Avsnitt
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Master of disaster, Dr. John Armstrong, discusses all things mass casualty. How to prepare your system, your ED, your team, and yourself for managing mass casualty events.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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When should we worry about burns? Which patients get sick? Who needs to be intubated? What is the right amount of fluid? In this podcast, Dr. Jack Rasmussen, plastic surgeon, critical care physician and burn expert, answers all of these questions and more.
If you want to hear more from Jack on burns, check out his Trauma NS webinar here: Burn webinar
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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In this podcast, Dr. Sean Hurley and I discuss an approach to management of penetrating neck trauma. How and when to intubate, hard and soft signs of injury, and a practical approach to investigation and management of airway, vascular and digestive tract injury.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Not all cardiac arrests are alike. In this podcast Dr. Nick Sowers and I explore the unique nature of traumatic cardiac arrest. How to prepare, what interventions you need to do, when to perform a resuscitative thoracotomy and more. And if your looking for more content from Nick on traumatic arrest, check out his trauma NS webinar here.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Shared goals, shared knowledge and mutual respect. In this podcast, Dr. Eve Purdy and I, discuss relational coordination. How do our relationships impact our teamwork in resuscitation, and how can we optimize relational dynamics to get the best performance from our resus teams.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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After the endotracheal tube is in, and the high-fives are done, what do you do with the ventilator? Dr. Laurel Murphy and I discuss initial vent settings, special considerations for the patient with obstructive lung disease or severe metabolic acidosis, and what to do when the vent alarms.
For more FOAM Resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Trauma care goes behind the resuscitation at the bedside. Patient outcomes rely on the function of the entire trauma system. In this podcast, Drs. Rob Green and Sean Hurley, talk about what constitutes a trauma team activation, who should get extra consideration, when to involve the trauma system in patient care, and what happens after the patient leaves the ED.
For more FOAM Resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this podcast, Dr. George Kovacs and I discuss all things video laryngoscopy: types of devices, variation in technique, use of a bougie and more.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this podcast, Dr. Hana Wiemer breaks down neonatal resuscitation in the ED. How to prepare for what happens after a delivery in the ED; we discuss airway management, medications and more.
For more FOAM resus related content, head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Toxicologist Dr. Caitlin Wolfe is back to talk about how to manage digoxin toxicity. When to use the antidote and how to dose it, how to manage dysrhythmias and that pesky hyperkalemia.
For more FOAM resus related content, head to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this podcast, Dr. Daniel French and I discuss the management of chest trauma - when is the right time to decompress, finger vs needle, and tons of post chest tube management pearls.
Click below for related content:
Finger thoracostomy
Pigtail insertion
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this podcast, Dr. Beatty and I review the diagnosis and management of BB and CCB overdoses. We chat about high dose insulin, vasopressors, intubation and more.
For more FOAM resus related content like this, head to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this part 2 podcast, Dr. Hana Wiemer and I discuss the various complications of a delivery in the ED, PPH, shoulder dystocia, cord prolapse and breech delivery
Head to www.theresuscourse.com for more FOAM resuscitation related content
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Dr. Nancy Murphy, toxicologist, and I discuss the management of toxic alcohols. Who to block, when to dialyze and much more.
For more resuscitation related FOAM content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Why do these patients need urine alkalinization, who needs dialysis, and how do we not to kill them with intubation, Dr. Lorri Beatty and I discuss the management of ASA toxicity.
For more FOAM resus related content head to www.theresuscourse.com
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How to prepare yourself, your team, your equipment and your space for a precipitous delivery in the ED. We discuss assessment, transport, delivery and more.
For more free open access Resus related content, head to www.theresuscourse.com
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Amidst an opioid epidemic, toxicologist Dr. Caitlin Wolfe reviews her approach to opioid toxicity. We discuss naloxone strategies, observation periods, and much more.
For more free open access resus related content. Check out www.theresuscourse.com
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Former scoper of bowels, turned emergency physician, Dr. Armstrong discusses how to best manage the exsanguinating upper GI bleed. We cover blood products, hemodynamic end points, intubation and much more.
For more free open access, resus related content, go to www.theresuscourse.com
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In this episode, Dr. Nancy Murphy discusses some high level resus pearls about some of the worst Antidepressant overdoses you will see. We cover management of neuro and cardiotoxicity, timing of intubation, WBI and much more.
Any further shownotes, as well as other free open access resuscitation related content, can be found at www.theresuscourse.com
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A thoughtful discussion your patients need you to hear, about a procedure you will hopefully never do!
Further shownotes, as well as other free open access resuscitation related content, can be found at www.theresuscourse.com
- Visa fler