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Dive into the research topics where Daniel L. Beskind is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel L. Beskind.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1994

Choreoathetotic movement disorder in a boy with Mycoplasma pneumoniae encephalitis.

Daniel L. Beskind; Samuel M. Keim

We present a case of a 10-year-old boy who presented to the emergency department with high fever, acute choreoathetosis, weakness, and dysarthria. An EEG showed generalized slowing, and serologies defined an acute case of Mycoplasma pneumoniae encephalitis. This report describes the most common presentations, therapy, and outcomes of M pneumoniae encephalitis.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2012

Balancing the potential risks and benefits of out-of-hospital intubation in traumatic brain injury: the intubation/hyperventilation effect.

Joshua B. Gaither; Daniel W. Spaite; Bentley J. Bobrow; Kurt R. Denninghoff; Uwe Stolz; Daniel L. Beskind; Harvey W Meislin

INTRODUCTION The early management of patients with severe traumatic brain injury presents a challenge for both out-of-hospital and emergency department (ED) providers. Every year, more than 1.4 million patients are evaluated in US EDs for traumatic brain injury; 235,000 of these patients require hospitalization and 50,000 die. The lifetime cost of traumatic brain injury sustained in 2000 alone was estimated to be more than


Resuscitation | 2016

Viewing a brief chest-compression-only CPR video improves bystander CPR performance and responsiveness in high school students: A cluster randomized trial

Daniel L. Beskind; Uwe Stolz; Rebecca Thiede; Riley Hoyer; Whitney Burns; Jeffrey Brown; Melissa Ludgate; Timothy Tiutan; Romy Shane; Deven McMorrow; Michael Pleasants; Ashish R. Panchal

60 billion, with more than 2% of the US population requiring long-term assistance with activities of daily living as a result of traumatic brain injury. Although only a fraction of these patients require out-of-hospital intubation, the potential influence of this intervention remains high because the intubated subgroup is generally a severely injured cohort. However, controversy now surrounds this issue. Patient outcomes after traumatic brain injury may be affected by early care, likely because outcomes are not determined solely by the severity of the initial insult, or primary brain injury. Additional secondary injury to the central nervous system may occur and increase disability or result in death. This potentially preventable or reversible damage may become indelible despite subsequent optimal management. In early traumatic brain injury care, intubation may be associated with worsened secondary injury. Some reports have implicated out-of-hospital intubation as a factor associated with negative outcomes. Other investigations have demonstrated no difference or improved outcomes with field intubation. These conflicting observations are the source of debate, complicated by growing evidence that postintubation hyperventilation is common and a cause of secondary brain injury. Even short periods of hyperventilation may result in increased morbidity and mortality. d


Prehospital Emergency Care | 2014

A Comparison of the Prehospital Motor Component of the Glasgow Coma Scale (mGCS) to the Prehospital Total GCS (tGCS) as a Prehospital Risk Adjustment Measure for Trauma Patients

Daniel L. Beskind; Uwe Stolz; Austin Gross; Ryan Earp; Justin Mitchelson; Dan Judkins; Paul Bowlby; José M. Guillén-Rodríguez

BACKGROUND CPR training in schools is a public health initiative to improve out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survival. It is unclear whether brief video training in students improves CPR quality and responsiveness and skills retention. OBJECTIVES Determine if a brief video is as effective as classroom instruction for chest compression-only (CCO) CPR training in high school students. METHODS This was a prospective cluster-randomized controlled trial with three study arms: control (sham video), brief video (BV), and CCO-CPR class. Students were randomized and clustered based on their classrooms and evaluated using a standardized OHCA scenario measuring CPR quality (compression rate, depth, hands-off time) and responsiveness (calling 911, time to calling 911, starting compressions within 2min). Data was collected at baseline, post-intervention and 2 months. Generalized linear mixed models were used to analyze outcome data, accounting for repeated measures for each individual and clustering by class. RESULTS 179 students (14-18 years) were consented in 7 classrooms (clusters). At post-intervention and 2 months, BV and CCO class students called 911 more frequently and sooner, started chest compressions earlier, and had improved chest compression rates and hands-off time compared to baseline. Chest compression depth improved significantly from baseline in the CCO class, but not in the BV group post-intervention and at 2 months. CONCLUSIONS Brief CPR video training resulted in improved CPR quality and responsiveness in high school students. Compression depth only improved with traditional class training. This suggests brief educational interventions are beneficial to improve CPR responsiveness but psychomotor training is important for CPR quality.


Prehospital Emergency Care | 2014

When Should You Test for and Treat Hypoglycemia in Prehospital Seizure Patients

Daniel L. Beskind; Suzanne Michelle Rhodes; Uwe Stolz; Brett Birrer; Thomas R. Mayfield; Scott Bourn; Kurt R. Denninghoff

Abstract Objective. This study compared the prehospital motor component subscale of the Glasgow Coma Scale (mGCS) to the prehospital total GCS (tGCS) score for its ability to predict the need for intubation, survival to hospital discharge, and neurosurgical intervention in trauma patients. Methods. This is a retrospective analysis of an urban level 1 trauma registry. All trauma patients presenting to the trauma center emergency department via emergency medical services from July 2008 through June 2010 were included. The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) analysis was used to compare the predictive ability of the prehospital mGCS to tGCS for three outcomes: intubation, survival to hospital discharge, and neurosurgical intervention. Two subgroups (patients with injury severity score [ISS] ≥ 16 and traumatic brain injury [TBI] [head abbreviated injury score (AIS) ≥ 3]) were analyzed. An a priori statistically significant absolute difference of 0.050 in AUC between mGCS and tGCS for these clinical outcomes was used as a clinically significant difference. Multiple imputation was used for missing prehospital GCS data. Results. There were 9,816 patients, of which 4% were intubated, 3.8% had neurosurgical intervention, and 97.1% survived to hospital discharge. The absolute difference in AUC (prehospital tGCS minus mGCS) for all cases was statistically significant for all three outcomes but did not reach the clinical significance threshold: survival = 0.010 (95% CI: 0.002–0.018), intubation = 0.018 (95% CI: 0.011–0.024), and neurosurgical intervention = 0.019 (95% CI: 0.007–0.029). The difference in AUC between tGCS and mGCS for the subgroups ISS ≥ 16 (n = 1,151) and TBI (n = 1,165) did not reach clinical significance for the three outcomes. The discriminatory ability of the prehospital mGCS was good for survival (AUC: all patients = 0.89, ISS ≥ 16 = 0.84, traumatic brain injury = 0.86) excellent for intubation (AUC: all patients = 0.95, ISS ≥ 16 = 0.91, traumatic brain injury = 0.91), and poor for neurosurgical intervention (AUC: all patients = 0.67, ISS ≥ 16 = 0.57, traumatic brain injury = 0.60). Conclusion. The prehospital mGCS appears have good discriminatory power and is equivalent to the prehospital tGCS for predicting intubation and survival to hospital discharge in this trauma population as a whole, those with ISS ≥ 16, or TBI.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2012

Analysis of Automated External Defibrillator Device Failures Reported to the Food and Drug Administration

Lawrence DeLuca; Allan Simpson; Daniel L. Beskind; Kristi Grall; Lisa R. Stoneking; Uwe Stolz; Daniel W. Spaite; Ashish R. Panchal; Kurt R. Denninghoff

Abstract Objectives. Seizure is a frequent reason for activating the Emergency Medical System (EMS). Little is known about the frequency of seizure caused by hypoglycemia, yet many EMS protocols require glucose testing prior to treatment. We hypothesized that hypoglycemia is rare among EMS seizure patients and glucose testing results in delayed administration of benzodiazepines. Methods. This was a retrospective study of a national ambulance service database encompassing 140 ALS capable EMS systems spanning 40 states and Washington DC. All prehospital calls from August 1, 2010 through December 31, 2012 with a primary or secondary impression of seizure that resulted in patient treatment or transport were included. Median regression with robust and cluster (EMS agency) adjusted standard errors was used to determine if time to benzodiazepine administration was significantly related to blood glucose testing. Results. Of 2,052,534 total calls, 76,584 (3.7%) were for seizure with 53,505 (69.9%) of these having a glucose measurement recorded. Hypoglycemia (blood glucose <60 mg/dL) was present in 638 (1.2%; CI: 1.1, 1.3) patients and 478 (0.9%; CI: 0.8, 1.0) were treated with a glucose product. A benzodiazepine was administered to 73 (11.4%; CI: 9.0, 13.9) of the 638 hypoglycemic patients. Treatment of seizure patients with a benzodiazepine occurred in 6,389 (8.3%; CI: 8.1, 8.5) cases and treatment with a glucose product occurred in 975 (1.3%; CI: 1.2, 1.4) cases. Multivariable median regression showed that obtaining a blood glucose measurement prior to benzodiazepine administration compared to no glucose measurement or glucose measurement after benzodiazepine administration was independently associated with a 2.1 minute (CI: 1.5, 2.8) and 5.9 minute (CI: 5.3, 6.6) delay to benzodiazepine administration by EMS, respectively. Conclusions. Rates of hypoglycemia were very low in patients treated by EMS for seizure. Glucose testing prior to benzodiazepine administration significantly increased the median time to benzodiazepine administration. Given the importance of rapid treatment of seizure in actively seizing patients, measurement of blood glucose prior to treating a seizure with a benzodiazepine is not supported by our study. EMS seizure protocols should be revisited.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Cost of an acting intern: clinical productivity in the academic emergency department.

Katherine M. Hiller; Chad Viscusi; Daniel L. Beskind; Hans Bradshaw; Matthew Berkman; Spencer Greene

STUDY OBJECTIVE Automated external defibrillators are essential for treatment of cardiac arrest by lay rescuers and must determine when to shock and if they are functioning correctly. We seek to characterize automated external defibrillator failures reported to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and whether battery failures are properly detected by automated external defibrillators. METHODS FDA adverse event reports are catalogued in the Manufacturer and User Device Experience (MAUDE) database. We developed and internally validated an instrument for analyzing MAUDE data, reviewing all reports in which a fatality occurred. Two trained reviewers independently analyzed each report, and a third resolved discrepancies or passed them to a committee for resolution. RESULTS One thousand two hundred eighty-four adverse events were reported between June 1993 and October 2008, of which 1,150 were failed defibrillation attempts. Thirty-seven automated external defibrillators never powered on, 252 failed to complete rhythm analysis, and 524 failed to deliver a recommended shock. In 149 cases, the operator disagreed with the devices rhythm analysis. In 54 cases, the defibrillator stated the batteries were low and in 110 other instances powered off unexpectedly. Interrater agreement between reviewers 1 and 2 ranged by question from 69.0% to 98.6% and for most likely cause was 55.9%. Agreement was obtained for 93.7% to 99.6% of questions by the third reviewer. Remaining discrepancies were resolved by the arbitration committee. CONCLUSION MAUDE information is often incomplete and frequently no corroborating data are available. Some conditions not detected by automated external defibrillators during self-test cause units to power off unexpectedly, causing defibrillation delays. Backup units frequently provide shocks to patients.


Resuscitation | 2017

Viewing an ultra-brief chest compression only video improves some measures of bystander CPR performance and responsiveness at a mass gathering event

Daniel L. Beskind; Uwe Stolz; Rebecca Thiede; Riley Hoyer; Whitney Robertson; Jeffrey Brown; Melissa Ludgate; Timothy Tiutan; Romy Shane; Deven McMorrow; Michael Pleasants; Karl B. Kern; Ashish R. Panchal

BACKGROUND A few studies suggest that an increasing clinical workload does not adversely affect quality of teaching in the Emergency Department (ED); however, the impact of clinical teaching on productivity is unknown. OBJECTIVES The primary objective of this study was to determine whether there was a difference in relative value units (RVUs) billed by faculty members when an acting internship (AI) student is on shift. Secondary objectives include comparing RVUs billed by individual faculty members and in different locations. METHODS A matched case-control study design was employed, comparing the RVUs generated during shifts with an Emergency Medicine (EM) AI (cases) to shifts without an AI (controls). Case shifts were matched with control shifts for individual faculty member, time (day, swing, night), location, and, whenever possible, day of the week. Outcome measures were gross, procedural, and critical care RVUs. RESULTS There were 140 shifts worked by AI students during the study period; 18 were unmatchable, and 21 were night shifts that crossed two dates of service and were not included. There were 101 well-matched shift pairs retained for analysis. Gross, procedural, and critical care RVUs billed did not differ significantly in case vs. control shifts (53.60 vs. 53.47, p=0.95; 4.30 vs. 4.27, p=0.96; 3.36 vs. 3.41, respectively, p=0.94). This effect was consistent across sites and for all faculty members. CONCLUSIONS An AI student had no adverse effect on overall, procedural, or critical care clinical billing in the academic ED. When matched with experienced educators, career-bound fourth-year students do not detract from clinical productivity.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Does the experience of the writer affect the evaluative components on the standardized letter of recommendation in emergency medicine

Daniel L. Beskind; Katherine M. Hiller; Uwe Stolz; Hans Bradshaw; Matthew Berkman; Lisa R. Stoneking; Albert Fiorello; Alice Min; Chad Viscusi; Kristi Grall

BACKGROUND CPR training at mass gathering events is an important part of health initiatives to improve cardiac arrest survival. However, it is unclear whether training lay bystanders using an ultra-brief video at a mass gathering event improves CPR quality and responsiveness. OBJECTIVE To determine if showing a chest-compression only (CCO) Ultra-Brief Video (UBV) at a mass gathering event is effective in teaching lay bystanders CCO-CPR. METHODS Prospective control trial in adults (age >18) who attended either a womens University of Arizona or a mens Phoenix Suns basketball game. Participants were evaluated using a standardized cardiac arrest scenario with Laerdal Skillreporter™ mannequins. CPR responsiveness (calling 911, time to calling 911, starting compressions within two minutes) and quality (compression rate, depth, hands-off time) were assessed for participants and data collected at Baseline and Post-intervention. Different participants were tested before and after the exposure of the UBV. Data were analyzed via the intention to treat principle using logistic regression for binary outcomes and median regression for continuous outcomes, controlling for clustering by venue. RESULTS A total of 96 people were consented (Baseline=45; Post intervention=51). CPR responsiveness post intervention improved with faster time to calling 911 (s) and time to starting compressions (sec). Likewise, CPR quality improved with deeper compressions and improved hands-off time. CONCLUSIONS Showing a UBV at a mass gathering sporting event is associated with improved CPR responsiveness and performance for lay bystanders. This data provides further support for the use of mass media interventions.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2011

Risk Adjustment Measures and Outcome Measures for Prehospital Trauma Research: Recommendations from the Emergency Medical Services Outcomes Project (EMSOP)

Daniel L. Beskind; Samuel M. Keim; Daniel W. Spaite; Herbert G. Garrison; E. Brooke Lerner; David Howse; Ronald F. Maio

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Uwe Stolz

University of Arizona

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Ashish R. Panchal

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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