jueves, 30 de abril de 2015

LITFL Review 179

LITFL review

Welcome to the 179th LITFL Review. Your regular and reliable source for the highest highlights, sneakiest sneak peeks and loudest shout-outs from the webbed world of emergency medicine and critical care. Each week the LITFL team casts the spotlight on the blogosphere’s best and brightest and deliver a bite-sized chuck of FOAM.

The Most Fair Dinkum Ripper Beauts of the Week

resizer If you do one FOAM-centred thing this week, spend 5 minutes watching this video on patient-centred care. Thanks to the International Forum on Quality and Safety In Healthcare 2015 [SO]

 

The Best of #FOAMed Emergency Medicine

The Best of #FOAMcc Critical Care

  • A brilliant talk from Kenji Inaba discussing lower extremity trauma from Essentials of Emergency Medicine. [AS]
  • Do you TRUST your tube placement? A nice review of using POCUS to confirm that your tube is in the appropriate location within the trachea. [AS]
  • A recent article suggested apnoeic oxygenation doesn’t work in the critically ill, but Josh Farkas from Pulmcrit takes this to task. Don’t abandon “o’s up the nose” just yet… [SO]
  • Here’s an interesting conversation with Professor Darren Heyland on critical care nutrition from the JICSCast team. [SO]

The Best of #FOAMtox Toxicology

The Best of #FOAMus Ultrasound

The Best of #FOAMim Internal Medicine

  • Dr Lederer’s case-centered lecture-and-slides on Na, K, and diuretics really does help clarify serum and urine electrolytes from an internist’s perspective. For those with greater urgency, the same nephrologist focuses on Electrolyte Emergencies, specifically hyponatremia and hyperkalemia. [ML]

The Best of Medical Education and Social Media

  • A guest post from Rob Orman on the EM Mindset from EMDocs.net. Remember to be humble, keep learning and set the tone. [AS]
  • Excellent podcast from Anton Helman, Chris Hicks, Walter Himmel and David Dushenski on risk tolerance, decision making and what we really mean (or should mean) when we say diagnosis. [AS]
  • A really interesting and thought provoking situation posed on ALIEM on the use of FOAM and the Case of the FOAM Faux Pas, exploring the criticism we may face as FOAM early adopters and quoting FOAM resources on the shop floor. Add your comments to the (at time of writing) 42 comments. On May 1 AKIEN will post the Expert Responses and Curated Community Commentary for the Case of The FOAM Faux Pas. [SL]

News from the Fast Lane

Reference Sources and Reading List

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