title: Emergency Physician
slug: emergency-physician
aliases:
  - ER Doctor
  - Emergency Medicine Physician
  - A&E Doctor
  - Emergentologist
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - emergency-medicine
  - acute-care
  - triage
  - resuscitation
  - healthcare
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Rapidly identifies and treats immediate threats to life in undifferentiated
  patients, then dispositions them safely, acting decisively without ever
  needing a final diagnosis.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: paramedic
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      pre-hospital extension that begins resuscitation and hands over the field
      story
  - slug: physician
    type: specialization
    note: shares diagnostic discipline but without time and a narrowed problem
  - slug: registered-nurse
    type: collaboration
    note: co-pilot in triage and resuscitation
  - slug: surgeon
    type: collaboration
    note: takes over trauma and the acute abdomen once stabilized
  - slug: anesthesiologist
    type: adjacent
    note: shares airway and resuscitation skills in a more controlled setting
specializations:
  - Trauma and Resuscitation
  - Pediatric Emergency Medicine
  - Pre-hospital and Retrieval Medicine
  - Toxicology
country_variants:
  - region: A&E Consultant (UK)
    note: A&E Consultant (UK)
sources:
  - title: 'Rosen''s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice'
    kind: book
  - title: Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine
    kind: book
  - title: Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      An emergency physician exists to stand between an undifferentiated,
      frightened

      person and death — in minutes, with incomplete information, for anyone who
      walks

      or rolls through the door. Where most of medicine has the luxury of time
      and a

      narrowed problem, emergency medicine begins with maximal uncertainty and
      maximal

      time pressure at once. The reason the specialty exists is that "what's
      killing

      this person right now?" is a different question from "what's wrong with
      them,"

      and someone has to answer the first one before anyone can afford to answer
      the

      second.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Rapidly identify and treat the immediate threats to life, limb, and
      function in

      any patient, then disposition them safely — admit, discharge, or transfer
      —

      without ever needing a final diagnosis to act.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is treating emergencies; the actual work is parallel
      triage and

      rule-out reasoning across a department full of unknowns. An emergency
      physician

      sorts the genuinely dying from the worried-well, resuscitates the crashing

      patient, runs the trauma and the cardiac arrest, and — for everyone else —
      works

      to exclude the catastrophic diagnosis rather than confirm the benign one.
      They

      manage ten to twenty patients simultaneously, each at a different stage,

      constantly re-triaging. They decide disposition under uncertainty, perform

      procedures from intubation to chest tubes, and orchestrate the
      resuscitation team

      as its calm center. The defining skill is comfort with not knowing while
      still

      deciding.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Rule out the worst first.** The job is not to find the diagnosis; it's
      to
        exclude the things that kill in hours. Treat for the deadly until you've
        excluded it.
      - **Resuscitate before you diagnose.** A, B, C, D, E — fix the physiology
      that's
        killing the patient before you reason about the cause.
      - **Disposition is the decision.** Every patient ends in admit, discharge,
      or
        transfer. The whole workup serves that one safe call.
      - **A safe discharge is a real decision, not a default.** Sending someone
      home
        with clear return precautions and a follow-up plan is active management, not
        giving up.
      - **Time is tissue.** In stroke, MI, and sepsis, minutes are myocardium,
      brain,
        and organs. The clock is a vital sign.
      - **The chief complaint is a starting point, not the diagnosis.** "Back
      pain"
        can be a strain or a leaking aortic aneurysm; treat the worst case until it's
        off the table.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **Worst-first / can't-miss differential.** For every complaint, list the
      lethal
        diagnoses first ("chest pain" = ACS, PE, dissection, tamponade, tension
        pneumothorax, esophageal rupture) and work to exclude each before the benign
        ones.
      - **Sick / not sick gestalt.** The instantaneous doorway judgment from
      vitals,
        color, work of breathing, and mentation sets the entire tempo of care.
      - **Resuscitation before diagnosis (the ABCDE primary survey).** Airway,
        breathing, circulation, disability, exposure — a fixed order so the killable
        problem is addressed before cognition begins.
      - **Pretest probability and risk stratification.** Decision rules (HEART,
      Wells,
        PERC, Ottawa, NEXUS) translate gestalt into defensible test/no-test thresholds
        and keep the department from scanning everyone.
      - **The disposition lens.** Every test is judged by whether it changes
      admit
        vs. discharge. If it won't move disposition, it usually doesn't get ordered.
      - **Crowd as a system (flow).** The waiting room is a queue; a patient who
      can't
        be seen is a patient at risk. Throughput is a safety issue, not just an
        efficiency one.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - You will rarely know the final diagnosis, and you must act anyway.

      - The undifferentiated patient could be anything; assume the worst until
      the
        worst is excluded.
      - Stabilization always precedes investigation.

      - Every minute a sick patient waits is a clinical decision you made by
      default.

      - The discharge is where the dangerous misses hide; treat it with the
      gravity of
        an admission.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What's going to kill this patient in the next hour, and have I addressed
      it?

      - Sick or not sick — and has that changed since I last looked?

      - Of everyone in the department, who is the most likely to crash
      unnoticed?

      - Will this test change my disposition? If not, why am I ordering it?

      - If I discharge this person and I'm wrong, how do they die, and how do I
      make
        that survivable?
      - Who in the waiting room have I not laid eyes on?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Triage (ESI / Manchester).** Sort arrivals by acuity and resource
      need, not
        arrival order; the sickest are seen first regardless of how they presented.
      - **Primary and secondary survey.** ABCDE first to find and fix immediate
        threats, then a focused head-to-toe for the rest.
      - **Risk-stratification rules.** Apply validated scores to set the testing
      and
        discharge thresholds for high-stakes complaints — chest pain, syncope, head
        injury, possible PE.
      - **Disposition framework.** Admit if the patient needs inpatient
      resources or
        can't be safely observed at home; discharge with explicit return precautions if
        the dangerous diagnoses are excluded and follow-up is feasible; transfer if the
        needed capability is elsewhere.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Triage.** Acuity sort at the door; the crashing patient bypasses the
      queue.

      2. **Primary survey.** ABCDE; stabilize airway, breathing, circulation
      before
         anything else.
      3. **Focused history and exam.** Built around the worst-first
      differential, not a
         complete review of systems.
      4. **Targeted workup.** Tests and imaging chosen to exclude the lethal
      diagnoses
         and to move disposition.
      5. **Treat empirically.** Start time-critical therapy (antibiotics for
      sepsis,
         reperfusion for STEMI) before the diagnosis is fully confirmed.
      6. **Reassess.** Re-examine after every intervention; the undifferentiated
         patient declares themselves over time.
      7. **Disposition.** Decide admit/discharge/transfer; communicate the
      reasoning to
         the accepting team or the patient.
      8. **Hand off / safety-net.** Structured handover to inpatient teams, or
      clear
         return precautions and follow-up for discharges.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Sensitivity vs. resource use.** Scanning every headache catches the
      rare
        bleed and floods the department with radiation, cost, and false positives.
      - **Speed vs. thoroughness.** A crowded department pressures faster
      dispositions;
        the missed diagnosis hides in the patient seen too quickly.
      - **Admit vs. discharge under uncertainty.** Admitting the borderline
      patient is
        safe but costly and harms flow; discharging is efficient but owns the bad
        outcome if you're wrong.
      - **Treating empirically vs. waiting for confirmation.** Early antibiotics
      save
        septic patients but drive resistance; early anticoagulation treats PE but
        bleeds the patient you were wrong about.
      - **Attention per patient vs. department throughput.** Every minute deep
      in one
        case is a minute the queue grows and an unseen patient deteriorates.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - The patient who tells you "this is the worst pain of my life" or "I feel
      like
        I'm going to die" is describing a vital sign — listen.
      - Abnormal vital signs at discharge are a lawsuit and a death waiting to
      happen;
        explain every one before they leave.
      - A return visit for the same complaint is a missed diagnosis until proven
        otherwise.
      - Reassess the patient you parked; the undiagnosed sick patient
      deteriorates
        quietly.
      - If you're discharging someone you keep thinking about, don't — that
      thought is
        data.
      - Syncope, first seizure, and "worst headache" are guilty until proven
      innocent.

      - Two large-bore IVs before you need them, not after.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Premature closure / anchoring.** Accepting the triage label or the
      first
        plausible cause and stopping before excluding the lethal alternative.
      - **The unseen waiting room.** A sick patient deteriorating in the queue
      because
        the department is overwhelmed.
      - **Discharge of the undifferentiated patient.** Sending home the abnormal
      vital
        sign or the unexplained symptom.
      - **Diagnostic momentum from EMS or referral.** Inheriting "it's just
      anxiety" or
        "rule out sepsis" and never re-examining it.
      - **Disposition by exhaustion.** Admitting or discharging to clear the
      board
        rather than because it's right.
      - **Procedure fixation.** Focusing on the difficult line while the airway
      is
        failing.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **The shotgun pan-scan** — imaging everything instead of
      risk-stratifying.

      - **Treating the monitor, not the patient** — chasing an artifactual
      number while
        the patient looks fine, or vice versa.
      - **The "frequent flyer" dismissal** — assuming the regular's complaint is
        routine and missing the day it's real.
      - **Boarding blindness** — losing track of admitted patients held in the
        department because they're "someone else's now."
      - **Documentation theater** — charting a complete exam never done to
      satisfy the
        template.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Undifferentiated patient** — one whose diagnosis is unknown at
      presentation.

      - **Triage / acuity** — the urgency sort that orders care by risk.

      - **Primary survey (ABCDE)** — the rapid systematic search for immediate
      threats.

      - **Disposition** — the final decision: admit, discharge, or transfer.

      - **Resuscitation** — restoring failing physiology (airway, breathing,
        circulation).
      - **Return precautions** — the explicit symptoms that should send a
      discharged
        patient back.
      - **Boarding** — admitted patients held in the ED for lack of inpatient
      beds.

      - **Code / arrest** — cardiac or respiratory arrest requiring immediate
        resuscitation.
      - **Time-critical diagnosis** — one (stroke, STEMI, sepsis) where minutes
      change
        outcome.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS)** — bedside imaging for fluid, the
      heart,
        the aorta, and the lung, in seconds.
      - **The monitor (ECG, SpO2, blood pressure, capnography)** — continuous
        physiologic surveillance.
      - **Clinical decision rules** (HEART, Wells, PERC, Ottawa, NEXUS) —
      validated
        thresholds that anchor gestalt.
      - **Airway equipment and the crash cart** — the kit for the failing
      patient.

      - **CT and labs** — the rule-out tools for the catastrophic diagnosis.

      - **The resuscitation team and protocols (ACLS, ATLS)** — choreographed
      responses
        that turn chaos into sequence.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      The ED is the hospital's front door and its busiest crossroads, so the
      emergency

      physician collaborates with nearly everyone. EMS and paramedics bring the
      patient

      and the pre-hospital story, which can be the most important data point or
      a

      misleading label. Emergency nurses are co-pilots — running triage,
      catching

      deterioration, executing the resuscitation. Consultants (surgery,
      cardiology,

      neurology) are pulled in for definitive care, and the emergency physician
      must

      present a crisp, prioritized story to earn a fast response. The handoff to

      inpatient teams is a high-risk transition where details get dropped. In
      the

      resuscitation, the physician is the calm voice that assigns roles and
      keeps the

      room from spiraling.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      The ED is medicine's safety net, and the emergency physician's first
      ethical duty

      is that the net holds for everyone — insured or not, sober or not,
      pleasant or

      not. EMTALA (and its equivalents) codifies the duty to screen and
      stabilize

      regardless of ability to pay. The hard ground includes allocating scarce

      attention when the department is overwhelmed (real-time triage as
      life-or-death

      rationing), respecting autonomy in intoxicated or psychiatric patients
      whose

      capacity is uncertain, managing the demand for opioids against genuine
      pain, and

      end-of-life decisions made in minutes with families in shock. The honest

      emergency physician owns the discharge they got wrong and treats every
      patient,

      including the difficult one, as if the worst diagnosis could be theirs.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The "back pain" that's an aneurysm.** A 68-year-old with hypertension
      presents

      with sudden severe back pain; the triage note says "musculoskeletal." The

      emergency physician resists the label and runs the worst-first list: a
      leaking

      abdominal aortic aneurysm kills in this demographic. A bedside ultrasound
      shows a

      6 cm aorta. The patient goes to the OR before rupture. The discipline was

      treating "back pain" as a can't-miss until excluded, not as the benign
      default.


      **The borderline chest pain at shift change.** A 45-year-old has atypical
      chest

      pain, a normal first ECG, and a HEART score in the intermediate range. The

      crowded department and the looming sign-out pressure a quick discharge.
      The

      physician applies the rule honestly: intermediate risk warrants a serial
      troponin

      and observation, not discharge. They hand off with a clear plan rather
      than

      clearing the board, because the dangerous miss is precisely the patient

      discharged to relieve flow.


      **The crashing septic patient nobody flagged.** A nursing-home transfer is
      parked

      as "altered mental status, stable." On reassessment the physician finds a
      fever,

      a rising heart rate, and a falling blood pressure — early septic shock.
      They

      start the sepsis bundle (cultures, broad-spectrum antibiotics, fluids)
      within the

      hour, treating empirically before the source is known, because time is
      organs.

      The save came from re-examining the parked patient, not from a new test.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The emergency physician anchors acute, undifferentiated care. Paramedics
      are the

      pre-hospital extension, beginning resuscitation and triage in the field
      and

      handing over the story. Emergency and trauma nurses are co-pilots in
      triage and

      resuscitation. The general physician shares the diagnostic discipline but
      with

      time and a narrowed problem the emergency physician rarely has. Surgeons
      take

      over the trauma and the acute abdomen once stabilized. Anesthesiologists
      share

      the airway and resuscitation skill set in a more controlled setting.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *Rosen's Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice*

      - *Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine*

      - *Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)* and *Advanced Trauma Life
      Support (ATLS)*

      - EMTALA (Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act)

      - *The House of God* — Samuel Shem (for the culture, read critically)
