Ketamine in the ED: Medical politics versus patient care
Affiliations
- From the Sterling Healthcare Group, Miami, FL, USA
Correspondence
- Address reprint requests to Dr Sobel, 101 Passage Point, Peachtree City, GA 30269.

Affiliations
- From the Sterling Healthcare Group, Miami, FL, USA
Correspondence
- Address reprint requests to Dr Sobel, 101 Passage Point, Peachtree City, GA 30269.
Affiliations
- Emergency Health Services, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Canada
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Abstract
The safe and effective use of ketamine for sedation/analgesia by emergency physicians has been validated in the medical literature. Nonetheless, arbitrary restrictions of this medication to anesthesia practitioners have prohibited emergency physician use in some locations. We explore the scientific evidence related to the use of ketamine by emergency physicians for sedation/analgesia, the history of sedation, the operational definitions of conscious sedation and dissociative anesthesia, and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) related standards. We conclude that ketamine sedation/analgesia offers many specific advantages for emergency patients and that it is safely administered by emergency physicians in the appropriately monitored setting.
Keywords:
Ketamine, conscious sedation, emergency department, emergency physician, dissociative anesthesia, sedation/analgesiaTo access this article, please choose from the options below
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