I want everyone to know that you did not miss the newsletter this month! It’s just taking a bit longer than expected to write it because there is so much interesting stuff that’s been written. I’ll have it to subscribers on Feb 28, and post it publicly in the blog the following week.
Welcome to the current newsletter. This is the second of two issues that will give quick analyses of some of the better oral and poster abstracts that will be presented at the 2016 Annual Scientific Assembly this month. Here’s the scoop on what’s inside:
How Long Does VTE Risk Last In TBI?
Measuring Volume Status Using Jugular Ultrasound
(F)utility Of Antibiotic Use In Facial Fractures
Use Of Scribes To Increase Charge Capture
Nursing Interruptions In The SICU
Pain And Tourniquet Efficacy
Subscribers received the newsletter last Sunday night. If you want to subscribe to get early delivery in the future (and download back issues), click here.
I’m still not done reviewing abstracts from next month’s annual meeting of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST). There are yet more oral and poster abstracts that I want to pick apart. Here are some that are coming in the January issue:
How long is DVT a potential risk in TBI?
Measuring volume status using jugular ultrasound
Pain as a predictor of tourniquet efficiency p23
Nursing interruptions in the SICU p18
And more…!
Anyone on the subscriber list when the ball drops on New Year’s Eve (CST) will receive it later that day. Everybody else will have to wait for me to release it here on the blog late next week. So sign up for early delivery now by clicking here!
The December newsletter is now available! Click the link below to download. This month’s issues some of the best abstracts (in my opinion) that will be presented at the EAST meeting next month. There are a lot of them, so I’m continuing this theme into the January issue..
In this issue you’ll find articles on:
Brain hypoxia after TBI during aeromedical evacuation
N-acetylcysteine (mucomyst) and pulmonary infection
(F)utility of tramsfusion in flight?
(F)utility of CPR in hemorrhagic shock
Scene time and mortality
Lower mortality in patients taking new oral anticoagulants compared to warfarin (how not to write your abstract)
Subscribers received the newsletter last Sunday night. If you want to subscribe to get early delivery in the future (and download back issues), click here.
Last year, a lot of the papers presented at EAST were a bit ho-hum. But I’ve been reviewing the abstracts for the upcoming January 2016 meeting, and there’s a lot of good stuff! Although you do need to take this with a grain of salt, because sometimes the paper does not live up to the hype of the abstract. But many of the abstracts look so good, that I’m going to dedicate both December and January Trauma MedEd newsletters to reviewing them.
There are lots of intriguing ideas coming! Here are a few that I will be writing about:
Suction evacuation of hemothorax
(F)utility of CPR in hemorrhagic shock
(F)utility of blood administration in the helicopter
EMS scene time and mortality
Does Mucomyst (acetylcysteine) predispose to pneumonia?
Distracted driving prevention
How long is DVT a potential risk in TBI?
Plus I’ll pick apart a number of really crappy abstracts
And more…!
Anyone on the subscriber list as of midnight (CST) Sunday night will receive it later that night Everybody else will have to wait for me to release it here on the blog late next week. So sign up for early delivery now by clicking here!