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Monday, January 15, 2018

University Emergency Medicine Foundation
src: www.uemf.org

An emergency physician is a physician who works at an emergency department to care for acutely ill patients. The emergency physician is a specialist in advanced cardiac life support (advanced life support in Europe), resuscitation, trauma care such as fractures and soft tissue injuries, and management of other life-threatening situations.

In some European countries (e.g. Germany, Belgium, Poland, Austria and Denmark), emergency physicians/anaesthetists are also part of the emergency medical service and are dispatched together with EMTs and paramedics in cases of potentially life-threatening situations for patients (heart attacks, serious accidents, resuscitations or unconsciousness, strokes, drug overdoses, etc.). An emergency physician is a "Jack of all trades". In the United States, emergency physicians are mostly hospital-based, but they often work on air ambulances and mobile intensive-care units.

When a patient is brought into the emergency department, he or she is usually sent to triage first. The patient may be triaged by an emergency physician, a paramedic, or a nurse; in the United States, triage is usually performed by a registered nurse. If the patient is admitted to the hospital, another physician such as a cardiologist or neurologist takes over from the emergency physician.


Video Emergency physician



See also

  • Ambulance
  • Emergency department
  • Emergency medical services
  • Emergency medicine
  • Fellow of American College of Emergency Physicians - professional certification for emergency physicians
  • Primary care physician

Maps Emergency physician



References

  • American College of Osteopathic Emergency Physicians
  • American Osteopathic Board of Emergency Physicians
  • Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians

https://web.archive.org/web/20140413154824/http://www.ibtphem.org.uk/IBTPHEM/Training.html

Source of article : Wikipedia