The authors describe a new test for clinical sensibility, initiated in response to the need of the senior author for a rapid, reliable method to evaluate sensibility. Using this test, the patient develops a ratio between normal light moving touch and diminished moving touch. Subsequent determinations can detect serial changes. The ratios obtained can be compared with a standard scale of sensibility with a high degree of validity and reliability. The interexaminer and intraexaminer results obtained are reliable and repeatable. Statistical evaluations substantiating the validity of the test are presented. Simplicity and depend-ability recommend this test for use in a busy clinical setting.
Despite successful implementation of an electronic medical record (EMR) by many health care organizations, information regarding EMR for trauma resuscitation is limited, and few have created reports that facilitate trauma registry data abstraction, performance improvement reviews, and provider care requirements. In October 2010, our organization implemented an EMR for trauma resuscitations. A collaborative committee was formed to standardize data elements. Documentation compliance was monitored pre- and post-EMR implementation. Median monthly documentation completion improved from 82% to a sustained median score of 96.5% for the past 603 activations. Documentation compliance enabled the development of succinct reports that facilitate our internal needs and supported our trauma center reverification site visit.
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