Annals of B-Pod: Quick Hit Case
/A male in his 30s came in after trying to break up a fight in a bar. No good deed goes unpunished, but what is wrong with this knee?
Read Moreemergency medicine tamed
Taming the SRU. The SRU is the "Shock Resuscitation Unit." It is a crucible of clinical training for the residents of the University of Cincinnati Emergency Medicine Residency training program.
A male in his 30s came in after trying to break up a fight in a bar. No good deed goes unpunished, but what is wrong with this knee?
Read MoreIn this week's grand rounds we covered the complications of sedation in alcohol withdrawl, the nuances of decreased door-to-needle time in acute ischemic stroke, bicarbinate use in metabolic acidosis and a case follow-up or respiratory depression in new onset myesthenia gravis
Read MoreThe UC Division of EMS has recorded a series of podcasts to celebrate EMS Week 2016. We are honored to be able to engage EMS Providers throughout the world with this forum. If you practice pre-hospital medicine, we would like to say thank you and that we appreciate everything you do to provide a high level of care to ill and injured patients in a wide variety of austere environments. For this podcast, we were joined by Dr. Dustin Calhoun, Associate Director of the UC Division of EMS, as well as two of this year’s UC EMS Fellows, Dr. Mike Bohanske and Dr. Justin Benoit.
Read MoreThe UC Division of EMS has recorded a series of podcasts to celebrate EMS Week 2016. We are honored to be able to engage EMS Providers throughout the world with this forum. If you practice pre-hospital medicine, we would like to say thank you and that we appreciate everything you do to provide a high level of care to ill and injured patients in a wide variety of austere environments. For this podcast, we were joined by Dr. Dustin Calhoun, Associate Director of the UC Division of EMS, as well as two of this year’s UC EMS Fellows, Dr. Mike Bohanske and Dr. Justin Benoit.
Read MoreThe UC Division of EMS has recorded a series of podcasts to celebrate EMS Week 2016. We are honored to be able to engage EMS Providers throughout the world with this forum. If you practice pre-hospital medicine, we would like to say thank you and that we appreciate everything you do to provide a high level of care to ill and injured patients in a wide variety of austere environments. For this podcast, we were joined by Dr. Jay Johannigman, Chief of the Division of Trauma and Critical Care at the University of Cincinnati. Dr. Johannigman has over thirty years of military experience which includes 6 deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Dr. Johannigman joined us to discuss how the military experience has changed civilian trauma care in the United States.
Read MoreThe UC Division of EMS has recorded a series of podcasts to celebrate EMS Week 2016. We are honored to be able to engage EMS Providers throughout the world with this forum. If you practice pre-hospital medicine, we would like to say thank you and that we appreciate everything you do to provide a high level of care to ill and injured patients in a wide variety of austere environments. For this podcast, we were joined by Dr. Tim Smith, an Interventional Cardiologist and Director of the Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center. Dr. Smith joined us to discuss our region’s partnership with the American Heart Association’s Mission Lifeline program to bring a regionalized system of care for STEMI patients to our area.
Read MorePre-hospital stroke care begins with a quick, simple assessment tool used to help identify patients that are suffering a stroke. In Southwest Ohio, this tool is the Cincinnati Pre-hospital Stroke Scale (CPSS). There are three simple components of the CPSS – facial droop, arm drift, and slurred speech. When assessing for facial droop, it is best to ask patients to bear their teeth. Arm drift is assessed by asking the patient to hold both arms outstretched in front of them with their palms facing up. If one arm drifts down or one hand rotates to a palm-down position, this aspect of the scale is positive. Lastly, ask the patient to repeat a sentence to assess for slurred speech or any other type of speech abnormality.
Read MoreTake a read through our Cases If It Bleeds it Leads..., Seeing is Believing..., and Belly Pain Bonanza. Curated commentary to follow
Acetaminophen Toxicity
Your patient is a well appearing, otherwise healthy 22 year old female who presents with lower abdominal pain x3 days. She is unsure of her LMP, but thinks she had some spotting about a month ago. Vital signs: Temp 99.3F, HR 92, BP 102/70, RR 20, 98% on RA. She has a benign, non-gravid abdomen. Urine pregnancy is positive. You fire off a quantitative hCG and don’t expect that result to come back for a while. What do you do next?
Read MorePalliative Care in the Emergency Department
Open Fracture Management
Cognitive Errors in Emergency Medicine
Guillan-Barre' Syndrome
Infection in Sickle Cell Disease
Isopropyl Alcohol Ingestion
There are obvious benefits to performing ultrasound-guided nerve blocks vs procedural sedation for applicable procedures which include the avoidance of respiratory/CNS depression, aspiration risk, and altered mental states in already altered patients
There is evidence comparing nerve blocks head-to-head with procedural sedation showing lower ED length of stay, improved safety profile, and decreased complications
There is significant evidence that suggests that, with the right training platform, that nerve blocks are safe and effective in the hands of emergency department providers--our platform is still under development.
Though overall complications are relatively rare, the potential for significant nerve-block-related complications certainly exists and include:
One poll shows that >50% of ED physicians believe that Press-Ganeys have led to worse quality care, particularly with respect to the excessive prescribing of narcotic pain medications and antibiotics as physicians strive to meet patient expectations and make them happy
The perception that greater patient satisfaction is correlated with worse mortality outcomes comes from the Fenton study. In this study, correlation was shown, though causation not in the least, with much room left open for confounders.
Some important truths about Press-Ganey:
Take home points from Dr. Shewakramani: Don't change your practice to affect your scores, change your approach!
Ultimately, happier physicians make happy patients, and happy patients are shown to adhere to their medical plans more and litigate less. Happy physicians experience burn-out less.
Transitions of care can be a high risk time for our patients, especially amidst the chaotic environment that can be the SRU.
Pre-planning sign out is an effective strategy to make the transition smooth. One to two hours out from the shift's end, take them time to start getting things in order for the end of the shift.
As emergency medicine physicians we have the tendency to want to wrap up our patients at sign out as nicely as possible. This is a good habit, realizing that it can predispose to premature closure, and, particularly in the case of an unpredictable SRU, should be applied with caution...
Read MoreIt's been a busy Monday night shift. 2 hours in and it seems like all you've seen is belly pain after belly pain. You hesitate and think maybe it's just a figment of your imagination but a quick look at the track board tells you nope, 5 patient's with abdominal pain in your 10 bed pod and a new patient arriving to C40 with, of course, abdominal pain. You meet the squad and get report...
Read MoreElbow injuries account for 2-3% of all emergency department visits across the nation (1). Yet, because of the elbow’s complex anatomy and the presence of numerous ossification centers in children, elbow fractures are the third most commonly missed fracture group in the ED (1). Here are some tools to help ED physicians read elbow x-rays more effectively and hopefully identify abnormalities more easily...
Read MoreIt is late on a blustery grey and rainy day in November and you are the dedicated flight doc on Air Care One (the “UH”) nearing the end of your shift. Your pilot has had to turn down two flights already due to high winds and reduced visibility as bands of storms moved through the area. Against your better judgment, you are standing in the sushi line in the hospital cafeteria to grab dinner when you hear “Air Care One Pilot, weather check for a patient coming back to the U” squawk out over your portable radio. Your excitement rises as “we can do that” echoes over the radio and you hear the tones drop for your flight. You grab the blood cooler and meet your crew for takeoff on the roof...
Read MoreIt’s true that sometimes critical care transport missions to transport STEMI patients to PCI are fairly uneventful. But if we allow ourselves to get lulled into a “Milk Run” mindset, it will most definitely come back to bite us. The jovial, normotensive, fairly comfortable-appearing STEMI patient may be only a couple of minutes away from V Fib arrest or florid cardiogenic shock. When that occurs, if we have expected and prepared for such a complication, it’s likely that we’ll be able to manage it successfully.
Read MoreSRU (pronounced "shrew") = Shock Resuscitation Unit
Training in, and managing, the SRU is one of the crown jewels of our residency. It is where the sickest of the sick patients are found in our ED. It is a crucible, a test of knowledge and strength, and a true manifestation of the tripartite mission of our department: Leadership, Excellence, and Opportunity.
Training in, and managing, the SRU is one of the crown jewels of our residency. It is where the sickest of the sick patients are found in our ED. It is a crucible, a test of knowledge and strength, and a true manifestation of the tripartite mission of our department: Leadership, Excellence, and Opportunity.