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Article
Ultrasound-guided peripheral intravenous access program is associated with a marked reduction in central venous catheter use in noncritically ill emergency department patients
Annals of Emergency Medicine
  • Hamid Shokoohi, George Washington University
  • Keith S. Boniface, George Washington University
  • Melissa McCarthy, George Washington University
  • Tareq Khedir Al-Tiae, George Washington University
  • Mehdi Sattarian, George Washington University
  • Ru Ding, George Washington University
  • Yiju Teresa Liu, George Washington University
  • Ali Pourmand, George Washington University
  • Elizabeth Schoenfeld, Tufts University
  • James Scott, George Washington University
  • Robert Shesser, George Washington University
  • Kabir Yadav, George Washington University
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2-1-2013
Inclusive Pages
198-203
Keywords
  • Catheterization,
  • Central Venous--utilization,
  • Catheterization,
  • Peripheral--methods,
  • Emergency Service,
  • Hospital--statistics & numerical data,
  • Ultrasonography,
  • Interventional--utilization
Disciplines
Peer Reviewed
1
Citation Information
Hamid Shokoohi, Keith S. Boniface, Melissa McCarthy, Tareq Khedir Al-Tiae, et al.. "Ultrasound-guided peripheral intravenous access program is associated with a marked reduction in central venous catheter use in noncritically ill emergency department patients" Annals of Emergency Medicine Vol. Volume 61, Issue 2 (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_schoenfeld/1/