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  1. Emergency Medicine: Emergency medicine (EM) involves the diagnosis and management of urgent medical conditions, especially life-threatening medical situations like motor vehicle accidents, heart attacks or the ingestion of poisons. EM physicians and pre-hospital personnel, such as ambulance workers provide initial ... [100%] 2023-12-01 [Page moved from Wikibooks] [Emergency Medicine]...
  2. Emergency medicine: Emergency medicine is the medical speciality concerned with the care of illnesses or injuries requiring immediate medical attention. Emergency physicians (often called "ER doctors" in the United States) specialize in providing care for unscheduled and undifferentiated patients of all ages. (Medical specialty concerned with care for patients who require immediate medical attention) [100%] 2023-12-19 [Emergency medicine] [Medical mnemonics]...
  3. Emergency medicine: Emergency medicine is the medical speciality concerned with the care of illnesses or injuries requiring immediate medical attention. Emergency physicians (often called "ER doctors" in the United States) specialise in providing care for unscheduled and undifferentiated patients of all ages. (Medicine) [100%] 2023-12-27 [Emergency medicine] [Medical mnemonics]...
  4. Emergency medicine: At its core, emergency medicine is the medical specialty concerned with the evaluation, management and treatment of patients with unexpected illness or injury. As opposed to most other specialties, emergency medicine has considerable involvement in working outside formal medical facilities ... [100%] 2023-07-18
  5. Society for Academic Emergency Medicine: The Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) is a professional organization for emergency medicine academicians. It is headquartered in Des Plaines, Illinois. (Organization) [85%] 2023-09-07
  6. Academic Emergency Medicine: Academic Emergency Medicine es una revista médica mensual revisada por pares publicada por Wiley en nombre de la Society for Academic Emergency Medicine . El editor en jefe es Jeffrey A. [81%] 2023-12-19
  7. Pediatric emergency medicine: Pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) is a medical subspecialty of both pediatrics and emergency medicine. It involves the care of undifferentiated, unscheduled children with acute illnesses or injuries that require immediate medical attention. (Medicine) [81%] 2023-12-19 [Emergency medicine] [Pediatrics]...
  8. Critical emergency medicine: Critical emergency medicine (CREM) refers to the acute medical care of patients who have medical emergencies that pose an immediate threat to life. In particular, the term is used to describe the role of anaesthesiologists in providing such care. (Medicine) [81%] 2023-11-06 [Emergency medicine]
  9. Emergency Medicine bibliography: Bibliography, Emergency Medicine Since Emergency Medicine covers such a wide range of topics, I have tried to include a general reading list that would suit the average student / junior doctor coming to the ED for the first time. The Oxford ... [81%] 2023-12-27 [Emergency Medicine] [Bibliographies]...
  10. International emergency medicine: Articles Most recent articles on International emergency medicine Most cited articles on International emergency medicine Review articles on International emergency medicine Articles on International emergency medicine in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ Media Powerpoint slides on International emergency medicine ... [81%] 2023-12-19 [Emergency medicine]
  11. Social Emergency Medicine: Social Emergency Medicine is an emerging branch of Emergency Medicine that explores the interplay of social forces and the emergency care system, and how these act together to affect the health of individuals and their communities. Organized in 2009, the ... (Medicine) [81%] 2023-12-17 [Emergency medicine]
  12. International emergency medicine: International emergency medicine is a subspecialty of emergency medicine that focuses not only on the global practice of emergency medicine but also on efforts to promote the growth of emergency care as a branch of medicine throughout the world. The ... (Medicine) [81%] 2023-12-20 [Emergency medicine]
  13. Critical emergency medicine: Critical emergency medicine (CREM) refers to the acute medical care of patients who have medical emergencies that pose an immediate threat to life, irrespective of location. In particular, the term is used to describe the role of anaesthesiologists in providing ... (Subspecialty of anaesthesiology concerned with immediately life-threatening emergencies) [81%] 2023-12-27 [Critical emergency medicine] [Anesthesiology]...
  14. Social emergency medicine: Social emergency medicine is an emerging branch of emergency medicine that explores the interplay of social forces and the emergency care system, and how these act together to affect the health of individuals and their communities. Organized in 2009, the ... (Medicine) [81%] 2024-04-14 [Emergency medicine]
  15. Academic Emergency Medicine: Academic Emergency Medicine is a monthly peer-reviewed medical journal published by Wiley on behalf of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. The editor in chief is Jeffrey A. [81%] 2024-08-23 [Emergency medicine education] [Emergency medicine journals]...
  16. Substance: Substance in the ordinary sense of the word, in everyday usage, is that of which a thing consists: physical matter or material form and substance, meaning a species of matter of definite chemical composition, such as: a chalky substance. In ... [76%] 2023-02-23 [Materials] [Philosophy]...
  17. Substance: SUBSTANCE sub'-stans (rekhush; hupostasis): Lit. that which stands under, is in the Bible used chiefly of material goods and possessions. In the Old Testament it is the translation of numerous Hebrew words, of which rekhush, "that which is gathered ... [76%] 1915-01-01
  18. Substance: Substance, in philosophy, has to do with the question or problem of what exists, and, more specifically, what exists by itself, underlying the changes that occur in things. The origin of the term goes back to the ancient Greeks. The ... [76%] 2023-02-04
  19. Substance: Many of the concepts analysed by philosophers have their origin in ordinary—or at least extra-philosophical—language. Perception, knowledge, causation, and mind would be examples of this. (Philosophy) [76%] 2021-12-24
  20. Substance (philosophy): In philosophy, a substance is something which could exist even if nothing else did. For example, it is commonly thought that a property like redness could not exist if there were not also some thing which was red, and hence ... (Philosophy) [76%] 2023-07-28

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