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Total 477 results found since Jan 2013.

Doctor Informed - surviving in scrubs
The culture which allows sexism to perpetuate in healthcare is no better illustrated than by The BMJ's investigation into sexual abuse in the NHS. However, The BMJ are not the first organisation to highlight the problems - Surviving in Scrubs  have been collating stories of sexism in healthcare, and making waves about the issues for a while. In this episode of Doctor Informed, Clara Munro is joined by the founders of Surviving in Scrubs, to discuss their campaign, how to create a culture of zero tolerance for sexism at the ward level, and why they think sexism should be a professional issue. Our guests; Becky Cox is an ac...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - May 26, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Prophylactic antiemetics for adults receiving intravenous opioids in the acute care setting
The Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care Group has more than 270 active full reviews in the Cochrane Library. They added to these in May 2022 with a new review of the effects of giving antiemetics to adults receiving intravenous opioids in acute care. We asked lead author, Michael Gottlieb from the Department of Emergency Medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, USA, to tell us more in this podcast.
Source: Podcasts from The Cochrane Library - August 3, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Cochrane Source Type: podcasts

February 2022: Palliative Care in the ED, COVID-19 in Children, and the ACEP Opioid Policy
Amal Mattu, MD, and colleagues explore some serious topics in this month’s podcast.
Source: Emergency Medicine News: SoundsBites: Q&A - January 31, 2022 Category: Emergency Medicine Source Type: podcasts

February 2022: Trusty Satchel
Bryan Brusick, RN, tells a story about dealing with an animated trauma patient. He had been hit by a car and began screaming and refused to answer questions. One of the paramedics decided to look through his bag to see if he had any drugs that would explain his erratic behavior, and learned that sometimes it's better not to look through a satchel.
Source: Emergency Medicine News: SoundsBites: Q&A - January 31, 2022 Category: Emergency Medicine Source Type: podcasts

January 2022: Cerebral Venous Thrombosis, Acute Brain Failure, and BRASH Syndrome
Amal Mattu, MD, and colleagues tackle some tough conditions in this month’s podcast.
Source: Emergency Medicine News: SoundsBites: Q&A - December 30, 2021 Category: Emergency Medicine Source Type: podcasts

The Physician Grind @ EMN
Bryan Brusick, RN, shares a story about a patient he treated while working on Thanksgiving. Initially, the patient was calm and cooperative, but like most things in the ED, that suddenly changed.
Source: Emergency Medicine News: SoundsBites: Q&A - December 30, 2021 Category: Emergency Medicine Source Type: podcasts

How accurate is chest ultrasonography compared to supine chest radiography for diagnosis of traumatic pneumothorax in the emergency department?
Alongside the many thousands of Cochrane Reviews of the effects of interventions, our reviews of diagnostic test accuracy, or DTA, provide evidence to help clinicians choose between different techniques for diagnosing a health problem. In July 2020, we published the new DTA review on ultrasound versus x-ray for diagnosing pneumothorax in trauma patients. Here's lead author, Kenneth Chan from the Department of Emergency Medicine in the University of Calgary in Canada, to tell us what they found.
Source: Podcasts from The Cochrane Library - January 11, 2021 Category: General Medicine Authors: Cochrane Source Type: podcasts

Lockdown lessons from an Antarctic winter
Anne Hicks, is an emergency medicine consultant in Portsmouth, and for 16 years was the medical director for the British Antarctic Survey (she stepped down last year). The British Antarctic Survey operates all through the antarctic winter - where for 90 days, the sun sets and plunges their base into cold and darkness. So who better to give us some advice on coping with the strict covid-19 rules during our winter period. Anne talks to Cat Chatfield about the wa ys in which structure, even the seemingly small and arbitrary, can help, how to spot signs of someone struggling, and how the lack of daylight affects teams worki...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - December 4, 2020 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

For a greener NHS - a call for evidence
The NHS is a world leader in sustainable healthcare - and it's the staff who have have been leading the charge. The For A Greener NHS campaign is asking everyone who has made a change to the way they work, to submit evidence and help shape the whole organisation's response to the climate emergency. In this podcast, Isobel Braithwaite, public health registrar& academic clinical fellow at UCL, and Sandy Robertson, LTFT Emergency Medicine Trainee and Chair of RCEM environmental specialist interest group, join us to explain what they're doing, and what kind of evidence is needed. For more on the For A Greener NHS campaign...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - March 14, 2020 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

November 2019: Ryan Stanton, MD:
Dr. Stanton goes inside addiction medicine while talking with a PA who lost her license after being hooked on heroin, oxycodone, and alcohol.
Source: Everyday Medicine for Physicians - November 1, 2019 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Emergency Medicine News Emergency Medicine News Source Type: podcasts