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Resultados de su búsqueda "Emergencies / First Aid".

Resultados de noticias de salud - 219

At Two Dallas Hospitals, Kids' ER Visits for Heat Illness Nearly Tripled Over Last Decade

In a sign that climate change may be fueling heat illnesses in kids, a new study reveals that such visits to two Texas children's emergency rooms spiked 170% between 2012 and 2023.

Study leader Dr. Taylor Merritt, a ...

Grandma, the Family Dog: Unexpected Sources of Opioid Tragedies for Young Kids

Grandma's pill organizer. Fido's pain medication. A tossed-away tissue.

All are potential sources of opioid poisoning for young children, researchers at the New Jersey Poison Control Center report.

Their five-year look at 230 cases of opioid exposure in children between 1 month and 6 years of age shows how easily they get their hands on dangerous drugs.

"I've seen too many kid...

One Gun Law Reduces School Shooting Deaths

Laws that ban assault weapons do indeed protect children from dying in mass shootings, but the same can't be said for more common types of gun restrictions and regulations, new research shows.

“Mass shootings are horrific events. We found that large capacity magazine bans may have the biggest effect on reducing child deaths in mass shootings,” said senior study author

988 Mental Health Crisis Calls Now Link to Caller Location, Not Area Code

In a move that could mean more Americans in crisis get help and get it quickly, federal officials announced Tuesday that major cellphone carriers now have the technology to direct 988 callers to local mental health services based on their location instead of their area code.

“The goal of 988 is to help people in a mental health or substance use crisis get 24/7 access to compassionat...

Climate Change Could Triple U.S. Heat Deaths by Mid-Century

If global warming is left largely unchecked, the number of Americans who succumb to extreme heat will triple by mid-century, new projections estimate.

These deaths could affect poor and minority Americans much more than the white and better-off, according to a team led by Dr. Sameed Khatana of the Univers...

Stroke Kills 7 Million Worldwide Each Year, and Deaths Are Rising

Climate change and worsening diets are sending global rates of stroke and stroke deaths skyward, a new study warns.

Almost 12 million people worldwide had a stroke in 2021, up 70% since 1990, according to a team led by Valery Feigin, of the Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand.

It's now the third leading cause of d...

Black Stroke Patients More Likely to Arrive Late at Hospital, Without Prior ER Notification

Black stroke victims are arriving at emergency rooms much later than white patients, greatly increasing their risk of death or lifelong disability, a new study finds.

Every second counts when it comes to treating a stroke, experts say.

Any moment’s delay ...

Rural Hospitals Especially Vulnerable to Ransomware Attacks

Rural hospitals – and their patients -- are particularly vulnerable to the aftershocks caused by ransomware attacks, a new study reports.

“Ransomware attacks are bad news for hospitals and patients no matter where they happen, but they’re especially harmful to rural hospitals and patients,” lead re...

Recreational Drug Use Triples Odds for Repeat Heart Crises

Recreational drug users are three times more likely to have repeated heart health emergencies than people who don’t use, a new study has found.

About 11% of patients admitted to intensive cardiac care units have been using recreational drugs, said researcher Dr. Raphael Mirail...

Most Americans Unsure How to Help Someone in Opioid Overdose

The U.S. opioid epidemic has caused a startling number of overdose deaths, but a new survey shows that most Americans still have no idea how to help an OD victim.

More than 3 in 4 people (77%) said they would not know how to respond if they saw someone having an overdose, according to survey results from Ohio State ...

Naloxone Might Help Revive People After Opioid-Linked Cardiac Arrest

The overdose-reversing drug naloxone can help save the lives of people whose hearts have stopped due to an opioid OD, a new study shows.

Naloxone rapidly reverses opioid ODs by blocking the ability of opioids to bind with receptors in the brain, researchers said in background notes.

The drug typically saves lives by restoring normal breathing to a person who’s stopped breathin...

Implant Automatically Releases Naloxone to Reverse Opioid Overdose

A new implant could help prevent overdose deaths by automatically administering the OD-reversing drug naloxone, a new study shows.

The implant, about the size of a stick of gum, is placed under the skin, where it monitors vital signs like heart rate and breathing, researchers say.

When the implant determines an OD has occurred, it rapidly pumps out a dose of naloxone, researchers sa...

Child ER Visits Linked to Water Beads Doubled in One Year

Child safety experts have warned about the sometimes lethal dangers of toy water beads.

Now, a report finds a doubling in just one year of U.S. pediatric ER visits linked to the products.

“The number of pediatric water bead-related emergency department visits is increasing rapidly,” said study senior author

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • August 14, 2024
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  • As Heat Waves Hit U.S., Poll Finds Most Can't Locate Local Cooling Station

    It's been a sweltering summer for much of the United States, and a new poll finds many people can recognize the signs of heat sickness if it strikes them or someone else.

    However, many more don’t know crucial information that could help them during a heatwave, such as the location of cooling centers where they can seek relief from the pounding heat, researchers discovered.

    â...

    FDA Approves First Nasal Spray to Curb Anaphylaxis, An Alternative to Injections

    Folks nervous about administering a rescue shot for anaphylaxis finally have a new alternative in a nasal spray.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday announced that it has approved neffy, the first non-injected treatment for life-threatening allergic reactions.

    The epinephrine nasal spray is for use by adults and children who weigh more than 66 pounds, the agency said.

    Red Cross Issues Blood Shortage Alert as Summer Heat Cuts Donations

    This summer's blistering temperatures have helped prompt an emergency blood shortage, the American Red Cross has warned.

    Heat waves affected almost 100 blood drives last month, either by hurting turnout or forcing the events to be canceled. Since July 1, the national blood supply has fallen by more than 25%, the organization said in a

  • Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter
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  • August 7, 2024
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  • Bystander CPR More Likely to Save Your Life If You're White and Male: Study

    Whites are three times more likely to survive a cardiac arrest after receiving bystander CPR than Black adults are, a new study has found.

    Likewise, men are twice as likely to survive after bystander CPR than women, researchers found.

    “CPR saves lives -- that, we know,” said researcher Dr. Paula Einhorn, a ...

    Fake Oxycontin Pills Widespread and Potentially Deadly: Report

    The rate at which young Americans are ending up in hospital ICUs after using fake Oxycontin pills spiked with fentanyl is soaring, especially in the U.S. West, a new report warns.

    Medical toxicology data from one unnamed hospital in the western U.S. found the number of cases involving overdoses involving fake "M-30" Oxycontin pills rose from just three in 2017 to 209 during 2022, accordin...

    Your Odds for Accidental Gun Death Rise Greatly in Certain States

    Americans' risk of dying in a firearm accident depends in large part on where they live in the United States, a new study finds.

    People in Southeastern states like Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama run the greatest risk of a gunshot accidentally killing them, researchers said.

    Meanwhile, the risk of accidental gun death is much lower in Northeastern states like Massachusetts, New Y...

    Risk of Mental Illness Rises for Kids Treated in ICUs

    Youngsters so sick they’ve needed treatment in an ICU appear to bear the scars of that experience years later, a new study finds.

    Children and teenagers treated in an intensive care unit have a significantly higher risk of developing a mental illness as they grow up, researchers reported July 20 in the

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • July 24, 2024
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  • U.S. Injuries From Electric Bikes, Scooters Are Soaring

    More and more Americans who use "micromobility" transport, such as electric bikes and e-scooters, are motoring their way straight into the ER, new data shows.

    In fact, the rate of e-bike injuries among Americans doubled each year between 2017 and 2022, reportED a team led by Dr. Adrian Fernandez, of the University of California, Sa...

    Extra Money Keeps Poorer Americans Out of the ER, Study Finds

    It's a simple strategy that could deliver powerful health dividends: New research shows that giving cash to poor people could help them stay out of the ER.

    In the study, investigators followed nearly 2,900 low-income people who applied for a lottery in the Boston area. Almost 1,750 of them got up to $400 per month from November 2020 through August 2021.

    The results? Those who receiv...

    Two Years Later, 988 Crisis Line Has Answered 10 Million Requests

    Just two years after the launch of the nation's three-digit crisis hotline, more than 10 million calls, texts and chat messages have been fielded by counselors, U.S. health officials announced Tuesday.

    Introduced in July 2022 to simplify emergency ...

    U.S. Surgeon General Declares Gun Violence a Public Health Emergency

    Gun violence in the United States has become a national public health crisis, the U.S. Surgeon General declared Tuesday.

    "Today, for the first time in the history of our office, I am issuing a Surgeon General's Advisory on firearm violence. It outlines the urgent threat firearm violence poses to the health and well-being of our country,"

  • Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter
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  • June 25, 2024
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  • U.S. Pedestrian Deaths Decline for First Time Since Pandemic

    For the first time since the pandemic, it got a little safer to cross America's streets in 2023, new statistics show.

    According to data released Monday from the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA), 7,318 American pedestrians were killed by motor vehicles last year -- a dip of 5.4% from 2022 and the first such decline seen ...

    U.S. Gun Injury Rates in 2023 Topped Pre-Pandemic Levels

    For the fourth year in a row, rates of gun injuries stayed above levels seen before the pandemic, a new government report shows.

    Race played a key role in who saw those higher rates of gun violence in 2023, the researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted.

    "Annual rates among Black and Hispanic persons remained elevated through 2023; by 2023 rates in ot...

    Smartphone Face-Screening Tool Could Help Paramedics Spot Stroke

    A new smartphone tool could help paramedics identify a stroke in seconds by scanning the patient's face.

    The AI-driven tool analyzes facial symmetry and specific muscle movements to detect subtle signs of stroke, researchers explained.

    "One of the key parameter...

    High Out-of-Pocket Costs Keep Some From Lifesaving Opioid Antidote

    Patients are less likely to fill prescriptions for the overdose-reversing drug naloxone when they have to shell out more at the pharmacy, a new study finds.

    Naloxone (also known by the brand name Narcan) is a critical lifesaving tool in preventing deaths from opioid overdose, researchers said.

    But about 1 in 3 naloxone prescriptions for privately insured and Medicare patients went u...

    Pandemic-Era Tax Credits Made Healthcare More Affordable, But They're Set to Expire

    In a success story for Americans seeking affordable healthcare coverage, tax credits put in place during the pandemic helped millions gain health insurance, a new report found.

    Trouble is, the credits are set to expire at the end of 2025, noted a research team from the nonprofit Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJ).

    According to RWJ's

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • June 18, 2024
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  • Calls to U.S. Poison Control Centers Are Becoming More Severe

    America's poison control centers are increasingly fielding calls on cases of deliberate or accidental poisonings that end in disability or death, a new report finds.

    Researchers at the University of Virginia Health System reviewed more than 33.7 million poison exposures reported to the 55 poison centers in the United States between 2007 and the end of 2021. 

    Over that time, the...

    Too Many Teens Are Driving Drowsy

    Teens on the verge of falling asleep behind the wheel is a common threat to public safety on U.S. roadways, a new study reports.

    About 1 in 6 teenage drivers say they've driven while drowsy, according to a National Sleep Foundation study presented Wednesday at the annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies in Houston. The research was also published in a special supplem...

    1 in 8 Older Americans Are Stricken With Traumatic Head Injury

    About one in eight U.S. seniors will be treated for a traumatic brain injury, typically during a fall, a new study finds.

    Medicare data shows that about 13% of seniors suffered a severe concussion during an average follow-up period of 18 years, researchers report.

    Although these injuries...

    U.S. Deaths Linked to ATVs Rose by a Third in One Year

    In just one year, U.S. deaths linked to the use of all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) jumped by a third, according to the latest report from the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

    With another summer set to begi...

    Amsterdam's 'Psychiatric Ambulance' Could Be Advance For Those in Mental Health Crisis

    Ambulances meant for people having a mental health crisis could help folks get the care they need with less confrontation and friction, a new study says.

    People transported to the hospital by a "psychiatric ambulance"required fewer restraints or coercive ...

    Stroke Rates Are Rising, Especially Among the Young

    The rate at which Americans under the age of 65 suffered a stroke rose by about 15% between 2011 and 2022, new government data shows.

    That was true even among the young: The rate of stroke jumped 14.6% among people ages 18 to 44 during the study period, researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

    It's not clear why stroke rates have risen so sharply, ...

    Only Half of Americans Feel Prepared to Save a Life in Emergencies: Poll

    Only about half of Americans feel prepared to help someone during a medical emergency, a new poll finds.

    Only 51% of Americans think they would be able to perform hands-only CPR to help someone who's collapsed. Similarly, only 49% feel they could step in and staunch serious bleeding, while 56% said they can help someone who's choking to death.

    "Before emergency responders arrive, it...

    U.S. Drowning Deaths Rising Again After Years of Decline

    TUESDAY, May 14, 2024 (HeathDay News) -- Following decades of declines, drowning deaths are once again climbing in the United States, new government data shows.

    More than 4,500 people died from drowning each year in 2020 through 2022, 500 more per year than in 2019, researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

    Increased access to basic swimming lessons...

    Cyberattack Cripples Major U.S. Health Care Network

    Ascension, a major U.S. health care system with 140 hospitals in 19 states, announced late Thursday that a cyberattack has caused disruptions at some of its hospitals.

    "Systems that are currently unavailable include our electronic health records system, MyChart (which enables patients to view their medical records and communicate with their providers), some phone systems, and various syst...

    Fewer Americans Are Suffering Most Dangerous Form of Heart Attack

    Many fewer Americans are falling prey to the most dangerous form of heart attack, a new study says.

    STEMI (ST"segment-elevation myocardial infarction) heart attacks have declined by nearly 50% during the past 15 years in the United States, researchers found.

    STEMI he...

    1 in 20 ER Visits Involve Homeless People

    At major medical centers across the southeast, 1 in every 20 visits to emergency departments involve people who are homeless or face "housing insecurity," a new U.S. study finds.

    Concerns of suicide was the leading medical reason bringing these types of patients to the ER and many were uninsured, said a team reporting recently in the journal

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • April 30, 2024
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  • Black, Hispanic Americans Getting Savvier About CPR

    Black and Hispanic Americans are gaining a better understanding of CPR, with a growing number expressing confidence they could use it to save a life, a new survey finds.

    About 44% of Black Americans now feel confident performing conventional CPR, up from 30% just three years ago, the American Heart Association (AHA)

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • April 24, 2024
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  • CDC Launches Online 'Heat Forecaster' Tool as Another Summer Looms

    Last summer was a record-breaker for heat emergencies, so the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday launched a new online heat forecaster to help folks better prepare as summer nears.

    The

    Stick to Heimlich Maneuver Not 'Anti-Choking' Devices, FDA Says

    People should rely on the well-established Heimlich maneuver to save a choking victim, rather than newfangled "anti-choking"devices, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says.

    "The safety and effectiveness of over-the-counter anti-choking devices have not been established; they are not FDA approved or cleared,"the agency said in a

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • April 23, 2024
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  • Rising Number of Americans Sent to ERs Last Year During Heat Waves

    As climate change threatens another long hot summer for Americans, new data shows last summer's record-breaking temperatures sent a rising number of people to emergency departments.

    At special risk of heatstroke and other heat-related issues: Working-age Americans, who often found the...

    One-Third of Americans Don't Know Vision Risks From Solar Eclipse, Survey Finds

    A total eclipse of the sun is coming up next week, and many folks don't know that watching it unprotected can cause permanent eye damage, a new survey finds.

    Nearly 30% of Americans don't know that looking directly into a solar eclipse without proper eye protection can cause permanent distortions or blind spots in their vision, the researchers found.

    "The survey results highlight th...

    Too Often, Nearby Defibrillators Go Unused on People in Cardiac Arrest

    There's been a big push over the past few years to get automated external defibrillators (AEDs) installed in public spaces, to help save lives threatened by cardiac arrest.

    Unfortunately, the devices are very seldom used.

    A new study finds that in nearly 1,800 cases where cardiac arrest occurred outside of a hospital, AEDs were only utilized 13 times.

    In many cases, the dev...

    ERs Might Be Good Spots to Offer Flu Shots

    New research offers an easy prescription to get people to roll up their sleeves for a flu shot.

    Just ask them to. 

    And then reinforce the invitation with a little video and print encouragement.

    "Our study adds to the growing body of knowledge showing that a number of important public health interventions can and should be delivered to underserved populations in emergency ...

    Shortage of Primary Care Doctors Could Bring Crowded ERs: Study

    Americans living in areas where primary care doctors and nurse practitioners are in short supply face a greater risk for emergency surgeries and complications, new research shows.

    They're also more likely to wind up back in the hospital after they've left it.

    That's because serious health issues don't get addressed until they become emergencies, said lead study author

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • March 12, 2024
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  • Is a 'Universal' Snake Venom Antidote Near?

    A "universal"antivenom can block the lethal toxins in the venoms of a wide variety of poisonous snakes found in Africa, Asia and Australia, researchers report.

    The antibody protected mice from the normally deadly venom of snakes like black mambas and king cobras, according to findings published Feb. 21 in the journal ...

    Protecting Yourself From Winter Weather Injuries

    Falls, frostbite, fractures: They are all potential hazards of icy winter conditions. But experts say there's a lot you can do to avoid injury when snowflakes fall.

    First, stay warm.

    According to the New York City Department of Health, people lose the bulk of their body heat through their heads, so scarves, hats and hoods are essential.

    Other trouble spots -- ...