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Dear Readers,
We are pleased to present our top 10 stories for 2017. These not only represent the most important articles from the past year but also seem to parallel the current political climate. We have learned that care coordination improves outcomes as well as saves money, guns and bullets are not good for the human condition, following guidelines saves lives (and money), math and facts matter, dogma is indeed fallible, and, lastly, access to healthcare is good and not bad.
Our NEJM Journal Watch Emergency Medicine Top Stories of 2017 are:
Early Catheterization After Cardiac Arrest in Patients Without STEMI or Shockable Rhythms
Opioid Prescribing by Emergency Physicians and Long-Term Use in Older Patients