Der Anaesthesist
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Introducing a chest tube is a routine emergency procedure in trauma victims. Emergency coniotomy or establishing an intraosseous access, however, are not often necessary, but in individual cases these techniques can be decisive for patient survival. The aim of this study was to present and evaluate a model for teaching these techniques, since the majority of emergency physicians do not have adequate experience in this area. ⋯ These results show that even emergency physicians with many years of practice have too little knowledge about thoracic drainage, even though it is required in the management of trauma victims. Over 80% of the emergency physicians have no experience with certain other emergency measures recommended as lifesaving in individual cases. Despite the criticism that the participants of the workshop were a selected study group, these numbers seem to reflect reality: Institutions with emergency medicine departments have reported considerable and serious deficiencies in providing emergency care to patients with polytrauma. These gaps could be closed by implementing practice-oriented workshops in collaboration with anatomical institutes. As these institutes use fixated corpses for training purposes, the differences in working with living patients would have to be made clear. In spite of this minor restriction, practical exercises could counteract the deficits in the care of emergency patients and should therefore be integrated into a future educational concept on a long-term basis.