When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 4AT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4AT

    The 4AT is designed to be used as a delirium detection tool in general clinical settings, inpatient hospital settings outside of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), or in the community. The 4AT is intended to be used by healthcare practitioners without the need for special training, and it takes around two minutes to complete. [ 4 ]

  3. Delirium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delirium

    Delirium (formerly acute confusional state, an ambiguous term that is now discouraged) [1] is a specific state of acute confusion attributable to the direct physiological consequence of a medical condition, effects of a psychoactive substance, or multiple causes, which usually develops over the course of hours to days.

  4. Confusion Assessment Method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confusion_Assessment_Method

    The Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) is a diagnostic tool developed to allow physicians and nurses to identify delirium in the healthcare setting. [1] It was designed to be brief (less than 5 minutes to perform) and based on criteria from the third edition-revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R).

  5. Cognitive disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_disorder

    Delirium is a type of neurocognitive disorder that develops rapidly over a short period of time. Delirium may be described using many other terms, including: encephalopathy, altered mental status, altered level of consciousness, acute mental status change, and brain failure.

  6. Mini–mental state examination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini–Mental_State...

    Other tests are also used, such as the Hodkinson [12] abbreviated mental test score (1972), Geriatric Mental State Examination (GMS), [13] or the General Practitioner Assessment of Cognition, bedside tests such as the 4AT (which also assesses for delirium), and computerised tests such as CoPs [14] and Mental Attributes Profiling System, [15] as ...

  7. Acute behavioural disturbance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_behavioural_disturbance

    The UK's National Health Service has produced guidelines for handling violence and the risk of violence in psychiatric and emergency departments. [5] When using physical restraint , National Institute for Health and Care Excellence suggest supine rather than prone restraint and that physical restraint should ideally not last longer than 10 minutes.

  8. Early warning system (medical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_early_warning_score

    An early warning system (EWS), sometimes called a rapid response system or track-and-trigger chart, is a clinical tool used in healthcare to anticipate patient deterioration by measuring the cumulative variation in observations, most often being patient vital signs and level of consciousness. [1]

  9. Excited delirium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excited_delirium

    The concept of "excited delirium" (also referred to as "excited delirium syndrome" (ExDs)) has been invoked in a number of cases to explain or justify injury or death to individuals in police custody, and the term excited delirium is disproportionately applied to Black men in police custody.