ARTICLE;
CONSULTANT DELIVERED SERVICE;
CONSULTATION;
EMERGENCY HEALTH SERVICE;
EMERGENCY MEDICINE;
EMERGENCY WARD;
HEALTH CARE DELIVERY;
HOSPITAL ADMISSION;
HOSPITAL DISCHARGE;
HUMAN;
PHYSICIAN;
PRIORITY JOURNAL;
RETROSPECTIVE STUDY;
UNITED KINGDOM;
WORKLOAD;
CONSULTANTS;
DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE;
EFFICIENCY, ORGANIZATIONAL;
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES;
GREAT BRITAIN;
HUMANS;
MEDICAL STAFF, HOSPITAL;
MODELS, ORGANIZATIONAL;
REFERRAL AND CONSULTATION;
RETROSPECTIVE STUDIES;
WORKLOAD;
Welsh Assembly Government. Stats Wales. Report No. 010285. Time Spent in NHS Wales Accident and Emergency Departments: Major Hospitals. http://www.statswales.wales.gov.uk (accessed 30 Sep 2010).
Same-day X-ray reporting is not needed in well-supervised emergency departments
DOI 10.1046/j.1442-2026.2001.00211.x
Sprivulis P, Frazer A, Waring A. Same day x-ray reporting is not needed in well supervised emergency departments. Emerg Med Australas 2001;13:194-7. (Pubitemid 33051559)
A regional approach to improving night time supervision of accident and emergency departments
DOI 10.1136/emj.2003.007062
Jaye P, Beckett MW, Parfitt A. A regional approach to improving night time supervision of accident and emergency departments. Emerg Med J 2004;21:65-6. (Pubitemid 38165489)
Reduced productivity among junior trainees in the emergency department and the impact on senior clinicians
Armstrong PA, White AL, Thakore S. Reduced productivity among junior trainees in the emergency department and the impact on senior clinicians. Emerg Med J 2010;27:97-9.