Government studying emergency care situations
Accreditation Connection, June 4, 2007
The U.S. government is in the process of performing a major study that would look at trauma care, according to The Washington Post.
The $50 million, five-year project is controversial because it will be performed on critical care patients without their consent. Researchers will perform the study on patients involved in car accidents, shootings, cardiac arrest, and other emergencies.
Prior to beginning the study, organizers underwent a long process of scientific and ethical review by the National Institutes of Health.
Examples of the types of research that will be done is giving head trauma patients hypertonic solutions with high levels of sodium along with dextram instead of saline infusions, according to The Post.
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