Richard V. Aghababian
University of Massachusetts Medical School
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Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1994
Richard V. Aghababian; C.Phuli Lewis; Lucille Gans; Frederick J. Curley
Hospital disaster planning should encompass events that affect the safety of the hospital environment and address those measures that ensure the availability of necessary services. Although most of the emphasis has been placed on general disaster planning, there is little written about disasters occurring within a hospital. In recent years, several incidents at our medical center involving fire, flood, and power failure resulted in a reevaluation of our preparedness to handle such situations. These experiences prompted this discussion and literature review of internal disaster plan because it is likely that at some time an internal emergency may occur.
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America | 1996
C.Phuli Lewis; Richard V. Aghababian
The definition and causes for internal and external disasters are discussed in this article. Features of a hospital disaster plan are outlined with special reference to the role of the emergency department. Examples of previous disasters involving hospitals are presented to demonstrate problems that disaster planners should anticipate.
Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2004
Robert R. Muder; Richard V. Aghababian; Mark Loeb; Jerald A. Solot; Martin D. Higbee
SUMMARY Nursing home-acquired pneumonia (NHAP) is a leading cause of morbidity, hospitalization, and mortality among older nursing home residents. Too often, these patients are erroneously grouped with cases of community-acquired and hospital-acquired pneumonia. Yet, they differ in terms of most common pathogens, significant underlying disease, impaired functional and cognitive status, and poor nutrition. The NHAP emergency department treatment algorithm presented here shows that an important decision for initial care in the emergency department (ED) is whether the patient should return to the nursing home. This decision often is based on the facilitys ability to administer parenteral antibiotics, and care for co-morbidities and complications. Cephalosporins are the foundation of initial treatment of NHAP in the ED, and are combined with other antibiotics in anticipation of the most likely pathogens and treatment variables discussed here. It is hoped the NHAP treatment algorithm will contribute to improved outcomes.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1995
Richard V. Aghababian; Kirsten Levy; Peter Moyer; Lawrence Mottley; Gregory R. Ciottone; Robert Freitas; Ara Minasian
At this writing, a collaborative partnership has been in place for 30 months between the Boston University Medical Center, the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, the Armenian Ministry of Health, and the Emergency Hospital of Yerevan, Armenia, to improve emergency and trauma care in that city. Fifty-five individuals have traveled to and from the Emergency Hospital, the partner hospital. The collaboration has led to the creation of the Emergency Medical Services Institute (EMSI) at Emergency Hospital, an 800-bed facility that serves as a trauma center and as base for the Yerevan ambulance system. A curriculum (text and slides) has been developed and translated into Armenian and Russian. To date, the Armenian EMSI has trained nearly 300 emergency medical personnel: physicians, nurses, drivers, and first responders. The Armenian EMSI faculty have received training in directing instruction of emergency care providers. Plans are in place to begin training in Armenian cities outside of Yerevan and in neighboring republics. An emergency medicine residency program received ministry approval and was begun with six resident physicians in January 1995. To date, 45 nurses have graduated from a 400-hour training program. This partnership program chose an education initiative as the vehicle for interaction between the United States and the formerly Soviet-directed Armenian health care system. Officials of the partner hospital requested assistance in upgrading the skills of its abundant emergency care workforce, citing cardiovascular disease, trauma, and accidents as leading causes of death and disability in Armenia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1996
Richard V. Aghababian; William G. Barsan; William H. Bickell; Michelle H. Biros; Charles G. Brown; Charles B. Cairns; Michael L. Callaham; Donna Carden; William H. Cordell; Richard C. Dart; Steven H Dronen; Herbert G. Garrison; Lewis R. Goldfrank; Jerris R. Hedges; Gabor D. Kelen; Arthur L. Kellermann; Lawrence M. Lewis; Roger G Lewis; Louis J. Ling; John A. Marx; John B. McCabe; Arthur B. Sanders; David L. Schriger; David P. Sklar; Terrence D Valenzuela; Joseph F. Waeckerle; Robert L. Wears; J.Douglas White; Robert J Zalenski
Abstract The goal of emergency medicine is to improve health while preventing and treating disease and illness in patients seeking emergency medical care. Improvements in emergency medical care and the delivery of this care can be achieved through credible and meaningful research efforts. Improved delivery of emergency medical care through research requires careful planning and the wise use of limited resources. To achieve this goal, emergency medicine must provide appropriate training of young investigators and attract support for their work. Promotion of multidisciplinary research teams will help the specialty fulfill its goals. The result will be the improvement of emergency medical care which will benefit not only the patients emergency physicians serve but also, ultimately, the nations health.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1995
Gregory D. Jay; David J. Tetz; Celia F Hartigan; Lee L Lane; Richard V. Aghababian
STUDY OBJECTIVE To compare oxygen administration by means of an inflatable portable hyperbaric chamber with that through a nonrebreather mask for the elimination of carboxyhemoglobin (COHb). DESIGN Double-crossover prospective analysis. SETTING University emergency department, Level I trauma center. PARTICIPANTS Twelve healthy paid adult volunteers, all smokers. INTERVENTIONS Each subject smoked five cigarettes within 60 minutes. COHb levels were measured before and after smoking by means of cooximetry. Subjects then breathed hyperbaric and normobaric oxygen in separate trials for 40 minutes. Normobaric oxygen was administered through a nonrebreather face mask at 15 L/minute outside the Gamow bag. Hyperbaric oxygen was delivered inside the Gamow bag with a demand valve regulator mask at a pressure of 1.58 atmospheres absolute pressure (8.5 psi). Venous blood (.5 mL) was sampled every 5 minutes. The specimens were iced and assayed for COHb in triplicate. RESULTS A significant increase in the elimination of COHb was observed for each subject in the Gamow bag (P < .05, repeated-measures ANOVA). The average half-life for COHb elimination was 27.5 +/- 1.08 minutes (mean +/- SE) (n = 10). IV access failure occurred in two patients, with incomplete data as a result. CONCLUSION The modified Gamow bag eliminated COHb more quickly than did nonrebreather mask oxygen and proved simple to operate and maintain. No complications were noted for any of the subjects. One subject experienced claustrophobia, but it abated after the bag was inflated.
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2009
Adam J. Singer; Henry C. Thode; Gary B. Green; Robert H. Birkhahn; Nathan I. Shapiro; Charles B. Cairns; Brigitte M. Baumann; Richard V. Aghababian; Douglas M. Char; Judd E. Hollander
OBJECTIVES The objective was to determine the incremental benefit of a shortness-of-breath (SOB) point-of-care biomarker panel on the diagnostic accuracy of emergency department (ED) patients presenting with dyspnea. METHODS Adult ED patients at 10 U.S. EDs with SOB were included. The physicians estimates of the pretest clinical probability of heart failure (HF), acute myocardial infarction (MI), and pulmonary embolism (PE) were recorded using deciles (0%-100%). Blood samples were analyzed using a SOB point-of-care biomarker panel (troponin I, myoglobin, creatinine kinase-myocardial band isoenzyme [CK-MB], D-dimer, and B-type natriuretic peptide [BNP]). Thirty-day follow-up for MI, HF, and PE was performed. Data were analyzed using logistic regression and receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve analysis. RESULTS Of 301 patients, the mean (+/-standard deviation [SD]) age was 61 (+/-18) years; 56% were female, 58% were white, and 38% were African American. Diagnoses included MI (n = 54), HF (n = 91), and PE (n = 16) in a total of 129 (43%) of the patients. High pretest clinical certainty (>or=80%) identified 60 of these 129 (46.5%) cases. The SOB point-of-care biomarker panel identified 66 additional cases of MI (n = 24), HF (n = 31), and PE (n = 11). The overall adjusted sensitivity for any diagnosis was increased from 65% to 70% with the addition of the SOB point-of-care biomarker panel (difference = 5%, 95% CI = -1.1% to 11%) while specificity was increased from 82% to 83% (difference = 1%, 95% CI = -4% to 7%). The model containing pretest probability and the results of the SOB panel had an area under the curve (AUC) of 83.4% (95% CI = 78.4% to 88.5%), which was not significantly better than the AUC of 80.4% (95% CI = 75.1% to 85.7%) for clinical probability alone. CONCLUSIONS The addition of the SOB panel of markers did not improve the AUC for diagnosing the combined set of clinical conditions. Using the disease-specific SOB biomarkers increased the sensitivity on a disease-by-disease basis; however, specificity was reduced.
Prehospital Emergency Care | 2002
Marvin A. Wayne; Edward M. Racht; Richard V. Aghababian; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Joseph P. Ornato; Corey M. Slovis
Out-of-hospital resuscitation protocols for patients suffering cardiac arrest have historically included cardiopulmonary resuscitation, defibrillation, and rapid transport to a hospital. For many years, use of drugs to improve myocardial perfusion or to correct arrhythmias that occur during cardiac arrest has been part of prehospital efforts to revive patients in ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation. Use of some of these drugs, however, may be based more on tradition than on well-documented evidence of efficacy. The authors reviewed pertinent data on the vasopressors epinephrine and vasopressin and the antiarrhythmics amiodarone and lidocaine to evaluate the usefulness of these drugs in cardiac arrest. They found little clinical data supporting the prehospital use of lidocaine in cardiac arrest, and despite a great deal of laboratory and clinical data addressing the efficacy of epinephrine, there is no large, randomized, controlled clinical trial supporting its use. Data on amiodarone and vasopressin support the use of these drugs in out-of-hospital resuscitation efforts.
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America | 2001
Djiby Diop; Richard V. Aghababian
The acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is now used to describe a spectrum of clinical presentations that share an underlying pathophysiology, replacing the previous nomenclature of ischemic chest pain. The accurate diagnosis and proper management of patients with these entities require the emergency medicine physician to consider the entire spectrum of ACS, with emphasis placed on early diagnosis and rapid treatment. Each of these syndromes has its own prognosis, pathophysiology, and specific management strategy.
Prehospital Emergency Care | 2003
Corey M. Slovis; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Marvin A. Wayne; Richard V. Aghababian; Edgardo J. Rivera-Rivera
Arrhythmias are commonly encountered by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel. The potential seriousness of acute symptomatic arrhythmias necessitates thorough up-to-date training of EMS personnel. The three most common acute tachyarrhythmias, not linked to cardiac arrest, that are observed outside the hospital are paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT), atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response (RAF), and perfusing ventricular tachycardia (VT). Ideally, these tachyarrhythmias should be operationally defined in a manner that simplifies, particularly for EMS providers, their diagnosis and treatment. The authors recommend referring to these rhythms as regular narrow-complex tachycardia (presumed PSVT), irregularly irregular narrow-complex tachycardia (presumed RAF), or regular wide-complex tachycardia (presumed VT or aberrantly conducted PSVT). Although the value of treatments such as cardioversion is widely understood, the benefit from others, such as lidocaine, is unclear. Current preferences, recommendations, and concerns regarding the treatment of most arrhythmias outside the hospital reflect the dichotomy that sometimes exists between available evidence and actual practice.