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Drug: Aspirin

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Total 9959 results found since Jan 2013.

Effective Facilitator Strategies for Supporting Primary Care Practice Change: A Mixed Methods Study
CONCLUSIONS: Facilitation strategies that differentiate more and less effective facilitators have implications for enhancing facilitator development and training, and can assist all facilitators to more effectively support practice changes.PMID:36228060 | PMC:PMC9512557 | DOI:10.1370/afm.2847
Source: Annals of Family Medicine - October 13, 2022 Category: Primary Care Authors: Shannon M Sweeney Andrea Baron Jennifer D Hall David Ezekiel-Herrera Rachel Springer Rikki L Ward Miguel Marino Bijal A Balasubramanian Deborah J Cohen Source Type: research

Medical management of critical limb ischaemia: where do we stand today?
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Source: Journal of Internal Medicine - June 26, 2013 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Matthew A. Lambert, Jill J. F. Belch Tags: Review Source Type: research

CDC Releases Guidelines for Prescribing Opioids
The dramatic increase in overdose deaths due to opioids has been a major focus of political and medical leaders over the last few months, and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention recently released new guidelines for practitioners to think twice before prescribing opioid medications for their patients. The guidelines, which are voluntary, ask primary care providers who are treating adults with chronic pain to consider alternatives to prescription painkillers such as oxycodone and hydrocodone, to limit treatment length, and to monitor their patients to see if the opioids are the best choice for them. Even though...
Source: Policy and Medicine - March 21, 2016 Category: American Health Authors: Thomas Sullivan - Policy & Medicine Writing Staff Source Type: blogs

Patient With Chest Pain and Shortness of Breath Shows Standardized Treatment Doesn't Work for All Patients
John, a 65-year-old male, is sitting in a chair in the corner of the room as you and your partner enter his house. John tells you he's the only one home and called 9-1-1 because he can't breathe and his chest is killing him. His skin is ashen and his breathing is rapid. You can palpate a weak irregular pulse and you note his skin is warm and diaphoretic. He describes his shortness of breath as increasing in severity over the last couple of hours with the chest discomfort. With a pulse oximetry reading of 78% on room air, you apply oxygen via a non-rebreathing mask. Physical exam reveals bibasilar crackles on pulmonary ausc...
Source: JEMS Patient Care - December 30, 2016 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Dennis Edgerly, EMT-P Tags: Columns Patient Care Source Type: news

Delayed Salicylate Toxicity in a 17-Year-Old Girl With Initially Undetectable Salicylate Concentration 3.9 Hours After Ingestion
We report the case of a 17-year-old girl with a 126-mg/kg nonenteric coated aspirin ingestion with nontoxic salicylate concentrations at 1.5 and 3.9 hours postingestion, who developed tinnitus and vomiting an estimated 8 hours postingestion, and who was subsequently found to have a toxic salicylate concentration at 22.7 hours postingestion. This case, as well as previous cases of delayed aspirin therapy, may prompt providers to consider educating patients and their care providers regarding the need to return for further testing if symptoms, such as vomiting or tinnitus, develop after an aspirin ingestion.
Source: Pediatric Emergency Care - November 1, 2017 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Illustrative Cases Source Type: research

The Latest Aspirin Research: Implications for Primary Care The Latest Aspirin Research: Implications for Primary Care
What do the latest studies about use of aspirin for primary prevention, which call into question previous guidelines, mean for primary care practice?Georgetown University Family Medicine
Source: Medscape Today Headlines - September 25, 2018 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Family Medicine/Primary Care Commentary Source Type: news

Effects of antiplatelet therapy on the mortality rate of patients with sepsis: A meta-analysis
ConclusionsAntiplatelet drugs, particularly aspirin, could be used to effectively reduce mortality in patients with sepsis.
Source: Journal of Critical Care - December 6, 2018 Category: Gastroenterology Source Type: research

Primary Care Practices' Implementation of Patient-Team Partnership: Findings from EvidenceNOW Southwest
Conclusion: Practices can improve efforts to partner with patients to assess social needs, gather meaningful input on practice improvement and patient experience, and offer resource connections. Our findings supplement recent evidence that patient registries and evidence-based guidelines may effectively prevent and manage cardiovascular disease. These strategies may also promote primary care patient-team partnership.
Source: Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine - July 11, 2019 Category: Primary Care Authors: Hall, T. L., Knierim, K. E., Nease, D. E., Staton, E. W., Nkouaga, C., Miriam Dickinson, L., Rhyne, R. L., Perry Dickinson, W. Tags: Original Research Source Type: research

Risk of major bleeding associated with aspirin use in non-surgical critically ill patients receiving therapeutic anticoagulation
Publication date: Available online 18 April 2020Source: Journal of Critical CareAuthor(s): Yosuf W. Subat, Hamza Rayes, Andrew C. Hanson, Madeline Q. Johnson, Phillip J. Schulte, Kimberly Evans, Timothy Weister, Vrinda Trivedi, Ognjen Gajic, Matthew A. Warner
Source: Journal of Critical Care - April 18, 2020 Category: Gastroenterology Source Type: research