Occupational Injuries among Emergency Medical Services Personnel
暂无分享,去创建一个
Katherine L Hunting | Tee L Guidotti | Gordon S. Smith | T. Guidotti | B. Maguire | K. Hunting | Gordon S Smith | Brian J Maguire
[1] C. Slovis,et al. Prospective field study of violence in emergency medical services calls. , 1998, Annals of emergency medicine.
[2] B J Tortella,et al. Disabling job injuries among urban EMS providers. , 1994, Prehospital and disaster medicine.
[3] R Elling. Dispelling myths on ambulance accidents. , 1989, JEMS : a journal of emergency medical services.
[4] S. Corbett,et al. Exposure of prehospital care providers to violence. , 1998, Prehospital emergency care : official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors.
[5] F. Shofer,et al. Original ArticlesInjuries from assaults on paramedics and firefighters in an urban emergency medical services system , 2002 .
[6] S. Weiss,et al. A comparison of rural and urban ambulance crashes. , 2001, The American journal of emergency medicine.
[7] P T Hogya,et al. Evaluation of the injury profile of personnel in a busy urban EMS system. , 1990, The American journal of emergency medicine.
[8] G S Sorock,et al. Alternative approaches to analytical designs in occupational injury epidemiology. , 1997, American journal of industrial medicine.
[9] B. Walz,et al. Current emergency medical services workforce issues in the United States , 2004 .
[10] T. Guidotti,et al. The risk of acquiring hepatitis B or C among public safety workers: a systematic review. , 2001, American journal of preventive medicine.
[11] J. Jui,et al. Occupational infectious disease exposures in EMS personnel. , 1993, The Journal of emergency medicine.
[12] D. Doezema,et al. Under-reporting of contaminated needlestick injuries in emergency health care workers. , 1991, Annals of emergency medicine.
[13] Guohua Li,et al. Biomechanics of the Patient Compartment of Ambulance Vehicles under Crash Conditions: Testing Countermeasures to Mitigate Injury , 2001 .
[14] J. Tintinalli,et al. Violent patients and the prehospital provider. , 1993, Annals of emergency medicine.
[15] F. Grevin,et al. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Ego Defense Mechanisms, and Empathy among Urban Paramedics , 1996, Psychological reports.
[16] A model for a statewide critical incident stress (CIS) debriefing program for emergency services personnel. , 1997, Prehospital and disaster medicine.
[17] M. Kommor,et al. Helping the helpers: the development of a critical incident stress management team through university/community cooperation. , 1993, Annals of emergency medicine.
[18] J. Hammer,et al. Occupational stress within the paramedic profession: an initial report of stress levels compared to hospital employees. , 1986, Annals of emergency medicine.
[19] EMS and vehicle safety. , 1997, Emergency medical services.
[20] The prevalence of occupational injuries in EMTs in New England. , 1993, Prehospital and disaster medicine.
[21] R. Cydulka,et al. Stress Levels in EMS Personnel: A National Survey , 1997, Prehospital and Disaster Medicine.
[22] Nadine Levick,et al. AMBULANCE CRASHWORTHINESS AND OCCUPANT DYNAMICS IN VEHICLE-TO-VEHICLE CRASH TESTS: PRELIMINARY REPORT , 2001 .
[23] L. Barton,et al. Epidemiology of needlestick injury in emergency medical service personnel. , 1988, The Journal of emergency medicine.
[24] D. Alexander,et al. Ambulance personnel and critical incidents , 2001, British Journal of Psychiatry.
[25] Gordon S. Smith,et al. Occupational fatalities in emergency medical services: a hidden crisis. , 2002, Annals of emergency medicine.
[26] R. Cydulka,et al. A follow-up report of occupational stress in urban EMT-paramedics. , 1989, Annals of emergency medicine.
[27] P. Pepe,et al. Viral hepatitis risk in urban emergency medical services personnel. , 1986, Annals of emergency medicine.
[28] R. O’Connor,et al. Reducing the rate of paramedic needlesticks in emergency medical services: the role of self-capping intravenous catheters. , 1996, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
[29] Elements of a violence prevention program for healthcare workers. U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration. , 1997, Journal of healthcare protection management : publication of the International Association for Hospital Security.
[30] Injury rates by industry 1970, BLS Report 406, Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. , 1972, IMS, Industrial medicine and surgery.
[31] L. M. Rodgers. A five year study comparing early retirements on medical grounds in ambulance personnel with those in other groups of health service staff. Part II: Causes of retirements. , 1998, Occupational medicine.
[32] C E Saunders,et al. Ambulance Collisions in an Urban Environment , 1994, Prehospital and Disaster Medicine.
[33] Santina Perrone,et al. Violence in the Workplace , 2018, Journal of transcultural nursing : official journal of the Transcultural Nursing Society.
[34] George S. Everly,et al. Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD) and the Prevention of Work-Related Traumatic Stress among High Risk Occupational Groups , 1995 .
[35] Brian A. Jackson,et al. Emergency Responder Injuries and Fatalities: An Analysis of Surveillance Data , 2004 .
[36] C Pozzi,et al. Exposure of prehospital providers to violence and abuse. , 1998, Journal of emergency nursing: JEN : official publication of the Emergency Department Nurses Association.
[37] Guohua Li,et al. Development of a dynamic testing procedure to assess crashworthiness of the rear patient compartment of ambulance vehicles , 2001 .
[38] D. Vlahov,et al. Review of Accidents/Injuries Among Emergency Medical Services Workers in Baltimore, Maryland , 1995, Prehospital and Disaster Medicine.
[39] Critical incident stress in prehospital emergency care. , 1992, The West Virginia medical journal.
[40] W. Peate. Preventing Needlesticks in Emergency Medical System Workers , 2001, Journal of occupational and environmental medicine.