John’s SMACC keynote
Search Results for: john hinds
EMCrit Wee – Cricolol by Dr. John Hinds
My favorite part of SMACCgold; buy some Cricolol
EMCrit 135 – Trauma Thoughts with John Hinds
John Hinds on Blunt Traumatic Arrest
EMCrit 153 – In Memory – John Hinds, On How He Ran His Unit
In Memory of Our Friend, John Hinds
EMCrit 287 – Thoracotomy Masterclass with Dennis Kim
All things chest crackin’
The Abbreviated ED Thoracotomy Tray
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ODR 011 – Kettlebells for the Brain – Meditation
A slightly different kind of topic was my inspiration for the John Hinds Keynote at SMACC
EMCrit 182 – Kettlebells for the Brain – Meditation
A slightly different kind of topic was my inspiration for the John Hinds Keynote at SMACC
How Not to be a #ResusWANKER
The seven folks that ruin your day…
EMCrit 282 – Hicks on the Labors of Trauma (Blunt)
Chris Hicks and I discussing the Labors of Trauma (Blunt edition), everything a trauma team leader needs on their radar screen.
EMCrit 83 – Crack to Cure – ED Thoracotomy
Crack to cure; in the right circumstances you may save a life. ER thoracotomy–do it improperly and you put you and your team at risk.
EMCrit 81 – An Interview on Severe Trauma with Karim Brohi
Let’s talk trauma. I interview Karim Brohi on traumatic arrest, massive transfusion and hypotensive resuscitation.
EMCrit 278 – Labors of Trauma – Blunt Edition (Part 1)
The complete (hopefully) menu of cognitive and operational tasks for the Trauma Team Leader for sick trauma patients.
Blood gas measurements in DKA: Are we searching for a unicorn?
Routinely obtaining an ABG or VBG is widely recommended, for example in both American and British guidelines. Why? Is this helping our patients, or is it something that we do out of a sense of habit or obligation?
PulmCrit- Overcoming occult diuretic resistance: Achieving diuresis without dehydration
Critically ill patients often strongly retain sodium. This may cause diuresis attempts to fail, if patients excrete dilute urine leading to a loss of water without loss of sodium. Such patients may seem to respond to diuresis, but in fact they are merely becoming progressively dehydrated and hypernatremic (occult diuresis resistance).
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