Primary Survey: the highlights of January 2018 - a podcast by BMJ Group
from 2018-01-11T17:55:21
Simon Carley, Associate Editor of EMJ, talks through the highlights of the January 2018 edition of the Emergency Medicine Journal, this month, picked by Ellen Webber (Editor-in-Chief, University of California, San Francisco, USA).
Read the primary survey here: http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/1.Details of the papers mentioned in this podcast can be found below:
Impact of Physician Navigators on productivity indicators in the ED - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/5Tackling the demand for emergency department services: there are no silver bullets - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/3
Emergency consultants value medical scribes and most prefer to work with them, a few would rather not: a qualitative Australian study - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/12Can an observational pain assessment tool improve time to analgesia for cognitively impaired older persons? A cluster randomised controlled trial - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/33
Failure of falls risk screening tools to predict outcome: a prospective cohort study - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/28
PREDICT prioritisation study: establishing the research priorities of paediatric emergency medicine physicians in Australia and New Zealand - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/39Profile and outcomes of critically ill children in a lower middle-income country - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/52
Characteristics of youth agreeing to electronic sexually transmitted infection risk assessment in the emergency department - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/46Waveform capnography: an alternative to physician gestalt in determining optimal intubating conditions after administration of paralytic agents - http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1/62
Read the full January issue of EMJ here: http://emj.bmj.com/content/35/1
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