Cocaine might be a drug you associate with the 1980s, however, a 2018 audit found that it was still the 2nd most used recreational drug within the UK. Deaths associated with cocaine doubled between 2015 and 2018. 2019 marks the highest deaths on record linked to cocaine use after 8 years of successive increase.
This month we’re looking at the pathophysiology of cocaine, the symptoms involved with toxicity and what we need to do to manage these patients.
Affecting an estimated 80% of the population at some time in their lives, Lower back pain is a common presentation to ambulance crews. Often this will be muscular in origin, however there are many serious conditions that is im portant ambulance staff are able to recognise and diagnose. This month we’re looking at the assessment and managment of these varied differential diagnoses from Cauda Equina Syndrome to Discitis.
In this episode we discuss to assess the scenes of Road Traffic Collisions, how car safety features work and how thinking about the injury experience during a collision can support our practice and care for injured patients.
In this episode we discuss to assess the scenes of Road Traffic Collisions, how car safety features work and how thinking about the injury experience during a collision can support our practice and care for injured patients.
Every year in England and wales 1.4 million people attend A+E with a head injury. Ultimately, 90% of people end up being diagnosed with a minor head injury and are discharged.
This week we’re tackling the assessment of Adult head injuries, we’ll go through some red flags to be aware of as well as how to appropriately safety net our patients.
In this episode we discuss logical fallacies and how they can lead to errors in clinical judgement, as well as some times in our practice we have displayed them and what if anything we can do to over come them.
Starting life with the responsibility and pressure that comes with registration is always nerve wracking and we remember it well. So we've compiled some of the bits of advice we wish we could have given ourselves before we registered.
In this episode we are going to be covering the assessment of Transient Loss of Conciousness (T-LOC) and discussing some of the differentials that could be responsible, from the easily discharged to the potentially life threatening
In this second of a 2 part series we discuss; the managment of the peri-arrest patient, management of a hypothermic cardiac arrest, the modifications to standard ALS therapy, how we can best warm patients pre-hospitaly, what our priorities are in managing these patients, in hospital treatments, and finally we’re going to discuss guidance around confirming deathing in hypothermia.
In this episode we look at the pathophysiology behind hypothermia. We go through the stages of hypothermia from mild homeostatic changes to peri-arrest phenomena.
This Episode focuses on Elderly fallers and our assessment as ambulance clinicians. We hope to dispel some myths, look at gold standard assessment and cover falls prevention.