Original contributionAirway management practices in emergency medicine residencies☆
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Cited by (47)
The Patient with a Full Stomach
2013, Benumof and Hagberg's Airway ManagementThe Patient with a Full Stomach
2012, Benumof and Hagberg's Airway Management: Third EditionSedation and analgesia in emergency structure. Which sedation and/or analgesia for tracheal intubation?
2012, Annales Francaises d'Anesthesie et de ReanimationEmergency airway management: A multi-center report of 8937 Emergency Department intubations
2011, Journal of Emergency MedicineCitation Excerpt :The advent of emergency medicine as a specialty has led to advances in emergency airway management. Residency training in emergency medicine emphasizes airway management, including use of rapid sequence intubation (RSI), defined as intubation after rapid induction and paralysis (1,2). Several previous studies, mostly with small samples, have reported intubation success rates within single institutions, but comprehensive large multi-center studies are lacking (3–7).
Comparison of the Pentax AWS videolaryngoscope with the Macintosh laryngoscope in simulated difficult airway intubations by emergency physicians
2011, American Journal of Emergency MedicineCitation Excerpt :Emergency physicians are frequently required to provide timely, definitive airway management in acutely ill patients. Because the specialty has developed, emergency practitioners have become increasingly proficient in this skill and have modified their approaches significantly, relying less on assistance from other medical specialists [1]. Emergency department (ED) intubations are more likely to occur in unfasted patients with a higher risk of airway contamination by foreign material and in trauma patients with cervical immobilization or bleeding into the airway.
The Patient with a Full Stomach
2007, Benumof's Airway Management
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Presented at the 24th Annual Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Meeting, Washington, DC, May 11, 1994.