• West J Emerg Med · Feb 2017

    Blog and Podcast Watch: Cutaneous Emergencies.

    • Andrew Grock, Eric J Morley, Lynn Roppolo, Jay Khadpe, Felix Ankel, and Michelle Lin.
    • Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Sylmar, California; University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine and Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Los Angeles, California.
    • West J Emerg Med. 2017 Feb 1; 18 (2): 288-292.

    IntroductionThe WestJEM Blog and Podcast Watch presents high quality open-access educational blogs and podcasts in emergency medicine (EM) based on the ongoing Academic Life in Emergency Medicine (ALiEM) Approved Instructional Resources (AIR) and AIR-Professional series. Both series critically appraise resources using an objective scoring rubric. This installment of the Blog and Podcast Watch highlights the topic of cutaneous emergencies from the AIR series.MethodsThe AIR series is a continuously building curriculum that follows the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) annual testing schedule. For each module, relevant content is collected from the top 50 most accessed sites per the Social Media Index published within the previous 12 months and scored by eight board members using five equally weighted measurement outcomes: Best Evidence in Emergency Medicine (BEEM) score, accuracy, educational utility, evidence based, and references. Resources scoring ≥30 out of 35 available points receive an AIR label. Resources scoring 27-29 receive an "honorable mention" label, if the editorial board agrees that the post is accurate and educationally valuable.ResultsA total of 35 blog posts and podcasts were evaluated. None scored ≥30 points necessary for the AIR label, although four honorable mention posts were identified. Key educational pearls from these honorable mention posts are summarized.ConclusionThis Blog and Podcast Watch series is based on the AIR and AIR-Pro series, which attempts to identify high quality educational content on open-access blogs and podcasts. This series provides an expert-based, post-publication curation of educational social media content for EM clinicians with this installment focusing on cutaneous emergencies.

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