Cellulitis: Treatment failure or failure to define treatment failure?
Etheridge, N., & Keijzers, G. Nov, 2020. Cellulitis: Treatment failure or failure to define treatment failure? Emergency Medicine Australasia.
Etheridge, N., & Keijzers, G. Nov, 2020. Cellulitis: Treatment failure or failure to define treatment failure? Emergency Medicine Australasia.
Inagawa T, Wennink T, Lebbink JHG, Keijzers G, Florea BI, Verkaik NS, van Gent DC, 2020. C-Terminal Extensions of Ku70 and Ku80 Differentially Influence DNA End Binding Properties. International Journal of Molecular Science. 2020 Sep 14;21(18):E6725.
Jones, P., Kelly, A.M., Keijzers, G., Klim, S., Holdgate, A., Graham, C.A., Craig, S., Kuan, W.S., Laribi, S., AANZDEM Study Group and McNulty, R., Sept 2020. Chronic disease management in emergency department patients presenting with dyspnoea. Emergency Medicine Australasia.
Snelling, P.J., Jones, P., Keijzers, G., Bade, D., Herd, D.W. and Ware, R.S., 2020. Nurse practitioner administered point-of-care ultrasound compared with X-ray for children with clinically non-angulated distal forearm fractures in the ED: a diagnostic study. Emergency Medicine Journal. Sept 2020
Dr Gerben Keijzers is adjunct Professor of Emergency Medicine. His research revolves around topics relevant to clinical practice in critical care, with special interest in sepsis, appropriateness of antibiotic use and respiratory medicine. He encourages curiosity and critical thinking.
Gerben’s research related roles at Gold Coast Health include Emergency Department Collaborative Research Group Chair, Research Council member, clinical trials steering committee member and Human Research Ethics Committee member.
Related links
Rousseau, G., Keijzers, G., van Meer, O., Craig, S., Karamercan, M., Klim, S., Body, R., Kuan, W.S., Harjola, V.P., Jones, P. and Verschuren, F., Epidemiology, treatment and outcome of patients with lower respiratory tract infection presenting to emergency departments with dyspnoea (AANZDEM and EuroDEM studies). Emergency Medicine Australasia.
Rana, R., Gow, J., Moloney, C., King, A., Keijzers, G., Beccaria, G. and Mullens, A., Does distance to hospital affect emergency department presentations and hospital length of stay among COPD patients?. Internal Medicine Journal.
Keijzers, G., Macdonald, S.P., Udy, A.A., Arendts, G., Bailey, M., Bellomo, R., Blecher, G.E., Burcham, J., Delaney, A., Coggins, A.R. and Fatovich, D.M., 2019. The Australasian Resuscitation In Sepsis Evaluation: FLUid or vasopressors In Emergency Department Sepsis, a multicentre observational study (ARISE FLUIDS observational study): Rationale, methods and analysis plan. Emergency Medicine Australasia, 31(1), pp.90-96.
Findings from a Gold Coast Health driven investigation into the use of intravenous fluids in sepsis management in emergency patients will be used as the foundation for a larger, $2.33M randomised controlled trial.
Sepsis, although not very common, is a serious condition where infection leads to organ dysfunction and possibly death.
The planned ARISE: Fluids study will explore liberal versus restricted fluid management in patients with septic shock after a large study led by principal investigator Professor Gerben Keijzers showed that there was large variation in how much fluid patients were given.
A/Prof Ed Heffernan, A/Prof David Green OAM, Dr Cathy Lincoln, A/Prof Josh Byrnes, Sen Sgt Paul Gardiner, Prof Stuart Kinner, Dr Caitlin Brandenburg, Prof Stuart Thomas, Dr Annabel Somerville and A/Prof Peter Davidson
In the acute phase of police detention, health concerns can emerge for detainees, especially around drug dependence, mental health conditions, and physical injury. In addition are system complexities including crowding.
In the event of an infectious disease outbreak (such as COVID-19), crowded conditions amongst a population with greater underlying burden of disease than the general population creates significant public health and economic concern. Furthermore, access to resources and expertise to manage health concerns in this environment can be challenging, especially in rural areas.
Researchers will interview key stakeholders involved with the care delivery and decision making of detainees, to identify innovative strategies to delivering healthcare in watch-house settings. This research will consider the decision making processes and costs associated with the delivery of healthcare in police watch-houses that may reduce the need for transfer to hospital emergency departments or reduce the potential for deaths in custody.
This research addresses the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) recommendation to understand how evidence-based health services can be provided for those requiring treatment, care and illness prevention whilst in police custody. It also identifies ways in which the need for expensive hospital stays can be minimised.
The expected impact of this research is the capability to identify and inform joined-up approaches so that cost-effective, safe, quality emergency care can be provided to detainees in police watch-house settings.