Ep 31 - London Trauma Conference: Day three round up.
The St.Emlyn’s Podcast - A podcast by St Emlyn’s Blog and Podcast - Wednesdays
Categories:
Key Insights from the London Trauma Conference: Training, Innovation, and Clinical Governance in Emergency Medicine Welcome to the St. Emlyn’s podcast summary of the London Trauma Conference. Over the past few days, experts in emergency medicine and pre-hospital care have shared valuable insights into the latest developments in our field. This blog post covers the highlights, focusing on effective training strategies, innovative practices, and crucial discussions on clinical governance. Quality Education in Pre-Hospital Care by Cliff Reid Cliff Reid’s session on delivering quality education in pre-hospital care was a standout. He emphasized that training for performance goes beyond knowledge acquisition. While understanding SOPs and the flip classroom approach are important, practical application is crucial. Key Training Techniques: Stress Exposure Training: Regularly exposing doctors to high-pressure situations to build resilience. Perturbation: Introducing distractions during simulations to test team stability, such as simulating patient vomiting or monitor failures during an RSI procedure. Cross-Training: Ensuring paramedics and doctors train together and are evaluated as a team. Cliff's insights highlight the necessity of training cohesive units to prepare effectively for real-world scenarios. Learning from Failures in Modern Forensic Pathology Professor Guy Ratti discussed modern forensic pathology, focusing on how clinical techniques are applied post-mortem to determine causes of death. The use of CT scans, angiography, and point-of-care toxicology testing has revolutionized post-mortem investigations, providing quicker and more detailed insights. Learning Points: Application of Clinical Techniques Post-Mortem: Using CT scans and angiography to identify trauma causes. Point-of-Care Toxicology Testing: Rapid results within 45 minutes that can guide future clinical decisions. For pre-hospital providers, understanding these techniques helps in learning from patients who couldn’t be saved, improving future care strategies. Clinical Governance: Striking the Right Balance Clinical governance was a key theme, with discussions on its importance and implementation. Effective governance structures are essential for ensuring consistent, high-quality care. Governance Highlights: Structured and Regular Feedback: Creating environments where teams feel comfortable receiving and acting on feedback. Balancing SOP Adherence and Flexibility: Recognizing situations where deviation from SOPs is necessary for patient care. The consensus was that governance must be tight enough to maintain standards but flexible enough to accommodate individual patient care nuances. Transporting and Transferring Difficult Patients A session dedicated to transporting and transferring difficult patients in the HEMS context provided practical advice and highlighted innovative approaches from international contingents. Patient Categories: Psychiatric Patients: Safe sedation with ketamine for acutely psychotic patients. Bariatric Patients: Innovative positioning techniques, such as using a vac mat for intubation. Infectious Disease Patients: Protocols for safely managing and transporting patients with infectious diseases. These insights are valuable for those working in diverse and challenging environments, ensuring patient safety and effective care during transfers. Afternoon Sessions: EMS Disasters and Quick Hits The afternoon sessions covered a range of topics, from emotional accounts of EMS disasters to rapid-fire discussions on current practices. EMS Disasters: Case Studies from Norway and Glasgow: Brave speakers shared their experiences, offering lessons on safety and crisis management. Quick Hits: Cervical Collars Debate: Discussing the efficacy and necessity of cervical collars, with evidence suggesting limited benefit but continued standard use. Pre-Hospital Blood Testing: Advocating for the feasibility and benefits of c