Conference Introduction- Dr Shaw
- Expectations
- Come prepared
- Deliver as if you are giving it at a regional/national meeting
- Stay within time frame given
- Changes to conference for this year ***Full details in e-mail***
- Will be given 2 days a semester (6 month period) that you can attend via Zoom
- recurring meeting ID and password in e-mail
- Please keep camera on during conference
- Allowed 2 conference days a semester that you can attend via Zoom
- FOAMed on 3rd Thursday of each month
- Will continue journal club during conference
- EMCAT (the Emergency Medicine Curriculum Assessment Tool)
- Link in email
- Eval_Session_ID is the date of the lecture, followed by the presentation title, followed by presenter
- Evals are anonymous but please keep professional
- Conference curriculum will be online, link in email (word document will still be sent each month via email)
- Will be given 2 days a semester (6 month period) that you can attend via Zoom
Sedation in the ED – David Roy, PharmD
- Know
dosing, adverse effects, and benefits of the following sedatives:
- Benzodiazepines
- Provide amnesia, anxiolysis, and sedation but no analgesia
- Drawbacks: respiratory depression, apnea, hypotension, variable response
- Propofol
- Reduces ICP and has anticonvulsive properties
- Drawbacks: hypotension, myocardial depression
- Ketamine
- Amnestic, analgesic, sympathomimetic properties
- Utility in pts with asthma/COPD, hypotension, status epilepticus
- Look for nystagmus as sign achieved dissociation
- Drawbacks increased secretions, caution in CV disease (hypertension, tachycardia)
- Etomidate
- Remember 15 (onset 15 secs, duration 15 minutes)
- Hemodynamically neutral
- Drawbacks: adrenal suppression, myoclonus
- Benzodiazepines
- Practicing using different agents during residency to get comfortable with them
- If remember RSI dosing, procedural duration doses are typically half and duration typically half as well
How to: Room 9 – Dr. Turner
- Familiarize yourself where equipment and supplies are located
- Examples of types of patients needing room 9: unconscious patients, GSWs(examine head to toe for wounds if rolling out), stab wounds, open fractures, STEMIs, and strokes
- familiarize with level 1 criteria and understand it’s purpose
- Provider roles: as intern -primarily US/procedures, upper level – team leader
- have a system that works for you and do it the same every time
- review imaging as soon as possible on these patients, don’t wait for the radiologist
- if you roll out patient, it is your patient
Transfer of Care, Dr. Platt
- happens more than you think! A patient can have multiple transfers of care for during ED stay
- good TOCs are clear, brief, timely, and complete
- for sample verbal handoff structure, look up IPASS
- use transfer of care note in Cerner at during sign-outs
- watch your tone and bias when talking to consults
- lead/frame the consult the way you want patient care to go
- if consulting medicine, be direct that you are consulting them for “admission”
US Basics, Jessica Kotha
- US generally safe. However, in first trimester, use M mode (not doppler) when calculating fetal heart rate
- linear probe (high frequency ), good for veins, soft tissue, ocular exam
- curvilinear probe (lower frequency) sacrifice resolution for depth, RUSH Exam
- Basic modes: 2-D (B-mode), M-mode (motion), doppler (Color, power)
- types of artifacts (posterior acoustic shadowing, reverberation, mirroring, etc)
- troubleshooting images: try more gel or pressure, adjust depth/gain
- RUSH exam: Heart, Inferior vena cava (IVC), Morrison’s/FAST abdominal views, Aorta, and Pneumothorax (HI-MAP).
- subxiphoid view- most sensitive for pericardial effusion
- familiarize yourself with findings of tamponade (diastolic RV collapse) as well as R heart strain for PE (RV dilation, McConnell’s sign)
- Look for lung sliding AND lung point when looking for pneumothorax
- measure aorta from outer wall to outer wall when evaluating for AAA