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The Resus Room

May 2019; papers of the month

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Science, Emergencymedicine, Medicine, Health & Fitness, Em, Ae

4.8678 Ratings

🗓️ 1 May 2019

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

So first up a huge welcome to SJTREM, the free open access journal who we've teamed up with in the delivery of the podcast, every paper they publish is available online to read for free.

Each month we'll be covering one of their papers in our Papers of the Month episodes, giving you the opportunity to review the literature yourself, come to your own conclusions and join the conversation. SJTREM have made our podcast a sustainable venture and together we look forward to promoting review and discussion of the best evidence and education, to all, for free!

This month we'll be looking at an analysis of REBOA and having a think about whether it is benefiting those patients that are receiving it. We take a look at paper that reviews what we really know about the use of ETCO2 in cardiac arrest and have a think about how much importance we should put on it. Finally we take a look at the utility of prehospital blood gases; should this be the standard of care, or is it a step too far?Make sure you take a look at the papers yourself, remembering that the paper from SJTREM on prehospital blood gases is totally open access.

We'd love to hear your thoughts and comments.

Enjoy!

Simon & Rob

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Recess Room podcast.

0:03.9

Five, four, three, two, one, fire.

0:12.5

So hi, and welcome back to the Recess Room podcast. I'm Simon Lang, and I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:19.2

And this is a really exciting episode for us.

0:23.2

So we have just joined partnerships with a Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine

0:29.9

who are supporting the podcast and are helping to deliver free open access medical education from this point onwards.

0:36.6

So we are delighted that they've done that.

0:39.5

No doubt you will have seen the journal, also known as SJTrem. It is again a free open access journal.

0:46.0

We've talked about a load of their papers over the last few years. And we're really going to be

0:49.7

using this opportunity to cover one of their papers each month, along with papers from all other journals,

0:56.2

and it's going to enable you the listener to really engage in that critical appraisal,

1:00.8

have a look at the paper yourself, come to your own conclusions, and really join the online

1:05.5

conversation about evidence-based medicine.

1:08.6

Yeah, absolutely, Simon. This is really exciting in terms of the partnership,

1:12.4

and we really hope that we can do some great stuff in terms of spreading the word that some of

1:16.5

their great authors do for their papers that are in their journal. So look out on the website,

1:20.8

about a week beforehand, we'll be highlighting the journal that we'll be covering, and it'll be,

1:24.6

as we say, they're, like all of their papers free open access to

1:28.3

have a look at that and to appraise it we should say at this point as well a huge thanks to abrak

1:33.1

who have supported the podcast to this point taking us from a point of totally unknown what this

1:39.1

was end up sounding like and let's be honest it didn't sound amazing at the start. Steady on, steady on, but I know what you mean.

1:46.6

They did take a bit of a chance on us, and thankfully I think it paid off for them.

...

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