%0 Journal Article %T Good Interdepartmental Relationships: The Foundations of a Solid Emergency Department %A Frank J. Edwards %J Archive of "Advanced Journal of Emergency Medicine". %D 2018 %R 10.22114/AJEM.v0i0.54 %X ¡°No man is an island¡± said the English poet, John Donne, and nowhere can that statement be better appreciated than in a modern emergency department (ED). As emergency physicians, we work in the setting of a close knit team involving nurses, technicians, consultants, clerks, security guards and many more. On a macroscopic level as well, the ED itself needs productive relationships with every other department in the hospital. Back when the ED was staffed by physicians-in-training, general practitioners and moonlighting specialists, the care of patients was jealously divided between the long-entrenched traditional specialties. Anesthesiologists handled difficult airways; Surgeons took care of trauma; Radiologists did the ultrasounds and read all the films, and so forth. Emergency medicine¡ªa specialty that encompassed parts of many disciplines¡ªwas initially met with skepticism and resistance from the traditional fields %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6549054/