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DESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CAEP 2021: GOALS OF THE CONFERENCE This is the first episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCAREDESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EM This is the second episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021conference
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: You are midway through a busy rapid response shift where you have noticed an increased response time of the hospital’s intubating teams to decompensating patients. Over the last few months, the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted restructuring of the use of many spaces to accommodate the influx of patients. You understand that the system is overwhelmed but you are optimistic that you can CAEP 2021: RECENT EM LITERATURE AND GLOBAL EM TRACKS Our Guests. Dr. Ken Milne is an emergency physician and host of the Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine Podcast. He is also the Recent EM Literature Track Chair, which features an international award-winning panel of speakers: Dr. Lauren Westafer, Dr. Samina Ali, and Dr. KirstyChallen!
FRCPC OR CCFP-EM: WHAT IS BEST FOR YOU? $ One exception to this is that FRCPC’s get paid more than CCFP-EM’s in Quebec with the disparity being ~$46,000/year as of 2010. However, the number of specialist (FRCPC) positions in each region is limited by work permits (huge thanks to Nina Nguyen, a med student from Sherbrooke, for this information!)Of course, in all provinces CCFP-EM’s would begin earning attending wages 2 years ABDOMINAL CUTANEOUS NERVE ENTRAPMENT SYNDROME (ACNES): A In this article, we will dive into the world of abdominal wall pain – specifically from a condition called Abdominal Cutaneous Nerve Entrapment Syndrome (ACNES) – a diagnosis rarely considered when seeing patients with abdominal pain in the ED. CANADIEM - PAGE 53 OF 187 - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF The Nova Scotia Health Authority is currently seeking Emergency Physicians to join the Cape Breton team! The industrial area of Cape Breton ranges from the very eastern tip of Cape Breton to the west side of Sydney Harbour, including Sydney, Glace Bay, North Sydney, and a number of smaller communities. CH 35 - FACIAL TRAUMA CrackCast Show Notes – Facial Trauma – June 2021 www.canadiem.org/crackcast Ch 35 - Facial Trauma EPISODE CONTENT BASED ON ROSEN’S EMERGENCY MEDICINE (9THPODCAST ARCHIVES
Lately, I have been thinking about the lies we tell each other as doctors. Mostly, these are lies of omission. We share stories of slick procedures, clever diagnoses, and post-shift half-marathons.THE FORKS: CAEP AT
T h u r s d a y , J u n e 1 7 t h Dialogues for inclusion and transformation in health care D r. A li k a L af onta in e Dr. Lafon t a ine is an awa rd winning physician and a practicing anesthesiologist FEATURED EDUCATION INNOVATIONS (FEI) ARCHIVES Three key papers were developed at the 2013 Canadian Association of Emergency Physician‘s (CAEP) Educational Scholarship Academic Symposium and published in the May 2014 edition of CJEM that explain the value of educational scholarship in emergency medicine. CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CAEP 2021: GOALS OF THE CONFERENCE This is the first episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCAREDESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CAEP 2021: GOALS OF THE CONFERENCE This is the first episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCAREDESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EM This is the second episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021conference
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: You are midway through a busy rapid response shift where you have noticed an increased response time of the hospital’s intubating teams to decompensating patients. Over the last few months, the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted restructuring of the use of many spaces to accommodate the influx of patients. You understand that the system is overwhelmed but you are optimistic that you can CAEP 2021: RECENT EM LITERATURE AND GLOBAL EM TRACKS Our Guests. Dr. Ken Milne is an emergency physician and host of the Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine Podcast. He is also the Recent EM Literature Track Chair, which features an international award-winning panel of speakers: Dr. Lauren Westafer, Dr. Samina Ali, and Dr. KirstyChallen!
FRCPC OR CCFP-EM: WHAT IS BEST FOR YOU? $ One exception to this is that FRCPC’s get paid more than CCFP-EM’s in Quebec with the disparity being ~$46,000/year as of 2010. However, the number of specialist (FRCPC) positions in each region is limited by work permits (huge thanks to Nina Nguyen, a med student from Sherbrooke, for this information!)Of course, in all provinces CCFP-EM’s would begin earning attending wages 2 years ABDOMINAL CUTANEOUS NERVE ENTRAPMENT SYNDROME (ACNES): A In this article, we will dive into the world of abdominal wall pain – specifically from a condition called Abdominal Cutaneous Nerve Entrapment Syndrome (ACNES) – a diagnosis rarely considered when seeing patients with abdominal pain in the ED. CANADIEM - PAGE 53 OF 187 - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF The Nova Scotia Health Authority is currently seeking Emergency Physicians to join the Cape Breton team! The industrial area of Cape Breton ranges from the very eastern tip of Cape Breton to the west side of Sydney Harbour, including Sydney, Glace Bay, North Sydney, and a number of smaller communities. CH 35 - FACIAL TRAUMA CrackCast Show Notes – Facial Trauma – June 2021 www.canadiem.org/crackcast Ch 35 - Facial Trauma EPISODE CONTENT BASED ON ROSEN’S EMERGENCY MEDICINE (9THPODCAST ARCHIVES
Lately, I have been thinking about the lies we tell each other as doctors. Mostly, these are lies of omission. We share stories of slick procedures, clever diagnoses, and post-shift half-marathons.THE FORKS: CAEP AT
T h u r s d a y , J u n e 1 7 t h Dialogues for inclusion and transformation in health care D r. A li k a L af onta in e Dr. Lafon t a ine is an awa rd winning physician and a practicing anesthesiologist FEATURED EDUCATION INNOVATIONS (FEI) ARCHIVES Three key papers were developed at the 2013 Canadian Association of Emergency Physician‘s (CAEP) Educational Scholarship Academic Symposium and published in the May 2014 edition of CJEM that explain the value of educational scholarship in emergency medicine. CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CAEP 2021: GOALS OF THE CONFERENCE This is the first episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCAREDESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CAEP 2021: GOALS OF THE CONFERENCE This is the first episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCAREDESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIPS - TAKING A SOCIAL HISTORY - CANADIEM Tiny Tips – Taking a Social History. While often overlooked, a patient’s social history can help narrow the differential diagnosis as well as help guide their final disposition. A mnemonic to help with the essential parts of the social history is ETOH SHOTS: Level of education of the patient; are they able to understand dischargeinstructions.
TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 . PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
A BORING GUIDE TO SPINAL CORD SYNDROMES Anterior cord syndrome often occurs as a result of flexion injury, or due to injury to the anterior spinal artery. This may occur as a result of vascular or atherosclerotic disease in the elderly, or iatrogenic secondary to cross clamping of the aorta. These patients have preserved function of their posterior column, and so theirproprioception
TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EM This is the second episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021conference
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: You are midway through a busy rapid response shift where you have noticed an increased response time of the hospital’s intubating teams to decompensating patients. Over the last few months, the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted restructuring of the use of many spaces to accommodate the influx of patients. You understand that the system is overwhelmed but you are optimistic that you can CAEP 2021: RECENT EM LITERATURE AND GLOBAL EM TRACKS Our Guests. Dr. Ken Milne is an emergency physician and host of the Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine Podcast. He is also the Recent EM Literature Track Chair, which features an international award-winning panel of speakers: Dr. Lauren Westafer, Dr. Samina Ali, and Dr. KirstyChallen!
FRCPC OR CCFP-EM: WHAT IS BEST FOR YOU? $ One exception to this is that FRCPC’s get paid more than CCFP-EM’s in Quebec with the disparity being ~$46,000/year as of 2010. However, the number of specialist (FRCPC) positions in each region is limited by work permits (huge thanks to Nina Nguyen, a med student from Sherbrooke, for this information!)Of course, in all provinces CCFP-EM’s would begin earning attending wages 2 years ABDOMINAL CUTANEOUS NERVE ENTRAPMENT SYNDROME (ACNES): A In this article, we will dive into the world of abdominal wall pain – specifically from a condition called Abdominal Cutaneous Nerve Entrapment Syndrome (ACNES) – a diagnosis rarely considered when seeing patients with abdominal pain in the ED. CANADIEM - PAGE 53 OF 187 - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF The Nova Scotia Health Authority is currently seeking Emergency Physicians to join the Cape Breton team! The industrial area of Cape Breton ranges from the very eastern tip of Cape Breton to the west side of Sydney Harbour, including Sydney, Glace Bay, North Sydney, and a number of smaller communities. CH 35 - FACIAL TRAUMA CrackCast Show Notes – Facial Trauma – June 2021 www.canadiem.org/crackcast Ch 35 - Facial Trauma EPISODE CONTENT BASED ON ROSEN’S EMERGENCY MEDICINE (9THPODCAST ARCHIVES
Lately, I have been thinking about the lies we tell each other as doctors. Mostly, these are lies of omission. We share stories of slick procedures, clever diagnoses, and post-shift half-marathons.THE FORKS: CAEP AT
T h u r s d a y , J u n e 1 7 t h Dialogues for inclusion and transformation in health care D r. A li k a L af onta in e Dr. Lafon t a ine is an awa rd winning physician and a practicing anesthesiologist FEATURED EDUCATION INNOVATIONS (FEI) ARCHIVES Three key papers were developed at the 2013 Canadian Association of Emergency Physician‘s (CAEP) Educational Scholarship Academic Symposium and published in the May 2014 edition of CJEM that explain the value of educational scholarship in emergency medicine. CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EMCRACKCASTABOUTCONTENTSUBMISSIONSEDUCATION & QIMEDICAL CONCEPTS This is the second episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021conference
CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like HIQUIPS: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT IN THE TIME OF COVID-19SEE MORE ONCANADIEM.ORG
CAEP 2021: PRE-CONFERENCE DETAILS Our Guest. Dr. Tamara McColl is an Emergency Medicine physician at the Saint Boniface Hospital, Assistant Professor at the Max Rady College of Medicine, and Director of Education Scholarship and Faculty Development with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Manitoba. She is also the Scientific Chair of CAEP 2021. Pre-conference Details: A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCARE PEM PEARLS 01: PEDIATRIC AIRWAY DIFFERENCES PEM Pearls 01: Pediatric Airway Differences. Welcome to PEM Pearls: a new CanadiEM Infographic Series focused on providing approaches and high-yield pearls for important pediatric EM topics! Today we will be discussing differences in pediatric airway anatomy and airway management considerations. 1 . TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 .DESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EMCRACKCASTABOUTCONTENTSUBMISSIONSEDUCATION & QIMEDICAL CONCEPTS This is the second episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021conference
CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like HIQUIPS: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT IN THE TIME OF COVID-19SEE MORE ONCANADIEM.ORG
CAEP 2021: PRE-CONFERENCE DETAILS Our Guest. Dr. Tamara McColl is an Emergency Medicine physician at the Saint Boniface Hospital, Assistant Professor at the Max Rady College of Medicine, and Director of Education Scholarship and Faculty Development with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Manitoba. She is also the Scientific Chair of CAEP 2021. Pre-conference Details: A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCARE PEM PEARLS 01: PEDIATRIC AIRWAY DIFFERENCES PEM Pearls 01: Pediatric Airway Differences. Welcome to PEM Pearls: a new CanadiEM Infographic Series focused on providing approaches and high-yield pearls for important pediatric EM topics! Today we will be discussing differences in pediatric airway anatomy and airway management considerations. 1 . TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 .DESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it TINY TIP: C BIG K DROP (MANAGEMENT OF HYPERKALEMIA WITH The goal of treatment is to prevent cardiac arrhythmia, then lower serum potassium. The management of hyperkalemia can be summarized by the mnemonic C (See) BIG K DROP (modified from .) Calcium: Calcium gluconate (10%) 10 mL IV over 10 min . Calcium is a – cardiacstabilizer.
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: You are midway through a busy rapid response shift where you have noticed an increased response time of the hospital’s intubating teams to decompensating patients. Over the last few months, the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted restructuring of the use of many spaces to accommodate the influx of patients. You understand that the system is overwhelmed but you are optimistic that you can A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all HOW TO READ PATIENT MONITORS It’s your first day as a clerk in the Emergency Department and your staff has asked you to see an 80 year old patient with known COPD presenting with increasing shortness of breath. He reminds you to check the patient monitor when you go in there to look for any abnormalities and to record a new set of vitals on the chart. Patient monitors can be overwhelming early in your training when you CAEP 2021: TRACTS AND PLENARY SPEAKERS This is the third episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today FRCPC OR CCFP-EM: WHAT IS BEST FOR YOU? $ One exception to this is that FRCPC’s get paid more than CCFP-EM’s in Quebec with the disparity being ~$46,000/year as of 2010. However, the number of specialist (FRCPC) positions in each region is limited by work permits (huge thanks to Nina Nguyen, a med student from Sherbrooke, for this information!)Of course, in all provinces CCFP-EM’s would begin earning attending wages 2 years NICE THREADS: A GUIDE TO SUTURE CHOICE IN THE ED It is generally accepted that if one uses sutures to repair an uncomplicated laceration, the best choice is a monofilament non-absorbable suture. Monofilament synthetic sutures have the lowest rate of infection . Size 6-0 is appropriate for the face. 3-0, 4-0 or 5-0 may be appropriate for other areas including torso, arms, legs,hands and
PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: COMPLICATIONS YOU MUST KNOW Description: Pacemaker malfunction is a global term used when a pacemaker is not working properly. It usually involves failure of the pulse generator or the lead (s). It presents as failure to pace, failure to capture, inappropriate sensing (over- or under-sensing), ordysrhythmia.
THE BORING GUIDE TO ECG'S: FASCICULAR BLOCKS Figure 1: Stylized schematic of the anterior and posterior fascicles of the heart. Note the relative widths of the anterior vs. posterior fascicles. In this article, we will briefly explore the physiology of cardiac depolarization, with and without fascicular blocks. Then we get to the important stuff: how to recognize these syndromes on ECG PACEMAKER ESSENTIALS: HOW TO INTERPRET A PACEMAKER ECG Approach to a Pacemaker ECG. A pacemaker consists of a box (i.e. the pacemaker or pulse generator) and a lead or leads. When it malfunctions, the issue is with rate, pacing, capturing (i.e. delivering the spike to depolarize the myocardium), or sensing .. It is important to go through a consistent approach when interpreting pacemaker ECGs, ideally the same one you use for non-paced TINY TIPS: STEMI? DON'T FORGET YOUR PAILS! Reading ECGs is a bread and butter emergency medicine skill. At busy centres a triage nurse may hand you tens of them to glance at per shift. It can be a mindless, monotonous task, but your brain needs to know where to look. So, when you identify legitimate ST elevation and you are concerned about a STEMI, where are those reciprocal changes found again? Think of PAILS! This mnemonic CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EMCRACKCASTABOUTCONTENTSUBMISSIONSEDUCATION & QIMEDICAL CONCEPTS A 30-year-old male presents to the ER with right forearm redness, swelling and pain. On exam, you are unsure whether this infection represents cellulitis or abscess. You wonder if point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) can be helpful. Superficial soft tissue infections are a common ED presentation. Cellulitis appears as an area oferythema, edema and
CAEP 2021: PRE-CONFERENCE DETAILS Our Guest. Dr. Tamara McColl is an Emergency Medicine physician at the Saint Boniface Hospital, Assistant Professor at the Max Rady College of Medicine, and Director of Education Scholarship and Faculty Development with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Manitoba. She is also the Scientific Chair of CAEP 2021. Pre-conference Details: A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like HIQUIPS: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT IN THE TIME OF COVID-19SEE MORE ONCANADIEM.ORG
APPROACH TO PAIN MANAGEMENT IN THE ED Pain is one of the most common concerns of patients presenting to the ED. Achieving excellent analgesia while minimizing side effects is an important and nuanced skill to develop. The goal of emergency pain management is not to completely eradicate pain but rather, reduce pain to an acceptable level allowing for safe discharge/return to daily activities, or to bridge until inpatient care THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCARE TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 .DESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it THE PROBLEM WITH MANDATORY WELLNESS CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EMCRACKCASTABOUTCONTENTSUBMISSIONSEDUCATION & QIMEDICAL CONCEPTS A 30-year-old male presents to the ER with right forearm redness, swelling and pain. On exam, you are unsure whether this infection represents cellulitis or abscess. You wonder if point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) can be helpful. Superficial soft tissue infections are a common ED presentation. Cellulitis appears as an area oferythema, edema and
CAEP 2021: PRE-CONFERENCE DETAILS Our Guest. Dr. Tamara McColl is an Emergency Medicine physician at the Saint Boniface Hospital, Assistant Professor at the Max Rady College of Medicine, and Director of Education Scholarship and Faculty Development with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Manitoba. She is also the Scientific Chair of CAEP 2021. Pre-conference Details: A GUIDE TO CHARTING IN THE ED It’s your first Emergency Medicine shift in clerkship. You’re asked to see a 25-year-old female with abdominal pain. What are things you want to make sure you ask about and examine, and how should you document your assessment without spending most of your shift on paperwork? Documenting patient encounters is a core skill in all medical specialties; in fact, it is a legal requirement of all CRACKCAST - CANADIEM Welcome to the home of CRACKCast on CanadiEM! A podcast for those who have to satisfy their ADHD studying needs, the CRACK in CRACKCast is for Core Rosen’s and Clinical Knowledge. This is a podcast that truly gets down to the basics by covering each and every chapter of Rosen’s Emergency Medicine – in order. New episodes are published weekly on Mondays and Thursdays. If you would like HIQUIPS: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT IN THE TIME OF COVID-19SEE MORE ONCANADIEM.ORG
APPROACH TO PAIN MANAGEMENT IN THE ED Pain is one of the most common concerns of patients presenting to the ED. Achieving excellent analgesia while minimizing side effects is an important and nuanced skill to develop. The goal of emergency pain management is not to completely eradicate pain but rather, reduce pain to an acceptable level allowing for safe discharge/return to daily activities, or to bridge until inpatient care THE RISING COST OF CANADIAN HEALTHCARE TEACHING THAT COUNTS: THE ONE-MINUTE PRECEPTOR MODEL The one-minute preceptor model (OMP) was first described in Family Medicine Education literature by Neher et al. in 1992 1 . Since then, it has become one of the cornerstones for professional development in clinical teaching and has been adapted to a variety of medical specialties, including emergency medicine 2–5 .DESCRIBING A RASH
When describing a rash there are many characteristics to make note of, including its primary morphology, secondary morphology, demarcation, colour, configuration, and distribution. The focus or this article will be on primary morphology. Reasoning through the first blush Within primary morphology you can stratify a lesion based on whether it is flat or elevated. If the lesion is flat, then it THE PROBLEM WITH MANDATORY WELLNESS CANADIEM - AN ONLINE COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR CANADIAN EM A 30-year-old male presents to the ER with right forearm redness, swelling and pain. On exam, you are unsure whether this infection represents cellulitis or abscess. You wonder if point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) can be helpful. Superficial soft tissue infections are a common ED presentation. Cellulitis appears as an area oferythema, edema and
CAEP 2021: TRACTS AND PLENARY SPEAKERS 1 day ago · This is the third episode of our CanadiEM’s podcast series in collaboration with CAEP 2021, with our guest host Ken Milne. You may recognize Ken Milne’s voice from the popular podcast Skeptic’s Guide to Emergency Medicine. In this series, Ken breaks down will tell you everything you need to know about the upcoming CAEP 2021 conference, CAEP at the Forks: Rising to the Challenge! In today APPROACH TO PAIN MANAGEMENT IN THE ED Pain is one of the most common concerns of patients presenting to the ED. Achieving excellent analgesia while minimizing side effects is an important and nuanced skill to develop. The goal of emergency pain management is not to completely eradicate pain but rather, reduce pain to an acceptable level allowing for safe discharge/return to daily activities, or to bridge until inpatient care HOW TO READ PATIENT MONITORS It’s your first day as a clerk in the Emergency Department and your staff has asked you to see an 80 year old patient with known COPD presenting with increasing shortness of breath. He reminds you to check the patient monitor when you go in there to look for any abnormalities and to record a new set of vitals on the chart. Patient monitors can be overwhelming early in your training when you DESIGNING A QI PROJECT You are attending your local ED monthly rounds where a journal club is being held discussing a Quality Improvement (QI) published paper. As the rounds progress, your presenter critiques the article and discusses perceived weaknesses including a small sample size, lack of randomization and blinding, and lists many different possible biases in this project. You reflect back on your previous INTRACRANIAL BLEEDING IN SENIORS WHO FALL Intracranial bleeding in seniors who fall – a growing problem with no research evidence. The Falls Consortium researchers would like to capture the variation in approach to emergency department senior patients who present after a fall. Please take 5 minutes to complete our survey. Clinical Case: This morning, I reviewed Mr. Barker in the emergency department. He had a fall at home. MEDICAL HISTORY IN ART: A BRIEF HISTORY OF ONE OF THE MOST Yesterday (March 30th, 2018) was National Doctor’s Day in the United States, and we thought it would be fitting to do a feature on arguably one of the most symbolic tools in medicine. What is the tool portrayed above? The painting above features Rene Theophile Hyacinthe Laennec using an early version of his invention – the stethoscope. The Inventor1 To the left is a portrait of Rene TINY TIPS: “TREADMILLS” PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY MNEMONIC Peripheral neuropathy is prevalent in up to 2.4% of the general population1. It is often characterized by an asymmetric distribution with sensory symptoms following a dermatomal pattern. Initial investigations include a complete blood count (CBC), metabolic panel (electrolytes, glucose, urea, creatinine), and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)2. There are many causes for peripheral neuropathyCRACKCAST E100
This (centennial!) episode of CRACKCast covers Rosen’s Chapter 100, Gynecologic Disorders. This chapter covers the common presentation of pelvic pain and vaginal bleeding in the emergency department, including can’t miss life or organ diagnoses. Shownotes – PDF Here Rosen’s in Perspective Pelvic pain and Vaginal bleeding is a common presentation in our departments!!!CRACKCAST E095
CRACKCast E095 – Large Intestine. In CRACKCast, Podcast by Adam ThomasJuly 27, 2017 Leave a Comment. This episode of CRACKCast covers Rosen’s Chapter 95, Large Intestine. This chapter covers a number of pathologies affecting the large colon, including their associated riskfactors &
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Brent Thoma CaRMS Guide, Mentorship January 1, 2015*
BASIC AIRWAY ASSESSMENT: IT’S AS EASY AS… 1-2-3? Rob Woods Medical Concepts August 4, 2014*
NEW CANADIEM SERIES – HIQUIPS Ahmed Taher Education & Quality Improvement, HiQuiPs July 10, 2018*
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THE ‘TOP FIVE CHANGES’ PROJECT: 2015 AHA GUIDELINES ON CPR + ECC UPDATE INFOGRAPHIC SERIES Blair Bigham Infographics, Knowledge Translation October 22, 2015*
CARMS GUIDE
Brent Thoma CaRMS Guide, Mentorship January 1, 2015*
BASIC AIRWAY ASSESSMENT: IT’S AS EASY AS… 1-2-3? Rob Woods Medical Concepts August 4, 2014*
NEW CANADIEM SERIES – HIQUIPS Ahmed Taher Education & Quality Improvement, HiQuiPs July 10, 2018*
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Tetyana Maniuk Arts PRN August 1, 2017*
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Adam Thomas CRACKCast, Podcast August 11, 2016*
THE ‘TOP FIVE CHANGES’ PROJECT: 2015 AHA GUIDELINES ON CPR + ECC UPDATE INFOGRAPHIC SERIES Blair Bigham Infographics, Knowledge Translation October 22, 2015PreviousNext
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FLOW HACKS 9 – OUCH! TIMELY ANALGESIA ADMINISTRATION FOR PATIENTS WITH MSK INJURIES IN THE ED. In Education & Quality Improvement,
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by Laila NasserAugust 13, 2019Leave a Comment To continue our FLOW Hacks series, Victoria Woolner (NP, MN, MSc QIPS) writes about another initiative her team has taken on, this time tackling timely analgesia administration for patients with MSK injuries in the ED. This innovation was also the winner of the Top QIPS Abstract Award at the Canadian Association of Emergency Physician’s Conference in 2019. Setting This intervention was carried out at Toronto General Hospital (University Health Network), an academic site with …View Post
HIQUIPS: COMPUTERIZED PHYSICIAN ORDER ENTRY (CPOE ) – USING HEALTH INFORMATICS TO DECREASE ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS In Education & Quality Improvement,
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by Ryan TamAugust 9, 2019Leave a Comment Your emergency department (ED) recently switched over to an electronic health system (EHR). While you slowly adjust your clinical workflow, you find all the dictating, clicking and typing cumbersome and “slows you down”. You wonder how this innovative technology seemingly has become the foremost barrier to your clinical care and how this technology could ever improve patient care? These frustrations and concerns are common sentiments as many EDs across the country are switching …View Post
HIQUIPS: YEAR IN REVIEW In Education & Quality Improvement,
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by Ahmed TaherAugust 8, 2019Leave a Comment It has already been one year since we launched the HiQuiPs (Health informatics, Quality Improvement, Patient Safety) series on CanadiEM. This year we had fifteen contributors from across the country, and over 15,000 page visits to our series. Over the past year, we have produced thirteen posts over the HiQuiPs interrelated fields: Quality Improvement: On QI, we introduced what is quality of care in the ED, then to guide our readers through the … CRACKCast, Featured, Podcast / August 5, 2019 CRACKCAST E204 – DEPRESSED CONSCIOUSNESS AND COMAView Post
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LEARNING TO FLY IN #PGWHY5: FIVE TIPS FOR SURVIVAL IN THE EXAM YEAR In Education & Quality Improvement,
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by Daniel TingJuly 19, 2019Leave a Comment Five practical tips on surviving the Emergency Medicine Royal CollegeExam!
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CANADIEM MVP INFOGRAPHIC SERIES – PROSPECTIVE MULTICENTER EVALUATION OF THE PULMONARY EMBOLISM RULE-OUT CRITERIA In Featured , Infographicsby Anuja
BhaleraoJuly 19, 2019Leave a Comment As part of the MVP infographic series, this article features a study published by Kline et. al assessing the application of the PERC rule in the emergency department (ED). 1 At the time of this study, the authors noted that there was an increased frequency of testing for pulmonary embolism (PE) in the ED amongst very low risk patients.2 These patients would undergo CT angiograms which would often be negative leading to more …* Page 1 of 144
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