Retraction

Does physician gender have a significant impact on first-pass success rate of emergency endotracheal intubation?

Paper Information

Record ID:
32278
Publication Date:
June 14, 2019
Retraction Date:
June 14, 2019 (6.4 years years ago)
Article Type:
Publisher:
Elsevier
Open Access:
Yes
PubMed ID:
Retraction PubMed ID:

Retraction Details

Nature of Retraction:

Retraction

Retraction Notice:
10.1016/j.ajem.2019.06.021
Additional Notes:

date of retraction unknown, html page overwrite; article updated to Withdrawn on unknown date;

Citations (4)

4
Total Citations
4
Post-Retraction
(100.0%)
0
Pre-Retraction
0
Same Day
Post-Retraction Citation Analysis
0 Within 30 days
3 Within 1 year
0 After 2+ years
475 Days since retraction (latest)
Paper citing Does physician gender have a significant impact on...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: Oct 2020
475 days after retraction
Paper citing Does physician gender have a significant impact on...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: Jan 2020
201 days after retraction
Paper citing Does physician gender have a significant impact on...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: Jan 2020
201 days after retraction
Paper citing Does physician gender have a significant impact on...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: Jan 2020
201 days after retraction
Quick Stats
Total Citations: 4
Years Since Retraction: 6.4 years
Open Access: Yes
Last Checked: Never
Related Papers
Vascular permeability and hemodynamic effects of ulinastati…
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine • 13 citations
Sublingual buprenorphine versus intravenous or intramuscula…
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine • 9 citations
Mometasone furoate for children with asthma: A meta-analysis
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine • 1 citations
Cancer immunotherapy-induced posterior reversible encephalo…
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine • 5 citations
Facial nerve palsy following mild mastoid trauma on trampol…
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine • 3 citations