Head and Neck Trauma – Dr. Sizemore
- signs of basilar skull fracture: hemotympanum, raccoon eyes (intra-orbital bruising], battle sign(retroauricular bruising) or cerebrospinal fluid leak (oto- or rhinorrhea, halo/ring)
- patients with LeFort II fractures and LeFort III fractures should have a CTA to screen for BCVI
- penetrating neck trauma
- Know anatomy associated with zones of neck (I,II,II)
- Early airway control should be considered in patients with hard signs
- Hard Signs > OR
- Soft Signs > CTA
- Zone I injuries can result in pneumothorax
- do not probe wounds with active bleeding as may dislodge clot
- if direct pressure cannot control bleeding, consider placement of a foley catheter and balloon inflation
Intro to Research: An Overview – Alyssa Thomas and Dr. Huecker
- interns, start thinking about project ideas now. Pick something that interests you
- remember, there are different type of “research” projects
- human subjects
- quality improvement
- program evaluation
- All members of the research team must have a valid CITI Human subjects and HIPPA research training
- Great resource when time for writing paper : https://www.strobe-stamenent.org
Delivering Bad News – Dr. Coleman
- These conversations are nuanced, demanding, personally impacting
- Dr. Hueckers ABCs
- Awareness: focus on this one thing, they know if you are distracted
- Blueprint: have a blueprint based on studies and based on experience, then modify based on circumstances
- Compassion: Stay composed and expect tough responses
- SPIKES, a six step protocol/mnemonic for delivering bad news mnemonic
- Set up
(Structure)
- mental rehearsal
- sit down
- control the situation
- maintain eye contact
- Perception/Professionalism
- before you tell, ask
- Invitation
- break it down, a little at a time
- Knowledge
- be direct, avoid “passed away”
- use plain language, avoid medical jargon
- Emotions
- Keep your cool, safety first
- Summary
- Explain what happens next
- Ask to be excused and how to reconnect
Social Media – Dr. Capocaccia
- Please follow us on twitter: @UofLEM and Instagram:uoflem
- Will be posting “white board talks” and conference pearls on twitter
- Please send Dr. Capocaccia any images pertaining to wellness that we can share on social media with applicants
How Emergency Doctors Think – Dr. O’Brien
- classic thinking “what does the patient have?” (obtain history, perform physical exam, differential diagnosis, testing, final diagnosis)
- in the ED, the classic model breaks down for a variety of reasons
- chaotic environment, “anyone, anything, anytime, anywhere”
- can average 4000 clicks over ten hour shift using EMR
- Constant interruptions/task switching
- Frequently responsible for ten or more patients
- Patients are unknown
- instead, we should ask “what does the patient need?” and whether or not any immediate action is required
- pearls
- Be the nicest, calmest person in the resuscitation room
- Rule-out first: diagnose second
- Focus on smaller list of smaller list of life threatening diseases related to chief complaint
- If you can, sit at the bedside to collect history
- Perform an uninterrupted physical exam
- Avoid diagnostic testing when able using rule-use tool
- Only order tests that will affect disposition/exclude life threatening/most likely
- Allow 2-3 minutes of interrupted time to mentally process each patient
- Mentally process one patient at a time to process disposition
- You can carry many patients but try to carry a max of 5 “undecided” patients
- Listen to nurses
- Avoid the biggest obstacle to the correct diagnosis, the previous diagnosis
- Avoid inheriting someone else’s thinking on a patient
- High risk times – sign out, hand offs, high volume, fatigue
- High risk patients – hostile, violent psych, drug abuse