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Resuscitology

resuscitology

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Resuscitology is a course for resuscitationists, based in Australia and brought to you by Brian Burns, Karel Habig, Libby Hanrahan, Geoff Healy, Natalie May and Cliff Reid. Our emphasis is on deep discussion of Resuscitation cases with focus on optimal up to date clinical resuscitation, leadership and human factors, wellness and sustainability. This podcast captures some of the thoughts, themes and ideas we are interested in around trauma, critical illness and other resuscitation topics.
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The RAGE Podcast - The Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything

Chris Nickson, Cliff Reid, Karel Habig, and the RAGE team

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The RAGE podcast is the Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything! RAGE is an audio podcast created by a team of specialist physicians from Australasia and the United States practicing in emergency medicine, intensive care and retrieval/ prehospital medicine. We are Dr Chris Nickson, Dr Cliff Reid, Dr Haney Mallemat, Dr Michaela Cartner and Dr Karel Habig. We bring an irreverent and educational ‘real world’ perspective to current research, core topics and controversies in critical care. ...
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Natalie May talks to critical care helicopter paramedic Libby Hanrahan about prehospital care to ask the all important question: what should we do if we stumble across a prehospital patient? Should we stop? Should we help? And how should we conduct ourselves? Like this content? Join us in person! Visit the website at resuscitology.com to find out m…
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Cliff takes the rest of the Resuscitology team - Libby, Karel, Brian, Nat and Geoff - through the management of a bleeding patient, from prehospital to theatre. This one's a long one, but it's full of gold; up-to-date evidence-based-medicine, tips, tricks and wisdom from the team. Like this content? Join us in person! Visit the website at resuscito…
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Cliff Reid, Geoff Healy, and Chris Nickson discuss a fictionalised case from the Resuscitology course: "Oncology patient in resus", including airway management and failure of video laryngoscopy, and the challenges of resuscitation in the context of potentially terminal illness.Autor: The RAGE team
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We're ready to RAGE again! This one is 85:26 min long and includes: Introduction... kind of (starts 00:00 min) ‘What’s bubbling up?’ (starts 02:08 min) — Dr Smith's ECG blog, DAS Guidelines for tracheal intubation of the critically ill, "The Human Factor" and trauma team performance. ‘DNR’ (starts 14:58 min) — the RAGE team discuss the concept of '…
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In this talk from the '2017 Performance Psychology in Medicine Conference' run by the Institute of Prehospital Care in London, Chris Nickson discusses these questions and more: What is elite performance? How is expertise developed? How can we use simulation to develop and maintain expertise, both individually and collectively?…
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A RAGE session featuring Karel Habig, Cliff Reid, and Chris Nickson: Introduction... kind of (starts 00:00 min) ‘What’s bubbling up?’ (starts 04:48 min) — an ED checklist for cognitive debiasing, are 'cold' platelets ready for primetime, the ART trial and the open lung approach to ventilation using recruitment manoeuvres ‘What's The Sats Target?’ (…
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The RAGE team talks to Peter Brindley about a new, free crisis resource management book and CRM Brindley-style, and we reflect on the recent dasSMACC conference. The usual stuff is there too: what's bubbling up?, a blast from the past about John Scott Haldane, and some Words of Wisdom from Peter Brindley to finish. Show notes available at: http://r…
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This RAGE session, featuring Cliff Reid, Brian Burns, and Geoff Healy, is a NSFW monster clocking in at 2h 48 min 59 sec long!!! Following an introduction the crew tackle the following questions: Describe training experiences that have shaped you? What is your experience of trainees, and what attributes of good and bad trainees do you observe? What…
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On August 17th 2016, Associate Professor Vincent Pellegrino, Head of the ECMO service at The Alfred ICU, discussed ECPR during an in-house education session. His discussion included: the difficulties with ECPR definitions and selection criteria Approaches to ECPR, ranging from cannulation techniques and types of cannula, to role cards and the impor…
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On November 11th 2015, Professor Stephen Bernard (@AmbVicMedic), Medical Advisor to Ambulance Victoria, presented a smorgasbord of ‘Updates in Resuscitation‘ at The Alfred ICU junior medical staff teaching session. He discussed: Recent data from registries on in-hospital and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), particularly from Victoria, and the…
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SMACC Chicago 2015 preview and The GoodSAM App Oxygen therapy: AVOID: Air Versus Oxygen in ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction and the HOT or NOT trial: HyperOxic Therapy OR NormOxic Therapy after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (HOT OR NOT): a randomised controlled feasibility trial. John Hinds discusses Helicopter Emergency Medical Services…
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This neuroRAGE Special Edition is 82 min 03 sec long and includes: Introduction, ‘What’s bubbling up?’ ‘Traumatic Brain Injury and a bit about the Spine’ ‘ICP Monitoring’ ‘Intracerebral haemorrhage and Subarachnoid Haemorrhage’ A ‘smorgasbord’ of other neurocritical care questions, including the ‘cranial screwtop manoeuvre’ ‘A blast from the past’ …
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The RAGE team are joined by many friends to recap the smaccGOLD experience: Rich Levitan (@airwaycam) Scott Weingart (@emcrit) Haney Mallemat (@CriticalCareNow) Michaela Cartner (@mjcartner) Karel Habig (@karelhabig) Chris Nickson (@precordialthump) John Hinds (@docjohnhinds) Cliff Reid (@cliffreid) Mark Wilson (@markhwilson) Oli Flower (@oliflower…
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Anand ‘Swami’ Swaminathan is an Emergency Physician in New York. He is one of the co-creators of EM Lyceum, and a major contributor to LITFL.com. Swami is a skeptic of the benefit of adrenaline in cardiac arrest. This is his brief response to Scott Weingart’s Cutting Edge Intra-Arrest Care at smaccGOLD and Weingart’s subsequent discussion about int…
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Cliff was asked to speak at the Australasian Conference for Emergency Medicine‘s Annual Scientific Conference in Adelaide in November 2013. The title they gave him was ‘What a great job’. It was a great opportunity for him to explore some of the literature around what makes people happy, and whether emergency medicine has the ingredients to do that…
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Relax, we didn’t really delete the discussion of The ProCESS Trial from RAGE Session Four… We just chopped it out to be published separately as a miniRAGE. This is what we’re talking about: ProCESS Investigators, et al. A randomized trial of protocol-based care for early septic shock. N Engl J Med. 2014 May 1;370(18):1683-93. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa140…
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RAGE Session Four is 61 min 46 sec long and includes: Introduction, including a welcome to new RAGE team recruit John Hinds ‘What’s bubbling up?’ ‘Getting The Right Side Right: RV infarction and RV failure’ ‘I Want to Stop, But Someone Else Doesn’t’ ‘A blast from the past’ on ‘Jack Barnes and the Irukandji Enigma’ ‘Words of Wisdom’ from motorcycle …
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RAGE Session 3 is 67 min 53 sec long and includes: Introduction (starts 00:00 min) ‘What’s bubbling up?’ (starts 01:30 min) ‘Medical Reversal’ (starts 52:52 min) ‘A blast from the past’ by Karel Habig on ‘Ether Day’ and the origins of general anaesthesia (starts 63:42 min) ‘Words of Wisdom’ (starts 66:32 min)…
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The discussion of verapamil as an option for the treatment of supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) in RAGE Session Two went off like a fire cracker in the FOAM world. In this RAGEback, Minh Le Cong from the PHARM podcast explains why the RAGE discussion is not going to change his practice, which is to use adenosine as a first line agent. This is foll…
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The RAGE team discuss 'what's bubbling up' in the critical care and #FOAMcc worlds, consider the role of thrombolysis in a case of suspected submassive pulmonary embolism, talk about humans in the resus room and resus room management ('when your back-up gets your back up'), have a 'blast from the past' in the form of WW2 hero Edgar Pask and finish …
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The RAGE team introduce themselves, discuss 'what's bubbling up' in the critical care and #FOAMcc worlds, talk about the post-TTM era of 'homeopathic hypothermia', try to come up with an answer to 'fever, hypotension... now what?', have a 'blast from the past' in the form of critical care legend Peter Safar and finish with some 'words of wisdom'.…
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