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This content is for AAA members only. Please either Log In or Join! The post FTC Publishes Final Rule Banning Employee Non-Compete Agreements appeared first on American Ambulance Association.
Although it made a bit of a splash when published, this article really didn’t interest me. Obviously, GCS 8 doesn’t mean intubate. I didn’t think anyone was simplistic enough to practice medicine based on a jingle. Clearly trajectory matters. If a patient’s GCS hit 8 and they are on a clinical course where you expect […] The post GCS 8 obviously doesn’t mean intubate (in tox or otherwise) appeared first on First10EM.
Critically ill patients requiring resuscitation often present with many challenges including the ability to secure safe, sterile, fast, and reliable intravenous (IV) access. Over the years emergency and critical care physicians have tried many ways to establish IV access in emergencies including the “crash” or “dirty” central line. If you are not familiar with this term, it’s the act of rapidly trying to place a central line (usually femoral), placing the needle for access over strict sterile pr
Welcome back to the tasty morsels of critical care podcast. Last time i was butchering my way through a diagnostic approach to hyponatraemia, particularly the forms likely to end up in the critical care end of the hospital. This time we’ll take a punt at how you might approach management. In an ideal world of course you would have all of the diagnostic tests back and you’ve been able to make a very solid diagnosis of the cause of hyponatraemia and you would institute a bespoke treatm
Carly is a 9-month-old who was brought in by her parents because she had been unsettled and not feeding well for a day. At triage, she has a pulse of 277 and is brought straight to resus. What happens in a normal heart? The sino-atrial ( SA ) node is the pacemaker of the heart. It is situated in the right atrium and generates an electrical impulse that conducts through the whole heart and causes it to contract.
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