Reviewing the process for in-person DHP investigations

Statewide, there's been a dramatic uptick in Virginia Department of Health Professions (DHP) in-person investigations based off patient complaints. The physician and provider community believe many of these stressful and time-consuming in-person visits can be avoided with a preliminary review — and DHP seems to agree.

Three Days in D.C.: VACEP advocates in Congress

Virginia emergency medicine leaders volunteered three days in Washington this week at the American College of Emergency Physicians Leadership & Advocacy Conference. There, they learned about the inner workings of federal legislation and regulations, brushed upon the latest emergency medicine topics, and on Tuesday spent the day on Capitol Hill meeting with Virginia’s federal lawmakers in the Senate and House of Representatives.

Peer Recovery Specialists offer healing power of purpose

The growing role of peer counselors as partners in providing specialized services was addressed during a panel at VACEP’s 53rd Annual CME Conference in Williamsburg in February. The counselors’ emergence dovetails with healthcare’s recognition of substance use disorder (and its relapses) as a medical condition.

Regulating synthetic, marijuana-like products in Virginia

Last week, Virginia emergency physicians joined three other prominent state healthcare groups to call on the Governor to regulate the sale of illicit, intoxicating THC-infused products. These are sold in convenience stores in every corner of the state, none are subject to regulatory oversight, and many contain illegal amounts of THC and other intoxicating, synthetic THC derivatives.

EBM Review Series: International Validation of the Canadian Syncope Risk Score

Pediatric patients account for more than 30 million emergency department (ED) visits each year, making up 20% of all ED visits in the U.S. In order to improve pediatric readiness in the nation’s hospitals, joint guidelines were created for the care of children in EDs. In April 2022, a retrospective cohort study in JAMA Surgery evaluated the association between ED pediatric readiness and mortality of injured children. Virginia's emergency physicians took a look at the study, and here’s what they found.

Pediatric patients account for more than 30 million emergency department (ED) visits each year, making up 20% of all ED visits in the U.S. In order to improve pediatric readiness in the nation’s hospitals, joint guidelines were created for the care of children in EDs. In April 2022, a retrospective cohort study in JAMA Surgery evaluated the association between ED pediatric readiness and mortality of injured children. Virginia's emergency physicians took a look at the study, and here’s what they found.

Updates on Virginia CME Requirements

As of July 1, you are no longer required by the Virginia Board of Medicine to take 2 hours of opioid CME each year. That surprised us, so we wanted to make sure our fellow Virginia EPs are up-to-date. Here’s our current CME requirements (as of September 2022).