Emergency room

An emergency room is a medical facility located inside a hospital or clinic where a doctor or nurse sees patients. Emergency rooms, as a rule, are designed for preliminary examination and provision of first aid to patients. A patient can enter a medical facility at any time of the day, regardless of the time of day. Before this, he must be examined by the doctor on duty to decide whether the patient needs to be admitted to hospital. In some cases, in the event of unforeseen complications and when the patient’s life is in danger, employees of the medical institution independently deliver the patient to the emergency room without prior examination. This can happen without calling an ambulance. The head of the emergency room is either a senior nurse in clinics or a department doctor in a hospital. Typically, emergency rooms in hospitals are equipped in such a way that several patients can be in the room at the same time. For example, this admission area may have up to five beds if the hospital has three departments. If necessary, the number of beds can be increased by adding additional waiting spaces.

The waiting rooms are equipped with all the necessary diagnostic equipment and necessary furniture. The waiting room contains furniture that the patient and his or her accompanying person may need. There may be chairs, armchairs, sofas. There are tables where you can leave documents. There is also a separate area where you can steam your clothes and change your street shoes to indoor ones. Before visiting the reception area, as well as before carrying out procedures, disinfection measures are carried out in the tent. If the hospital has a procedure room, then in the waiting room there should be a special place for hospitalization, where patients wait their turn for intravenous administration of drugs or gastroscopy or duodenal intubation