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Podcast Recommendations?
Started by sylvanthus
Resus.me
Lifeinthefastlane.com
You really can't get enough of these, but you really need to pick the GOOD ones. 🙂
Lifeinthefastlane.com
You really can't get enough of these, but you really need to pick the GOOD ones. 🙂
I <3 the following:
EM:RAP. Mel Herbert, and I've learned to absolutely love Stuart Swadron.
EMCRIT: Scott Weingart is the bomb. Push-dose pressors and awake intubation guy.
Rob Orman's own podcasts rock. http://blog.ercast.org
Matt and Mike rock. http://www.ultrasoundpodcast.com
Outside the EM mainstream but highly recommended is Mark Crislip -- everyone needs more Mark Crislip. "Cat: the other white meat." http://edgydoc.com
(Anyone who can make infectious disease fun is clearly more than just a human being.)
(And I love cats.)
EM:RAP. Mel Herbert, and I've learned to absolutely love Stuart Swadron.
EMCRIT: Scott Weingart is the bomb. Push-dose pressors and awake intubation guy.
Rob Orman's own podcasts rock. http://blog.ercast.org
Matt and Mike rock. http://www.ultrasoundpodcast.com
Outside the EM mainstream but highly recommended is Mark Crislip -- everyone needs more Mark Crislip. "Cat: the other white meat." http://edgydoc.com
(Anyone who can make infectious disease fun is clearly more than just a human being.)
(And I love cats.)
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- EM Basic: just as the title implies, basic overview of what to do based on chief complaint, and also some basic high-yield literature review.
- EM:RAP: needs no introduction.
- SMART EM: very lengthy in-depth discussions about the evidence for certain things. Not as high-yield in terms of learning per minute, but gives you a deeper understanding of the data behind important EM topics.
Those three things are the highest yield I think. EM Basic to get a general idea of what's going on, EM:RAP to stay current, and SMART EM to understand the literature.
- EM:RAP: needs no introduction.
- SMART EM: very lengthy in-depth discussions about the evidence for certain things. Not as high-yield in terms of learning per minute, but gives you a deeper understanding of the data behind important EM topics.
Those three things are the highest yield I think. EM Basic to get a general idea of what's going on, EM:RAP to stay current, and SMART EM to understand the literature.
Awesome thank you guys, Ill take a look at some of these.
Ohhh ! Push-dose pressors ! Loved that one (for realsies).
Ultrasound Podcast is awesome if you have time to watch videos...
Another vote for EM Basic.
It was probably the best resource for my EM rotations, as it's basically a terrific step-by-step approach for bread and butter chief complaints. No other resource provided nearly as much useful, concise information (for the EM newbie) as this guy. Given my ongoing 4th year knowledge-wasting, I expect to revisit it quite a bit as an intern 😀
It was probably the best resource for my EM rotations, as it's basically a terrific step-by-step approach for bread and butter chief complaints. No other resource provided nearly as much useful, concise information (for the EM newbie) as this guy. Given my ongoing 4th year knowledge-wasting, I expect to revisit it quite a bit as an intern 😀
Keeping Up In Emergency Medicine
Triple boarded Vanderbilt-Super-Genius, Clay Smith combs the literature (EM, Cards, Crit Care, ID, Trauma, Peds, etc) every month for practice changing/cutting edge medicine articles and boils them down to reviews that are short (3-5 minutes) and super concise. It's straight awesome.
http://keepingup.vanderbiltem.com/
Free on Itunes
Triple boarded Vanderbilt-Super-Genius, Clay Smith combs the literature (EM, Cards, Crit Care, ID, Trauma, Peds, etc) every month for practice changing/cutting edge medicine articles and boils them down to reviews that are short (3-5 minutes) and super concise. It's straight awesome.
http://keepingup.vanderbiltem.com/
Free on Itunes
Keeping Up In Emergency Medicine
Triple boarded Vanderbilt-Super-Genius, Clay Smith combs the literature (EM, Cards, Crit Care, ID, Trauma, Peds, etc) every month for practice changing/cutting edge medicine articles and boils them down to reviews that are short (3-5 minutes) and super concise. It's straight awesome.
http://keepingup.vanderbiltem.com/
Free on Itunes
I second Clay Smith. 👍
(Sadly, though, I often slip up and call it "Keeping It Up in Emergency Medicine"
not the same thing.
EMCrit is from a guy in New York...
Another vote for EM Basic.
It was probably the best resource for my EM rotations, as it's basically a terrific step-by-step approach for bread and butter chief complaints. No other resource provided nearly as much useful, concise information (for the EM newbie) as this guy. Given my ongoing 4th year knowledge-wasting, I expect to revisit it quite a bit as an intern 😀
Dr. Carroll is awesome. 👍
Besides RAP and CRIT it's easily my favorite. I love the pdf summaries he puts up after each podcast.
Keeping Up In Emergency Medicine
Triple boarded Vanderbilt-Super-Genius, Clay Smith combs the literature (EM, Cards, Crit Care, ID, Trauma, Peds, etc) every month for practice changing/cutting edge medicine articles and boils them down to reviews that are short (3-5 minutes) and super concise. It's straight awesome.
http://keepingup.vanderbiltem.com/
Free on Itunes
He has 7 kids too. 😱
http://www.vanderbiltem.com/clay-smith-md-faap-facep.html
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