EMJ podcast
Summary: From June 2023, all our podcasts will move to https://emjbmj.podbean.com. You can continue with your subscription on your favourite podcast App. Emergency Medicine Journal (EMJ) is an international peer review journal covering pre-hospital and hospital emergency medicine, and critical care. The journal publishes original research, reviews and evidence based articles on resuscitation, major trauma, minor injuries, acute cardiology, acute paediatrics, toxicology, toxinology, disasters, medical imaging, audit, teaching and reflections on clinical practice. The journal is aimed at doctors, nurses, paramedics and ambulance staff. * The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. The content of this podcast does not constitute medical advice and it is not intended to function as a substitute for a healthcare practitioner’s judgement, patient care or treatment. The views expressed by contributors are those of the speakers. BMJ does not endorse any views or recommendations discussed or expressed on this podcast. Listeners should also be aware that professionals in the field may have different opinions. By listening to this podcast, listeners agree not to use its content as the basis for their own medical treatment or for the medical treatment of others.
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Podcasts:
Simon Carley and Rick Body, EMJ associate editors, talk you through the highlights of March's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: emj.bmj.com/content/33/3.toc#Primarysurvey
Simon Carley and Rick Body, EMJ associate editors, talk you through the highlights of March's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: emj.bmj.com/content/33/3.toc#Primarysurvey
Simon Carley and Rick Body, EMJ associate editors, talk you through the highlights of February's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/33/2.toc
Simon Carley and Rick Body, EMJ associate editors, talk you through the highlights of February's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/33/2.toc
Dr Ellen Weber talks to Dr Renatus Tarimo and Dr Shahzma Suleman from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. This interview takes place as they complete their six week obsevation visit at the emergency departments of UCSF Medical Center and San Francisco General Hospital in San Francisco and they reflect on their visit and the differences in medical practice and education between the two countries.
Dr Ellen Weber talks to Dr Renatus Tarimo and Dr Shahzma Suleman from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. This interview takes place as they complete their six week obsevation visit at the emergency departments of UCSF Medical Center and San Francisco General Hospital in San Francisco and they reflect on their visit and the differences in medical practice and education between the two countries.
Lack of familiarity between teammates is linked to worsened safety in high risk settings. The emergency department (ED) is a high risk healthcare setting where unfamiliar teams are created by diversity in clinician shift schedules and flexibility in clinician movement across the department. Dr Ellen Weber speaks to Dr Daniel Patterson about his research to characterise familiarity between clinician teammates in one urban teaching hospital ED over a 22 week study period. Read the full paper: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/4/258.full?sid=f47dc6b9-deef-4a61-a77a-342ea713262b
Lack of familiarity between teammates is linked to worsened safety in high risk settings. The emergency department (ED) is a high risk healthcare setting where unfamiliar teams are created by diversity in clinician shift schedules and flexibility in clinician movement across the department. Dr Ellen Weber speaks to Dr Daniel Patterson about his research to characterise familiarity between clinician teammates in one urban teaching hospital ED over a 22 week study period. Read the full paper: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/4/258.full?sid=f47dc6b9-deef-4a61-a77a-342ea713262b
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of February's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/2.toc
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of February's EMJ. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/2.toc
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of January's EMJ, including pulmonary embolism in pregnancy and the post partum period, the causes of suffering in the ED, and how to diagnose a patient by their facial expressions. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/1.toc Listen to a podcast on diagnosis by face: http://goo.gl/0ackZw Listen to a podcast on suffering in the ED: http://goo.gl/JhGa7P
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of January's EMJ, including pulmonary embolism in pregnancy and the post partum period, the causes of suffering in the ED, and how to diagnose a patient by their facial expressions. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/32/1.toc Listen to a podcast on diagnosis by face: http://goo.gl/0ackZw Listen to a podcast on suffering in the ED: http://goo.gl/JhGa7P
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of December's EMJ, including crowding in the emergency department, sepsis treatment and capillary refill. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/31/12.toc
Simon Carley, EMJ associate editor, talks you through the highlights of December's EMJ, including crowding in the emergency department, sepsis treatment and capillary refill. For all the content from the issue, see: http://emj.bmj.com/content/31/12.toc
Provision of prompt, effective analgesia is rightly considered as a standard of care in the emergency department (ED). However, much suffering is not ‘painful’ and may be under-recognised. A recent paper in EMJ looked to describe the burden of suffering in the ED and explore how this may be best addressed from a patient centred perspective. Ellen Weber talks to lead author Richard Body, Emergency Department Research Office, Manchester Royal Infirmary, to hear what they found.Read the full paper:http://goo.gl/kjs0x9