‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations

© 2018 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine Appropriate deliberate clinical inertia refers to the art of doing nothing as a positive clinical response. It includes shared decision-making to improve patient care with the use of clinical judgement...

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Main Authors: Egerton-Warburton, Diana, Cullen, L., Keijzers, G., Fatovich, D.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68877
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author Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Cullen, L.
Keijzers, G.
Fatovich, D.
author_facet Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Cullen, L.
Keijzers, G.
Fatovich, D.
author_sort Egerton-Warburton, Diana
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2018 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine Appropriate deliberate clinical inertia refers to the art of doing nothing as a positive clinical response. It includes shared decision-making to improve patient care with the use of clinical judgement. We discuss common clinical scenarios where the use of deliberate clinical inertia can occur. The insertion of peripheral intravenous cannulae, investigating patients with suspected renal colic and the investigation of low risk chest pain are all opportunities for the thoughtful clinician to ‘stand there’ and use effective patient communication to avoid low value tests and procedures. Awareness is key to identifying these opportunities to practice deliberate clinical inertia, as many of the situations may be so much a part of our environment that they are hidden in plain view.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:39:12Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-688772018-06-29T12:35:36Z ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations Egerton-Warburton, Diana Cullen, L. Keijzers, G. Fatovich, D. © 2018 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine Appropriate deliberate clinical inertia refers to the art of doing nothing as a positive clinical response. It includes shared decision-making to improve patient care with the use of clinical judgement. We discuss common clinical scenarios where the use of deliberate clinical inertia can occur. The insertion of peripheral intravenous cannulae, investigating patients with suspected renal colic and the investigation of low risk chest pain are all opportunities for the thoughtful clinician to ‘stand there’ and use effective patient communication to avoid low value tests and procedures. Awareness is key to identifying these opportunities to practice deliberate clinical inertia, as many of the situations may be so much a part of our environment that they are hidden in plain view. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68877 10.1111/1742-6723.12950 Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia restricted
spellingShingle Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Cullen, L.
Keijzers, G.
Fatovich, D.
‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title_full ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title_fullStr ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title_full_unstemmed ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title_short ‘What the hell is water?’ How to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
title_sort ‘what the hell is water?’ how to use deliberate clinical inertia in common emergency department situations
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68877