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The Resus Room

May 2026; papers of the month

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Medicine, Science, Health & Fitness

4.9708 Ratings

🗓️ 1 May 2026

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This month's Papers of the Month is a real mix of papers that challenge some of the things we think we know, whilst also highlighting just how important systems and processes are in improving patient care.

We start with intracerebral haemorrhage and the tricky issue of blood pressure management. We've all been taught that early, aggressive blood pressure reduction is key, but this paper raises some important questions about whether we may sometimes be overshooting. It looks at whether rapidly driving the blood pressure down really improves outcomes, or whether going too low may actually be associated with harm.

From there, we move into trauma, with a sobering look at the timing of deaths from uncontrolled haemorrhage. Despite all of the advances in trauma systems, blood products, haemostatic resuscitation and major trauma care, this paper suggests that the overall timing of haemorrhagic deaths has changed very little in the last 30 years. It is a stark reminder that bleeding remains one of the biggest challenges we face, and that there is still plenty of work to do if we want to reduce preventable deaths.

Finally, we finish with something a bit different but arguably just as important: airway governance and quality improvement. This paper from Ireland looks at how a structured programme of airway training, governance, simulation and feedback can improve first-pass success and keep complication rates low. It's a really useful reminder that good outcomes are not just about kit and technical skills, but about systems, training, competency and making sure teams maintain currency through repeated exposure and practice.

Once again we'd love to hear any thoughts or feedback either on the website or via X @TheResusRoom!

Simon & Rob

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the recess room podcast.

0:03.5

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

0:12.2

So hi, and welcome back to the recess room podcast.

0:15.6

I'm Simon Lang, and I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:18.6

And this is May 2026's Papers of the Month. Yes, May already. Well,

0:24.1

where is this year going? Hey, I bet that lawn is looking good now, though, hey, buddy. Time to

0:28.7

break out the Factor 500 for you as well, Lang as coming into the summer months. Absolutely peak, Rob.

0:34.5

Yes, thank you. I'll share the live stream of the CCTV of both lawns with you later.

0:39.3

But yeah, it is looking fantastic. And if you're wondering where time was going, well, we're going to help you lose yet another half hour of your life with this episode.

0:47.3

Indeed. And we've been keeping our eye on the journals. And we have three papers, as always for you. So first up, blood pressure goals in intracranial hemorrhage.

0:56.3

So an interesting one, this, all about what happens in terms of functional outcomes

1:00.6

and not necessarily what you'd think out there.

1:03.5

Then I'm going to be taken us through a paper looking at the timing of trauma deaths

1:07.8

due to uncontrolled hemorrhage.

1:10.0

So basically how things have changed over the past 30 years

1:13.9

with all the newer evidence-based strategies that we have.

1:17.1

And then finally, we're going to be covering

1:18.9

some emergency airway management in the ED setting.

1:23.0

So Simon has found us a lovely little paper

1:25.4

describing a quality improvement project. So can't

1:29.3

wait. Great mix this month, my friend. Yeah, they are. And there aren't any huge RCTs out this

1:34.5

month to be having a look at, but we've picked some topics which you think will be really

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