMD) [direct medical control] of prehospital care results in orders, to describe the nature of these orders, and to measure OLMD time intervals. METHODS Blinded, prospective study. SETTING A university hospital base-station resource center. PARTICIPANTS Ten emergency physicians, 50 advanced life support providers. INTERVENTIONS Prehospital treatment was directed by both standing orders and OLMD physician orders. Independent observers recorded event times and the characteristics of OLMD. RESULTS Physician orders were given in 47 (19%) of the 245 study cases, and covered a variety of interventions, including many already authorized by standing orders. Mean OLMD radio time was four minutes (245 +/- 216 seconds [sec]), and time from beginning of OLMD to hospital arrival averaged 12 minutes (718 +/- 439 sec). Mean transport time in this system was 13 minutes. CONCLUSION Despite detailed standing orders, OLMD results in orders for clinical interventions in 19% of cases. On-line medical direction requires about four minutes of physician time per call. This constituted about one-third of the potential field treatment time interval in this system. Thus, OLMD appears to play an important role in providing quality prehospital care.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1995

Attending supervision of nonemergency medicine residents in a university hospital ED

C. James Holliman; Richard C. Wuerz; Mark J Kimak; Keith K. Burkhart; J. Ward Donovan; Howard L Rudnick; Mark A Bates; H. Arnold Muller

There have been a limited number of studies assessing the impact of attending physician supervision of residents in the emergency department (ED). The objective of this study is to describe the changes in patient care when attending emergency physicians (AEPs) supervise nonemergency medicine residents in a university hospital ED. This was a prospective study including 1,000 patients, 32 second- and third-year nonemergency medicine residents and eight AEPs. The AEPs classified changes in care for each case as major, minor, or none, according to a 40-item data sheet list. There were 153 major changes and 353 minor changes by the AEP. The most common major changes were ordering laboratory or x-ray tests that showed a clinically significant abnormality, and eliciting important physical exam findings. Potentially limb- or life-threatening errors were averted by the AEP in 17 patients. Supervision of nonemergency medicine residents in the ED resulted in frequent and clinically important changes in patient care.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1997

Emergency medicine in Jordan.

Suleiman Abbadi; Abdel Karim Abdallah; C. James Holliman

The kingdom of Jordan is well known in the Middle East for the high-quality health care it provides its citizens and other patients from throughout the region. The specialty of emergency medicine is developing in Jordan along unique lines, mainly as an outgrowth of family medicine.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1992

Medical command errors in an urban advanced life support system

C. James Holliman; Richard C. Wuerz; Steven A Meador

STUDY OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to assist in focusing educational efforts for command physicians by identifying the most common types of errors made by on-line medical command. DESIGN Retrospective survey of prehospital advanced life support (ALS) trip sheets. SETTING An urban ALS paramedic service with on-line physician medical command rotating on a monthly basis among three hospitals. PARTICIPANTS From September 1988 through December 1990, all ALS run sheets were reviewed as part of an ongoing quality assurance program. Cases were identified as deviating from regional emergency medical services protocols as judged by agreement of three physician reviewers. Cases were excluded if all three reviewers did not agree that the command rendered was inappropriate. INTERVENTIONS Command errors were identified from the prehospital ALS run sheets and categorized. RESULTS One hundred ninety-four command errors in 167 cases were identified from 3,839 runs (4.4% of all runs). Six types of errors accounted for 80% of the total errors, with the most common error (34%) being failure to address the possibility of hypoglycemia with altered level of consciousness. Error rate decreased from 7.9% to 2.6% of total runs during the study period. CONCLUSION To reduce the medical command error rate, physician education should be directed at the six problem areas identified. Ongoing quality assurance review of medical command may result in a decrease of the command error rate.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1993

The art of dealing with consultants.

C. James Holliman

This article presents guidelines for interactions with consultant physicians by emergency physicians. The political aspects of dealing with consultant physicians often are not stressed in emergency medicine training programs and little has been written in the emergency medicine literature on this topic. Practicing maintenance of good relations with consultant physicians can make work in the emergency department more enjoyable for all concerned, and probably contributes to better overall patient care.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 1994

Comparison of Interventions in Prehospital Care by Standing Orders Versus Interventions Ordered by Direct [On-line] Medical Command

C. James Holliman; Richard C. Wuerz; Gaspar Vazquez-de Miguel; Steven A Meador

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to compare the patient care measures provided by paramedics according to standing orders versus measures ordered by direct [on-line] medical command in order to determine the types and frequency of medical command orders. DESIGN Prospective identification of patient care measures done as part of a prehospital quality assurance program. SETTING An urban paramedic service in the northeast United States with direct medical command from three local hospitals. PARTICIPANTS One thousand eight paramedic reports from October 1992 through March 1993. INTERVENTIONS All patient care interventions recorded as done by standing orders or by direct medical command orders. Errors in patient care were determined by the same criteria as in the prior two studies of the same system. RESULTS Direct medical command gave orders in 143/1,008 (14.2%) cases. Paramedics performed 2,453/2,624 (93.5%) of the total patient care interventions using standing orders. In 61 cases (6.1%), medical command ordered a potentially beneficial intervention not specified by standing orders or not done by the paramedic. 21/171 (12.3%) command orders were for additional doses of epinephrine or atropine in cardiac arrest cases (where the initial doses had been given under standing orders), and 59/171 (34.5%) were for interventions already mandated or permitted by standing orders. The paramedic error rate was 0.6%, and the medical command error rate was 1.8% (unchanged form the prior study of the same standing-orders system). CONCLUSION Direct medical command gave orders in 14% of cases in this standing-orders system, but 35% of command orders only reiterated the standing orders. More selective and reduced uses of on-line command could be done in this system with no change in the types or numbers of patient care interventions performed.

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Richard C. Wuerz

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Steven A Meador

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Gary B. Green

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Alan J. Hirshberg

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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