Articles: emergency-medicine.
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Differences in interpretation of the residency review committee (RRC) directive concerning resident scholarly activity have resulted in inconsistencies in the practical fulfillment of this responsibility among the various training programs in emergency medicine. During a workshop organized by the SAEM Research Directors' Interest Group (RDIG), a consensus statement was developed regarding the scope, definition, and purpose of the scholarly project requirement. ⋯ While each residency program must implement the RRC residency requirements in a manner that best suits the needs and culture of its individual environment, a concurrence of definition and approach to satisfying the scholarly project requirement would provide better consistency in resident training. Guidelines developed by consensus during the SAEM RDIG workshop may serve as a general recipe that can be used to fulfill the goals of the scholarly project and the spirit of the RRC directive.
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Comparative Study
A comparison of emergency medicine ultrasound training with guidelines of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
To compare the current state of emergency medicine residency ultrasound training with guidelines for that training from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM). ⋯ Most emergency medicine residency programs own at least 1 ultrasound machine, with more than half of these obtaining their first machine within the past 3 years. Only 1 program currently meets SAEM training guidelines.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of wire-guided cricothyrotomy versus standard surgical cricothyrotomy technique.
We compared a wire-guided cricothyrotomy technique vs. standard surgical cricothyrotomy in terms of accuracy in placement, complications, performance time, incision length, and user preference. We conducted a randomized, crossover controlled trial in which Emergency Medicine (EM) attendings and residents performed cricothyrotomies by both standard and wire-guided techniques (using a commercially available kit) on human cadavers after a 15-min training session. Procedure time, incision length, and physician preference were recorded. ⋯ Overall, 14 of 15 physicians stated that they preferred the wire-guided to the standard technique. Our data suggest that this wire-guided cricothyrotomy technique is as accurate and timely to use as the standard technique and is preferred by our physician operators. In addition, the technique results in a smaller incision on human cadaver models.