A man living with cancer died after being given multiple overdoses of morphine
Clinical
<p>Toddlers and other children frequently attend emergency care settings with nasal
<p>Emergency care nurses are expected to be able to care for a range of people with
<p>Working in emergency departments has never been more stressful than it is nowaday
<p>The art of body piercing has been practised in many cultures for thousands of yea
<p>In the UK there are on average four major incidents a year with a range of betwee
<p>Patients presenting to emergency departments and minor injury services with hand
<p>Nurses working in emergency care often have to manage patients with undifferentia
<p>Nurse practitioners (NPs) have become integral to A&E teams so that, even
<p>As a newly qualified nurse in a busy A&E department, I made two relativel
<p>Nurses working in emergency care often have to manage patients with undifferentia
<p>In the past 28 years, there have been 108 events classed as major incidents in En
<p>Nurses working in emergency care often have to manage patients with undifferentia
<p>The bomb attacks on the London transport system on July 7 this year brought home the reality and horror of terrorism to nursing staff at St Mary’s Hospital, in the west of the city.</p>
<p>Acute renal colic is a common presentation in emergency departments. In fact, it is estimated that at least one patient with renal colic presents every day in most emergency departments (Leslie 2005).</p>
<p>Nursing care in ambulance services is part of pre-hospital emergency care in Sweden.</p>
<p>Nurses working in emergency care often have to manage patients with undifferentiated and previously undiagnosed conditions. This month, Emergency Nurse continues to look at how emergency nurses across the UK have tackled the unusual and unexpected</p>
<p>This article defines Raynaud’s phenomenon, outlines the signs and symptoms as well as the classifications of the disease, and discusses the treatment options for primary and secondary Raynaud’s phenomenon.</p>
<p>The scaphoid is the most frequently fractured carpal bone, accounting for 71per cent of all carpal bone fractures and between 2 and 7per cent of all orthopaedic fractures (McNally etal 2004).</p>
