Author: Carpenter, Christopher R.; Mudd, Philip; West, Colin P.; Wilber, Erin; Wilber, Scott T.
                    Title: Diagnosing COVIDâ€19 in the Emergency Department: A Scoping Review of Clinical Exam, Labs, Imaging Accuracy and Biases  Cord-id: 1dzkgt6w  Document date: 2020_6_16
                    ID: 1dzkgt6w
                    
                    Snippet: In December 2019 a novel viral respiratory pathogen emerged in China, ultimately named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€Coâ€Vâ€2) with the clinical illness dubbed coronavirus disease (COVIDâ€19). COVIDâ€19 became a global pandemic in early 2020 forcing governments worldwide to enact social isolation policies with dire economic ramifications. Emergency departments (ED) encountered decreased patient volumes before some in Seattle, New York City, New Orleans, and Detroit 
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: In December 2019 a novel viral respiratory pathogen emerged in China, ultimately named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€Coâ€Vâ€2) with the clinical illness dubbed coronavirus disease (COVIDâ€19). COVIDâ€19 became a global pandemic in early 2020 forcing governments worldwide to enact social isolation policies with dire economic ramifications. Emergency departments (ED) encountered decreased patient volumes before some in Seattle, New York City, New Orleans, and Detroit experienced waves of COVIDâ€19 patients mixed with asymptomatic patients or those concerned about potential exposures. Diagnosing COVIDâ€19 was hampered by inadequate supplies of reagents and kits, which was compounded by clinical and radiographic features that overlap with numerous seasonal viral respiratory infections.
 
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