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Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and today we're talking about falls and we have the pleasure of having Associate Professor Mark Latt who's a geriatrician here at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Welcome Mark. Thank you James. So falls are a pretty common reason that a junior doctor will get called whereas they...
Hi, I'm Josh. I think the real story goes when you really want to ask someone, you ask the other ICU fellow who's actually working this weekend, so then Josh gets stuck. No, I'm kidding. So we're going to talk really, really quickly about blood gases. We've only got 20 minutes. Blood gases are profoundly intimidating, ...
And if it's in between somewhere, who knows, probably a little bit of maybe acute or chronic or something that's a bit indeterminate. But what you do know is certainly if your bicarb got nowhere near 26 even, right, if your bicarb is still even lower than that 26, then there's some other process that's stopping your me...
In normal settings, a good chunk of your anion gap is made up from the negative charge that's on albumin, the most abundant protein that lives in your plasma. So that means that if your albumin drops, that when you're looking at the actual collection of unmeasured anions that you're actually interested in, right, those...
Hello and welcome to On The Wards. I'm Sarah Dalton and today we're talking to Mary Dobby about sexual assault as it presents in the ED. Welcome, Mary. Thanks, Sarah. Mary's worked in the day and after hours roster in the Sexual Assault Service at RPA and Liverpool hospitals in New South Wales since 2012. The RPA Sexua...
But after that, we're going to need your specialist expertise as a sexual assault service. So how does someone go about contacting a sexual assault service? Well, usually there's a team, there's a dedicated intake person. At Prince Alfred, the intake counsellor is the person who's contacted. So usually SWITCH calls the...
Welcome to On The Woods, it's James Edwards and today we're talking about hearing loss and we're welcoming back Dr Joel Hartman. Welcome Joel. Thank you. Joel is an ENT registrar currently working at the Sydney Adventist Hospital and Joel previously spoke to us about the Sawyer which was a surprise hit for Odd the Wood...
And why would you hear it better in the ear that you've got conductive hearing loss? Yeah, so that's a good question. So the process that's causing the conductive loss actually acts as a bit of a masking. So then your brain is then interpreting that side louder because you haven't actually got the external or ambient n...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and today we're doing something a tiny bit different. This is less on a clinical topic but more of us speaking to someone who's got a very interesting career in medicine. I'd like to welcome Dr Nicola Morton. Welcome Nicola. Thank you. Nicola is a general paediatrician workin...
Welcome to On The Wallwards everyone, it's James Edmonds today and today I have the pleasure of speaking with Catherine Spira. Catherine is a neurology trainee. She completed her internship at Residency Liverpool and basic trainee at Prince of Wales and East Coast Medical Network and now she's doing an advanced trainee...
So benign positional vertigo very common and can happen in hospital because people are spending long periods of time lying flat and things like that. So the history someone will give there is usually in a hospital situation, either starting with a fall or starting in bed, turning over in bed, and then suddenly getting ...
However, if you have vertigo and a normal head impulse test, what does that suggest? So if you have vertigo and a normal head impulse test, it suggests that there's a cause other than unilateral vestibular dysfunction, essentially. So you need to consider... Central causes. In regard to the whole pipe test, can you des...
Welcome to On The Boards, it's James Edwards and today we're having our 100th podcast. It's been a long journey to get to 100. Started here at RPA doing a few small local podcasts and now we've got a On The Wards website where we deliver a podcast a week. I'd like to thank a lot of people on the way, probably Evangelin...
That was my sense of the world and that's how I decided to do the medicine that I wanted to formally practice. But I also recognised it was important to diagnose and make sure you didn't mess things up and that was another lesson that quickly came to the fore. What else? I don't know. First patient who died, you know, ...
Certainly no one's infallible. I'm not infallible. No one's infallible. And, you know, everyone makes mistakes, hopefully less than one used to, but they're still made. So certainly don't believe the infallibility story. And actually, I think one of the great benefits of working in a team is it reduces the error rate. ...
I mean, why do you need to go and listen to a lecture from so-and-so when you can hear the best person in the world deliver the lecture, you know, any time you want and in a way that you're going to enjoy much more? So a lot of the... And even tutorials can be delivered this way in massive groups, potentially. You know...
You know, you look at those really successful entrepreneurs, they've always gone against conventional wisdom and they've never listened to anybody else. So I think that is a little bit a part of this. If you've got a good idea, don't worry that when you talk to other people about it, you're dismissed or it's dismissed....
Welcome to On The Wards, and this, the first of a two-part podcast interview in which Dr. Bruce Way discusses an approach to undifferentiated shock. As we know, shock's a complication of a number of different disease states and it presents both a diagnostic and a management challenge. Early recognition and treatment ar...
Okay, welcome everyone to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and I have the pleasure today of speaking to Associate Professor Andrew Dawson who's a toxicologist. Welcome Andrew. Hi James. We're going to talk about toxicology and I guess from the perspective of a junior doctor and they're more likely to see a toxicology p...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and today we're talking about anxiety disorders and today we have Dr. Julian Nasty, Julian. Hi, James. Julian is an advanced trainee in psychiatry, currently working at Canterbury Hospital. And we're talking today about anxiety disorders, which I guess are a very common disor...
Welcome to On Awards. I'm Jane MacDonald and I'm an ONG registrar based in Sydney. Today we're talking about some of the clinical scenarios commonly faced by ONG SRMOs with Dr Becky Taylor. Becky is an ONG fellow at RPA Hospital based in Sydney. Welcome Becky. Hi Jane, thanks so much for having me. Today we're going to...
From clinical experience, I often find that a maternal tachycardia is one of the things that first suggests that there's brewing infection. And you're monitoring, again, as I said, for the change in the colour of the PV loss, any development of abdominal tenderness, any fetal tachycardia on a daily CTG and any other si...
Now, outside of PPROM, there are other ways of starting an induction. So, for example, if a woman was having an induction for post-dates, then there are other strategies that we will use to get to the point that we can break the waters. So that essentially refers to cervical ripening. So cervical ripening is when we pr...
Welcome everyone to On The Wards. Hang on there James, you're not hosting this one, I am. This is Paul Hamer hosting On The Wards. Today we've got Dr James Edwards who's our special guest presenter today. We're going to be talking about clinical handover. James Edwards, who usually hosts the On The Wards podcast, is a ...
The background is which is B what are the issues that led up this situation you know they day two post stop a hip surgery what has been happening in the last couple of days that led to your phone call tonight and then there's's the A, which is assessment. And that's kind of what the problem is. What your assessment of ...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards, I'm the host of the podcast series On The Wards. We're looking at different topics, especially aimed at junior doctors. And our first expert is Dr. Sean Lowe, who's an advanced catalogy trainer here at RPA and also did his junior doctor training at RPA, so he knows the wards...
Okay. I mean, in the post-operative patients, sometimes we worry that they may be nil by mouth or may not be absorbing tablets. Would that change your management rather than going for more metocloprolol? I think in that case, again, once you've looked at reversible factors and if the patient is asymptomatic and there's...
Welcome to On The Wards. This is Sarah Dalton and today we're talking about coaching for performance with Dr. Jules Wilcox and Tony Sloman. Welcome. Jules is an ED consultant, DPET at Gosford and trained as an executive coach. He has a strong interest in coaching and mentoring and a very strong interest in supporting t...
The things that I have seen in people who've really had problems passing exams is sometimes it's actually less book work and it's more focusing on a lot of this behavioral psychological stuff. And so we have specific practices that if we have time we can talk about a couple of them. But it's really about shifting that ...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's James Edwards and today we're talking about palliative care and we have the pleasure of having Dr. Bridget Johnson join us. Welcome, Bridget. Thanks very much for having me. Bridget's a palliative care physician here in Sydney and we're going to have a really general discussion about palli...
In the scenario of the medical team, I always say to people, is this person who's dying in front of you, are they dying the way that you would want your grandfather to die? So if they're comfortable and things are going well and people are managing it and confident, that's great. The palliative care team doesn't necess...
Hi, I'd like to welcome John Saunders, who's a renter physician here at RPA, to our podcast series. As with a lot of our podcasts, we look at common after-hours problems, and this one is, I guess for every junior out there, a pretty common presentation, hypertension on the wards. Welcome, John. Thank you. Now, I guess ...
Hello and welcome to On The Wards. My name is Faitha Rau and I'm a third year obstetrics and gynaecology registrar based at Liverpool Hospital in Sydney. Today we're talking about infertility and I'm joined by Dr. Louis Angelopoulos, a staff specialist in obstetrics and gynaecology at Gosford Hospital. Welcome, Louis. ...
Welcome to On The Wards. Today we're talking about palliative care and crisis medications and I'd like to invite Dr Jessica Bourbassy. Welcome Jessica. Thank you. Jessica is an advanced trainee in palliative care medicine and we're going to, before we kind of get into some of the nitty gritty, we're going to, I guess, ...
Because ultimately, by the time you've determined which drug, how much, checked the medication, got the medication, the patient may well have already died. And it's better that they've died with you being there reassuring them than being alone. You described some of the first-line medications for the anticipatory medic...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's James Edwards and today we're talking about ovarian cancer and I'd like to invite Dr. Caroline Ford to On The Wards today. Welcome, Caroline. Thank you. Caroline is the head of the Gynaecological Cancer Research Group at the University of New South Wales. And we thought we'd have the persp...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's Amy Koops. Today we're talking about what makes a good boss with Ria Liang and Ellie Sobels. Welcome Ellie and Ria. Hi Amy. Hi Amy. Great to have you both. A little bit about Ellie. She's a final year medical student at the University of Sydney in New South Wales and she's currently comple...
So I think, yeah, it's about allowing that 360 degree sort of feedback with views that are the same and dissimilar to really ensure that, you know, you're making the right choice. Yeah. See, I would be really interested in hearing from you both as medical students and junior doctors what you appreciate in a boss. Well,...
And you're constantly torn between like, should I be in the hospital or should I be studying for exams? And should I be, you know, at the clinical school and doing, you know, those kinds of things and striking that balance is difficult. And I think, you know, you have to focus on the here and now really. So I think you...
Yeah. They see, they see potential and they, I think bringing out the best in people absolutely is it. I can't believe it's taken to this point in the conversation for that to be said, but that is one of the main attributes of a good boss, isn't it, is bringing out the best in people, seeing what their skills are and w...
Yeah, I think some of it is what I've just said, which is, you know, being a leader is about being brave. You've got to be brave and you've got to call bad behaviour out and you've got to call people on their problematic views. And I think that, I mean, you have to be more careful with this, but it extends to patients ...
But I thought thought it's important to role model who you are as a whole person because actually in real life those two things can't be separated work is life life is work um and all the things I do outside of my paid work influence my paid work um you know it's fairly well known on Twitter I think that I I'm a bit of...
Welcome to On The Wards. Today we get to talk on cross-cultural communication with Dr. Alan Giles. Welcome Alan. G'day, lovely to be here. Alan is a fellow emergency physician and a medical educator based in Sydney. He also hosts podcasts. It's a podcast I've been on once or twice, EMcast. You can get that on an app. A...
But that becomes more awkward, but I think that's certainly where the interpreter service is required, is essential. Along the cultural aspect, you know, sometimes as a doctor you'll be asked by your patient to see a doctor of a different gender to your own. Yes. I've come across this before, and many people in emergen...
Good morning and welcome to On The Wards. It's Amol Merrick today and we're talking about end-of-life care with Professor Imogen Mitchell. Welcome Imogen. Hi. Imogen is an intensive care specialist at Canberra Hospital and the Dean of the Medical School at Australian National University. So today we're going to be talk...
So I think, again, I mean, it goes back to I've just mentioned talking to the medical staff. I think probably one of the other discussions that you need to have is particularly with the equivalent of the nursing team leader or the nurse manager. Make sure that they are also on the same page. I mean, I think it's incred...
Welcome to On The Wall, it's James Edwards and I have the pleasure today of having Dr. Ian Katerson, an endocrinologist who's been an endocrinologist at RPA since 1982. Is that right, Ian? That's right, John. Okay, well, you must have seen a number of patients with diabetes and almost the epidemic of type 2 diabetes. S...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's Jules Wilcox here and today we have a real treat for you because we're talking about the AstraZeneca vaccine-induced clotting disorder with Professor Marie Scully, the person who made the link between the vaccine and these extremely rare unusual cases. Professor Scully is a consultant hema...
In UCL, came into your hospital? At UCLH, yeah. And a low platelet count was sent to us, you know a blood clot in their head in ucl came into your hospital at uclh yeah um and a low platelet count was sent to us you know low platelet count you look after low platelet counts must be itp uh and she just deteriorated even...
So what they are in the morning with a very severe headache, never one like this they could be tubed in the afternoon it can be really very progressive okay so the usually so what we've done is develop uh pathways for all the specialties including ed so please do share that with your colleagues if it's any help the one...
Hi, it's James Edwards. Welcome to On The Wards. Today I'm speaking to Dr. Cherry Koh, a colorectal surgeon at RPA. Welcome, Cherry. Thank you very much for inviting me to come along to this podcast. Thank you. We're going to talk today about PR bleeding. And we'll start with a kind of scenario that some junior doctors...
So if the patient is hypotensive, tachycardic, and we're talking about not just hypotensive or lying down, sometimes I actually sit them up and see what the blood pressure is. Just looking at them from the end of the bed, you can tell that if someone has lost a significant volume of blood, they just look shut down and ...
In patients like that they require what we call, what we would do in this institution is a CT angiogram. The reason for that is because we have a very good CT angiogram, we have a very good interventional team. So a CT angiogram, we know that one of the problems is that it only detects bleeding days rapid enough. We're...
Welcome to On The Wood, James Edwards, and today we're talking about something really important. We're talking about medical students' mental health, And today we have Professor Gavin Andrew with us. Welcome, Gavin. Thank you. Gavin is a professor of psychiatry at the University of New South Wales and at St Vincent's H...
Welcome to all our listeners from On The Wards with a discussion with Jonathan Brett who's one of our Addiction and Toxicology Fellows here at RPA And we're talking about something I think scares most junior doctors about, that's really dealing with the agitated, aggressive patient. Welcome, Jonathan. Thank you. So we'...
Welcome everyone to On The Wards, we're doing a podcast on febrile neutropenia and we've invited Dr. Ibrahim Tahidi Esfahani to speak with us. Welcome. Thanks for having me. So Ibrahim, we've actually just had a podcast on transfusion reactions and I guess we're doing another haematology topic because Ibrahim's a haema...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and I'm here again speaking to the junior doctors of Australia and beyond. I guess I'd like to start off, this is a podcast in 2017 and we've made lots of changes for On The Wards with a new website and I'm really encouraged by how many people are visiting the website so I kn...
And then they're closer, do you want to look in mum and dad's ears? And usually they'll warm up to it after that. Exactly. And so I talk about preparation, examining, and then like explanation or debrief, because it's really common for kids to become distressed. No matter how great your rapport building skills and how ...
And we might call them 3%, 5% or 10% dehydrated. And that's probably a great topic for another podcast, James, if you can find another pediatrician to come in and talk about it. But, you know, we are looking at things about how much they've had to drink, whether their mucous membranes are dry, whether they can produce ...
It might be uncomfortable and here's some things you can do. So giving the child some power over it. And then again all, all the distraction things we talked about before, thinking about which of those distraction things you can use to keep the child comfortable. So smartphones are fantastic, thinking about how you pos...
Okay, I would like to welcome our listeners to our next podcast series and it's about the opiate dependent patient in hospital and we've got Jonathan Brett who's a advanced clinical pharmacologist and addiction specialist. Welcome Jonathan. Yeah, thank you for inviting me. So what we'll do is we'll start with some scen...
Methadone's probably slightly more effective for the users that are very heavy users or very unstable socially, psychiatrically or medically. Buprenorphine is preferred by some people because it's more flexible, so you can do things like second daily dosing because it has such a long half-life. And it's much, it's prob...
Welcome to On The Water, Jules Wilcox here again. This podcast was created in conjunction with our sponsor Global Medics, your career solutions recruitment specialist in permanent and local medical jobs across Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom and Ireland. Today we're speaking with Dr. Hina Moa Elder, a leading Ne...
How do you avoid labelling people? Like you say, there's so many covert things through medical school and through society. If you look at the Harvard Implicit Association test, which I recommend to my registrars, they all take it and do it because a lot of them are coming from places where they haven't seen Indigenous ...
I saw a quote the other day, which I quite like, which said that every time you hear an attack, you see an attack, it's a cry for help because actually they're scared and they're afraid. Not that I think many people would admit that, but I do think it comes from a sense of threat and that education is the way to go. An...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and today we are talking straight mimics. I'd like to welcome back Dr. Catherine Spira. Welcome back, back Catherine. Thanks James. Catherine's a neurologist working at Prince of Wales Hospital also privately and stroke mimics is something that is concerning as an ED physicia...
Sorry, it's more Bell's palsy, less concerning for overall systemic or neurological issue. So we mentioned Bell's palsy as a mimic for stroke, but what are some of the other conditions that can mimic a stroke? So I've made a little list. I guess I was thinking, what do you get caught about that? Or what do patients lea...
Okay, welcome everyone to On The Wards and today we're doing a podcast on chronic liver disease. Now I've invited Dr. Anastasia Volovets, who's a second year gastronomy advanced trainee here at Alpine Salford, which is a liver hospital, liver transplant hospital. So experience with chronic liver disease is something yo...
So we would use that, but probably for a JMO, I wouldn't bother. Do any of these patients need a CAT scan? Look, I think anyone who's got an acute drop in GCS always should be investigated with a CT of their brain. Especially a lot of our patients are coagulopathic, thrombocytopenic, and their potential for bleeding in...
So they'll be coming into clinic and getting taps of up to 10 litres of fluid removed at a time. And really, if they've reached this point, they're either heading towards a transplant quickly or they're heading towards death quickly. Once you develop, you know, diuretic resistant, large volume ascites that need a weekl...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's Jules Wilcox here and today we're going to be talking about indigenous health and how to relate to indigenous patients and some of the specific aspects that you might need to consider when you're dealing with indigenous patients. We have a panel discussion and I'll let them introduce thems...
So I think it's really helpful to sort of gauge that health literacy. And I think also in terms of before you go into an interview, remembering sort of what, like touching on what Tilly was saying about having empathy and compassion before you even go in there and remembering that for a lot of Aboriginal people that co...
No, that's exactly right. It affects his personal life, but it also affects his health care too, because it's a a barrier now for him to access healthcare because he has that fear of his personal information sort of becoming public knowledge. And like I was saying, when we share a story, we're trusting that person with...
Welcome everybody to On The Wards. It's James Edwards. I'm here again talking today about a pediatric topic, febrile convulsions, and I'd like to welcome back Dr. Arjun Rao. Welcome. Thanks, James. Now, Arjun has spoken to us before. He's a pediatric emergency physician from the Sydney Children's Hospital, and we're go...
And if they're sleepy, trying to gently rouse them and see what they're like. If the seizure's just recently finished, it wouldn't be surprising that they're in a postictal phase. And if it has just been a generalized seizure in their postictal, then I would expect them to gradually get better. So close monitoring is r...
So welcome to On The Wards, it's Jules Wilcox here and today we're going to be talking about self-efficacy with Kirsten McKenna. Welcome Kirst. Thanks so much, Jules. Kirsten is a corporate leader turned entrepreneur, the founder and principal consultant of two purpose-driven businesses, Cortex Consulting and my favour...
And you're then switching on your relaxation response, which puts you in that good physiological state that was number four for influencing self-efficacy for receiving that feedback because people do even though feedback is common when it comes to medical training I think that people don't seek it out as much as they c...
Number two is observe. Yeah. Okay. I'd say next is placing yourself in that optimal physiological state prior to embarking on a task or learning experience. Because if we go into that task or experience in a negative state, it influences our performance negatively. Versus if we go into it positively, if we've taken two...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's Abhi Pal, a medical oncologist based in Sydney. Today we're talking about human factors in medicine with Dr Ranjana Srivastava. Ranjana will be a name that is familiar to many of our listeners, but for those who don't know, she is not only a very successful medical oncologist, but also a v...
I started writing at a very young age and I wrote all sorts of things. I was always an avid reader and, you know, entered little kiddie poetry competitions and little story competitions, etc. My first foray into publishing as a doctor, as a medical student, I went back to India. I was studying in Melbourne and I went b...
So I think the key here is to be interested in writing for writing's sake and to be interested then in improving oneself. So my metric was never how many publications. And my metric was never how many publications can I get into the New England? My metric was, gee, I love to write. I love getting high grade free editor...
People end up not doing things they don't like and they're not having a good time doing it. Thank you. That's really, so I think the take-home message of that is doing something different in medicine is not simple because it's such a conservative and very hierarchical and just having some confidence, being creative. So...
It's just completely like that's beyond me. I don't know. It's a big question, but in a couple of sentences, what are the key steps in a Fulbright scholarship? Are there key eligibility, key timelines? Is it possible? Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up because everybody I meet, I sort of try to encourage to at least ha...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's James Edwards and today we're talking about a problem that every junior doctor would have seen on the ward, heart failure. I'd like to welcome Dr. Sean Lau. Welcome, Sean. Thanks, James. Thanks for having me. Sean did one of our first ever podcasts for On The Wards when he was an advanced ...
So I think it's better just to ask an open-ended question and ask, do you have any past medical history, cardiac related history? Because if you have somebody who says, well, look, I see a cardiologist as an outpatient and maybe they've got some coronary disease and they think about the fact that they've got coronary d...
So anatomically when you're looking at that internal jugular vein if you look from the angle of the jaws below your earlobe and start down, that's pretty much where it would run in most people. I say to people, look, take what you can get. So if it's the external jugular vein that's prominent and you can see that and i...
Welcome to On The Wards. It's Carly Castamento and today we're talking about the infant refeeding difficulties with Dr. Chris Elliott. Welcome, Chris. Hi, Carly, thanks for having me. It's all right. Chris is a general and developmental paediatrician. For the past seven years he's worked at the Paediatric Multidiscipli...
you know you can't manage the child's feeling without having teased that out right um so how much and how often chris should a baby feed in the first month of life okay so this is where you come down to you've taken your history and you've heard oh so she feeds 60 meals a day you know 60 mils per feed and it takes 20 m...
Well, that's holding baby down, doing a very technically challenging procedure or putting a catheter into their bladder to get a sterile urine sample. So sick, senior help, investigations are needed. Well, you may not need any investigations, particularly if they're growing well. If they're not growing well, as Abby is...
Okay, welcome to On The Wards. It's James Edwards, I'm here again and today we're talking about graded assertiveness and we have the pleasure of welcoming back Dr. Sarah Dalton. Welcome back Sarah. Thanks James. Sarah is a paediatrician working at the Kids Hospital at Westmead, also worked for the Clinical Excellence C...
Welcome to On The Wards. My name is Eloise Sobelz and today we're talking about after hours care and safety with Dr Sonia Chanchlani. This podcast is produced in collaboration with MedApps, a proud sponsor of On The Wands. Welcome Sonia. Thank you, thanks for having me. A little bit about Sonia before we begin. She's c...
Hi, it's James Edwards. Welcome to On The Wards. Today is the first day of October 2014 and we've got Dr. Oliver Warren, who's a colorectal fellow at RPA. Welcome, Oliver. Hello. Thanks for having me come along. Today we're going to talk about something I know little about, stomas. So many of these podcasts I ask inqui...
And there's all sorts of different pieces of information gathering you can do. You can talk to the patient who most often will know why they've got a stoma and what operation they had. Look at the operation note. The operation notes are now nearly always digitally available so they're there on PowerChart. And often the...
So again, the operation note can be a source of great information because if the surgeon has noted that, for example, only 150 centimetres of small bowel exist proximal to that stoma, then we know that that patient is going to have a high output stoma in the post-operative period and that we're going to have to do some...
Welcome to a thought-provoking discussion. My name is Dr. James Edwards. Today we'll be discussing diagnostic error and this is an initiative of our partnership between On The Wards and Avant and I have the pleasure of welcoming today Dr. Mark Graber. Good morning James. Mark is a leader in the field of patient safety ...
Welcome to On The Wards, it's James Edwards and I am speaking to Lauren Troy today. Lauren is a respiratory physician here at RPA. Welcome, Lauren. Thank you for having me. Lauren did one of our first ever podcasts on the approach to shortness of breath on the ward, but today we're talking about pneumonia, particularly...
Welcome back to Key Lime, where the number needed to listen is one. We keep track of all the medical education literature for you and tell you cool things that you need to know as a clinician educator. It's Jason Frank. Today, I am once again down under. This is our Keyline podcast, Takes to the Road. We've recorded pr...
Because what I often have seen, not having read this article up until recently, but seen reference to it, is people quoting the findings and treating them as said. Yeah. So shall we move on to the findings then? Yeah. So what do you think the implications are for medical educators? What stood out to you? The authors pr...
It's actually something that does something completely differently and therefore adds a lot more into your selection process. Just before you go on with some of these other things that they pulled out of the literature, I'm also aware of some surgical programs that bring all the candidates together to one site and do s...
So maybe we should add that into the list too. I immediately held my hands. So, Anthony, are there any other highlights you want to give for medical educators out of this very thorough paper? Some meditators probably don't need to read this paper, but we can get to that. But just in terms of limitations, look, the stud...