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Dive into the research topics where Christopher Eric McCoy is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher Eric McCoy.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2013

Guidelines for Field Triage of Injuried Patients - eScholarship

Bharath Chakravarthy; Christopher Eric McCoy; Shahram Lotfipour

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has published significant data and trends related to the national public health burden associated with trauma and injury. In the United States (U.S.), injury is the leading cause of death for persons aged 1–44 years. In 2008, approximately 30 million injuries resulted in an emergency department (ED) evaluation; 5.4 million (18%) of these patients were transported by Emergency Medical Services (EMS).1 EMS providers determine the severity of injury and begin initial management at the scene. The decisions to transport injured patients to the appropriate hospital are made through a process known as “field triage.” Since 1986, the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT) has provided guidance for the field triage process though its “Field Triage Decision Scheme.” In 2005, the CDC, with financial support from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), collaborated with ASC-COT to convene the initial meeting of the National Expert Panel on Field Triage (the Panel) to revise the decision scheme. This revised version was published in 2006 by ASC-COT, and in 2009 the CDC published a detailed description of the scientific rational for revising the field triage criteria entitled, “Guidelines for Field Triage of Injured Patients.”2–3 In 2011, the CDC reconvened the Panel to review the 2006 Guidelines and recommend any needed changes. We present the methodology, findings and updated guidelines from the Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) from the 2011 Panel along with commentary on the burden of injury in the U.S., and the role emergency physicians have in impacting morbidity and mortality at the population level.


Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions | 2016

Flipping the advanced cardiac life support classroom with team-based learning: comparison of cognitive testing performance for medical students at the University of California, Irvine, United States

Megan Boysen-Osborn; Craig L. Anderson; Roman Navarro; Justin Yanuck; Suzanne Strom; Christopher Eric McCoy; Julie Youm; Mary Frances Ypma-Wong; Mark I. Langdorf

Purpose: It aimed to find if written test results improved for advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) taught in flipped classroom/team-based Learning (FC/TBL) vs. lecture-based (LB) control in University of California-Irvine School of Medicine, USA. Methods: Medical students took 2010 ACLS with FC/TBL (2015), compared to 3 classes in LB (2012-14) format. There were 27.5 hours of instruction for FC/TBL model (TBL 10.5, podcasts 9, small-group simulation 8 hours), and 20 (12 lecture, simulation 8 hours) in LB. TBL covered 13 cardiac cases; LB had none. Seven simulation cases and didactic content were the same by lecture (2012-14) or podcast (2015) as was testing: 50 multiple-choice questions (MCQ), 20 rhythm matchings, and 7 fill-in clinical cases. Results: 354 students took the course (259 [73.1%] in LB in 2012-14, and 95 [26.9%] in FC/TBL in 2015). Two of 3 tests (MCQ and fill-in) improved for FC/TBL. Overall, median scores increased from 93.5% (IQR 90.6, 95.4) to 95.1% (92.8, 96.7, P=0.0001). For the fill-in test: 94.1% for LB (89.6, 97.2) to 96.6% for FC/TBL (92.4, 99.20 P=0.0001). For MC: 88% for LB (84, 92) to 90% for FC/TBL (86, 94, P=0.0002). For the rhythm test: median 100% for both formats. More students failed 1 of 3 tests with LB vs. FC/TBL (24.7% vs. 14.7%), and 2 or 3 components (8.1% vs. 3.2%, P=0.006). Conversely, 82.1% passed all 3 with FC/TBL vs. 67.2% with LB (difference 14.9%, 95% CI 4.8-24.0%). Conclusion: A FC/TBL format for ACLS marginally improved written test results.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Emergency medical services public health implications and interim guidance for the Ebola virus in the United States.

Christopher Eric McCoy; Shahram Lotfipour; Bharath Chakravarthy; Carl H. Schultz; Erik D. Barton

The 25th known outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) is now a global public health emergency and the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared the epidemic to be a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). Since the first cases of the West African epidemic were reported in March 2014, there has been an increase in infection rates of over 13,000% over a 6-month period. The Ebola virus has now arrived in the United States and public health professionals, doctors, hospitals, Emergency Medial Services Administrators, Medical Directors, and policy makers have been working with haste to develop strategies to prevent the disease from reaching epidemic proportions. Prehospital care providers (emergency medical technicians and paramedics) and medical first responders (including but not limited to firefighters and law enforcement) are the healthcare systems front lines when it comes to first medical contact with patients outside of the hospital setting. Risk of contracting Ebola can be particularly high in this population of first responders if the appropriate precautions are not implemented. This article provides a brief clinical overview of the Ebola Virus Disease and provides a comprehensive summary of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Interim Guidance for Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems and 9-1-1 Public Safety Answering Points (PSAPS) for Management of Patients with Known of Suspected Ebola Virus Disease in the United States.


BMC Emergency Medicine | 2015

A retrospective analysis of ethnic and gender differences in alcohol consumption among emergency department patients: A cross-sectional study

Shahram Lotfipour; Victor Cisneros; Uzor C. Ogbu; Christopher Eric McCoy; Cristobal Barrios; Craig L. Anderson; Wirachin Hoonpongsimanont; Kristin Alix; Bharath Chakravarthy

BackgroundPrevious studies of alcohol use have recognized several trends in consumption patterns among gender and age yet few have examined ethnic differences. This study examines the intra- and inter-ethnic differences in alcohol consumption among a population of patients seen in the emergency department.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional study conducted in the emergency department in a large urban setting. Information on drinking behavior and ethnicity was collected using the Computerized Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention (CASI) tool. We explored differences in drinking patterns using a multivariate multinomial logistic regression model.ResultsWe analyzed the drinking habits of 2,444 patients surveyed between November 2012 and May 2014. The results indicate that when compared to non-Hispanic whites, Asians have the lowest odds of drinking within normal limits or excessively, followed by other Latinos, and Mexicans. Age and gender consistently showed statistically significant associations with alcohol-use. The odds of drinking within normal limits or excessively are inversely associated with age and were lower among females. The predicted probabilities show a marked gender-specific difference in alcohol use both between and within ethnic/racial groups. They also highlight an age-related convergence in alcohol use between men and women within ethnic groups.DiscussionThe results of this study show intra-racial/ethnic variability associated with sex and education. The highlighted differences within and between ethnic groups reinforce the need to use refined categories when examining alcohol use among minorities.ConclusionThe results of this study confirm some alcohol consumption trends among ethnic minorities observed in literature. It provides empirical evidence of the marked gender differences and highlights an age-related convergence for gender-specific alcohol use. Health-care personnel should be aware of these differences when screening and counseling.


Expert Opinion on Drug Safety | 2004

Safety of drotrecogin alfa (activated) in the treatment of patients with severe sepsis

Christopher Eric McCoy

While severe sepsis continues to plague hospitals worldwide, new treatment modalities, including activated recombinant protein C (drotrecogin alfa, Xigris™, Lilly), have become a standard treatment alternative in many institutional algorithms. Drotrecogin alfa was shown to have a beneficial effect on mortality versus placebo in the PROWESS (Recombinant Human Activated Protein C Worldwide Evaluation in Severe Sepsis) trial (p = 0.005), but its use is not completely without risk. An increased risk of bleeding, including severe bleeding episodes, exists ranging 3.5 – 5.2% in the drotrecogin alfa treatment group versus 2.0 – 5.0% in the placebo group. Patients at risk include those on concomitant heparin therapy (> 15,000 units/day), those with platelet counts ≤ 30,000/mm3, and those undergoing an invasive procedure during the scheduled infusion period. After almost three years on the US market, the reported incidence of severe bleeding episodes has risen only slightly from the pre-marketing era, at that time notable for restrictive treatment protocols, devoid of at-risk patients. Drotrecogin alfa, while a promising agent for severe sepsis, requires prudent patient evaluation for bleeding risks.


AEM Education and Training | 2017

Telesimulation: An Innovative Tool for Health Professions Education

Christopher Eric McCoy; Julie Sayegh; Rola Alrabah; Lalena M. Yarris

Telesimulation is a new and innovative concept and process that has been used to provide education, training, and assessment in health‐related fields such as medicine. This new area of simulation, and its terminology, has its origins within the past decade. The face validity and ability to provide the benefits of simulation education to learners at off‐site locations has allowed the wide and rapid adoption of telesimulation in the field of medical education. Telesimulation has been implemented in areas such as pediatric resuscitation, surgery, emergency medicine, ultrasound‐guided regional anesthesia in anesthesiology, nursing, and neurosurgery. However, its rapid expansion and current use has outgrown its recent description less than a decade ago. To date, there is no unifying definition of telesimulation that encompasses all the areas where it has been used while simultaneously allowing for growth and expansion in this field of study. This article has two main objectives. The first objective is to provide a comprehensive and unifying definition of telesimulation that encompasses all the areas where it has been used while allowing for growth and expansion in the field of study. The secondary objective is to describe the utility of telesimulation for emergency medicine educators in the context of the current evidence to serve as a background and framework that educators may use when considering creating educational programs that incorporate telecommunication and simulation resources. This article is complementary to the large group presentation where this new comprehensive and unifying definition was introduced to the simulation community at the International Meeting on Simulation in Healthcare in January 2016.


CJEM | 2008

Central diabetes insipidus misdiagnosed as acute gastroenteritis in a pediatric patient

Laleh Gharahbaghian; Shahram Lotfipour; Christopher Eric McCoy; Wirachin Hoonpongsimanont; Mark I. Langdorf

This case report describes an unusual presentation of nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, which was misdiagnosed as acute gastroenteritis in a 6-year-old girl. The patient later returned to the emergency department (ED) with severe dehydration from idiopathic central diabetes insipidus (DI). At her first visit, this previously healthy patient presented with mild dehydration, signs of acute gastroenteritis and normal urine output. Her brother had experienced similar symptoms a few days earlier. She tolerated an oral fluid challenge and was discharged from the ED with stable vital signs. Two days later, the patient returned with severe dehydration, resolving diarrhea and persistent vomiting. She was admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit. Magnetic resonance imaging illustrated an absent posterior pituitary enhancing signal, which demonstrated a loss of function in that region. There were no other abnormalities. The patient subsequently received desmopressin with improving clinical status and was discharged on the eighth hospital day. DI is a rare disease, but can be fatal if left undiagnosed. It should, therefore, be considered in the differential diagnosis of a dehydrated patient with an unexpectedly low urine specific gravity.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018

Understanding the Use of Composite Endpoints in Clinical Trials

Christopher Eric McCoy

Clinicians, institutions, healthcare networks, and policymakers use outcomes reported in clinical trials as the basis for medical decision-making when managing individual patients or populations. Therefore, the choice of a valid primary endpoint is crucial for randomized controlled trials (RCT) to demonstrate efficacy of new therapies. Recent improvements in treatment, however, have led to a decline in the morbidity and mortality of several common diseases, resulting in a reduction in relevant outcomes that can be used as clinical trial endpoints. Composite endpoints have been used as a solution to maintain the feasibility of RCTs, particularly when facing low event rates, high cost, and long follow-up. However, the benefits of using composite endpoints must be weighed against the risks of misinterpretation by clinicians and policymakers, as incorrect interpretation may have a detrimental effect on patients and populations. This paper defines a composite endpoint, discusses the rationale for its use, and provides a practical approach to interpreting results to aid in medical decision-making.


Clinical Practices and Cases in Emergency Medicine | 2018

Submassive Central Saddle and Extensive Bilateral Pulmonary Embolism Presenting as Syncope Treated with Catheter-directed Therapy

Jessica Andrusaitis; Mohammad Helmy; Christopher Eric McCoy; Wirachin Hoonpongsimanont; Bharath Chakravarthy; Shahram Lotfipour

Massive and submassive pulmonary emboli (PE) are rare but potentially life-threatening medical conditions that necessitate immediate recognition and appropriate treatment. We report a 52-year-old man who was found to have a submassive central saddle and extensive bilateral PEs after experiencing a syncopal event and who had evidence of right heart strain and pulmonary hypertension. He was subsequently treated with catheter-assisted thrombectomy and pulmonary artery tissue plasminogen activator administration. This case report presents an outcome in a patient who received an innovative therapy that has not been well established in this subset of patients.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2016

Race-related Healthcare Disparities Among California Workers: Public Health Considerations for Immigration Reform

Christopher Eric McCoy; Randy Woo; Craig L. Anderson; Shahram Lotfipour

BACKGROUND Healthcare disparities are prevalent in medicine and identifying them will provide healthcare professionals, administrators, and policy makers needed information to address this public health concern. OBJECTIVE To evaluate racial and ethnic disparities in the rates of hospital admission and death among California workers. METHODS We performed an analysis of hospital and emergency department (ED) data from the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD). Data was collected from California licensed acute care hospitals from 2008-2010. INCLUSION CRITERIA patients >15 years of age whose expected source of payment was workers compensation. EXCLUSION CRITERIA patients <15 years; had missing data for age, sex, race, or injury; or were injured by a suicide attempt, poisoning, or complication of medical procedure. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the relationship of race/ethnicity and admission/death rates. RESULTS There were 393,298 patients discharged from the ED and 23,343 patients admitted from ED had workers compensation as their expected sources of payment and 150,277 met our inclusion criteria. The annual rate of ED treated injuries was 209/100,000 for Caucasians 343/100,000 for Hispanics, 258/100,000 for blacks and 97/100,000 for Asians. Compared to Caucasians, admission odds ratios (OR) were 1.15 (95% CI 1.07-1.25) for Hispanics, 1.08 (95% CI 0.87-1.33) for blacks, and 0.78 (95% CI 0.63-0.97) for Asians. CONCLUSION We observed race and ethnicity related healthcare disparities among the occupationally injured in California, with Hispanics having the highest odds of admission and annual incidence of ED treated injuries. No difference in mortality rates was observed.

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C. Anderson

University of California

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Julie Sayegh

University of California

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Michael Menchine

University of Southern California

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