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Timothy J. Mader

Researcher at University of Massachusetts Medical School

Publications -  80
Citations -  1281

Timothy J. Mader is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resuscitation & Ventricular fibrillation. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 71 publications receiving 1110 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy J. Mader include Memorial Hospital of South Bend & Tufts University.

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Reducing the pain of local anesthetic infiltration: Warming and buffering have a synergistic effect

TL;DR: The difference in mean pain score for thewarm buffered solution, compared with those for the warm, buffered, and room-temperature solutions, suggests that warming and buffering have a synergistic effect.
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Adequacy of pain assessment and pain relief and correlation of patient satisfaction in 68 ED fast-track patients.

TL;DR: This survey revealed that acute pain conditions are underevaluated and undertreated in one fast-track setting, suggesting that ED staff need more education about the management of acute pain and showed that relying on patient satisfaction surveys as surrogate markers for how well the authors manage pain is erroneous.
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Do patients with acute medical conditions have the capacity to give informed consent for emergency medicine research

TL;DR: It is suggested that some patients with AMI may have difficulty processing information necessary to give informed consent for acute care research, and routine clinical evaluation may not detect this cognitive defect.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes stratified by rhythm analysis ,

TL;DR: Findings suggest that CS and IS are different entities and that alternatives to existing resuscitation algorithm tailored to patients with CS should be investigated.
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Disability-Adjusted Life Years Following Adult Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in the United States.

TL;DR: The disability-adjusted life years (DALY) is a common public health metric used to consistently estimate and compare health loss because of both fatal and nonfatal disease burden as discussed by the authors.