Tuesday Emergency Medicine Conferences
The didactic curriculum covers core topics from the Model of the Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine in the form of weekly educational conferences. Curriculum topics are covered over a period of 24 months and then recycled. Core didactic sessions are scheduled every Tuesday from 8am - 12noon. (Click here for sample Monthly Conference Schedule) Emergency medicine faculty, emergency medicine residents, off-service residents on ED rotation, medical students, and physician assistant students attend these sessions.
1) Self-Directed Study
Core topics from the Model have been grouped into 24 study modules. Each month the resident is responsible for reading on module topics in the text, Emergency Medicine, by J. Tintinalli. Residents complete a CORD, web-based quiz by the 30th of each month on the assigned module. Each resident can review test results and answers. The goal is to emphasize self-directed study, provide an introduction to the process of continuous certification, and augment the resident's factual knowledge base in preparation for the written ABEM board examination.
2) Electrocardiography
This is a monthly, one-hour case-based ECG session presented by Dr. J. Shiber. Format is interactive with presentation of ECGs to the group and discussion. A mini-curriculum on ECG interpretation and related patient management is covered over 24 months.
3) Advanced Pediatric Life Support
The Advanced Pediatric Life Support Course Curriculum is covered in a monthly, interactive lecture format over 24 months. These sessions, taught by Dr. Patterson, alternate with quarterly Emergency Medicine/Internal Medicine Grand Rounds.
4) Emergency Medicine/Internal Medicine Grand Rounds
This is a quarterly interdepartmental conference with the Department of Medicine, approved for CME credit, and coordinated by Dr. Charles Brown. Guest speakers from both departments present timely Medicine topics in a lecture/case presentation/discussion format.
5) Emergency Medicine Grand Rounds
Invited guest speakers in Emergency Medicine and from other specialties give these didactic lectures, approved for CME credit. A number of these speakers are nationally recognized. These sessions are coordinated by Dr. Leigh Patterson.
6) Resident/Faculty Meeting
This is a monthly administrative meeting where various aspects of the training program and work environment are discussed. This is led by the two EM-3 Chief Residents. Residency directors and faculty address a number of pertinent issues with the group.
7) Chief Complaint Conference
Signs, symptoms, and presentations from the Model are emphasized during these monthly sessions that compliment the Professor Rounds topics. These are given in an interactive, case-based format by Dr. C. Bourne.
8) Emergency Radiology Series
A mini-curriculum in Emergency Radiology, led by an attending radiologist, is covered using a radiographic case presentation/discussion format. Cases reviewed are those seen in the Emergency Department and selected for presentation by EM residents, faculty and radiologists.
9) Procedures/Skills Lab
Two hours per month are devoted to developing expertise in basic and advanced Emergency Medicine procedural skills. Anatomy, technique, indications, contraindications, and complications of Emergency Medicine procedures are taught. This is a hands-on, workshop experience using a skills-station format. These take place in the Emergency Department classroom, in the gross anatomy facilities of the medical school, in the Comparative Medicine Lab, and in the Emergency Care Simulation Skills Lab. These sessions are coordinated by Dr. W. Robey.
10) Morbidity and Mortality
The EM-3 resident on Administration/Education rotation presents actual ED cases (either several similar cases on a single topic or 1-2 cases with different learning points) in which either management errors or unexpected outcomes occurred. The use of multimedia aids and inviting individuals directly involved in the cases reviewed compliments the educational experience.
11) Trauma Rounds
This is a monthly CME-approved conference that is coordinated by the Trauma Service and attended by members of the Department of Emergency Medicine and the Trauma Service. Trauma topics are presented in a lecture or case presentation/discussion format by members of both departments. Emphasis is placed on clinical trauma care, system development, and improving patient care. Cases discussed are frequently those presenting diagnostic or management problems.
12) Toxicology Grand Rounds
These CME-approved Grant Rounds are prepared and presented by the EM-2 resident on Toxicology rotation and faculty toxicologist, Dr. W. Meggs. Format consists of the presentation of unknown cases seen by the Toxicology Consultation Service during the month. Audience participation is encouraged.
13) Resident Lecture
Each EM-3 resident presents an EM topic of their choice during the year. An interactive, case-based format is suggested and current literature regarding the topic emphasized.
14) Pediatric Emergency Medicine Grand Rounds
This is a monthly, CME-approved, interdepartmental conference involving the Departments of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics, and coordinated by Dr. Leigh Patterson. Guest speakers and members from both departments present timely Pediatric Emergency Medicine topics in a lecture/case presentation/ discussion format.
15) Literature/Biostatistics/Research
One hour each month is dedicated to the critical review of essential Emergency Medicine literature, statistics, and research methodology. Recent articles and current abstracts from the literature pertinent to Emergency Medicine are reviewed for content, research design, and applicability to clinical practice. Various aspects of evidence-based methodology and statistical analysis are emphasized. The EM-3 resident on Administrative/Education rotation reviews and discusses two articles with the group. Faculty from the Division of Research, Drs. J. Gough and K. Brewer, assign the articles and lead the discussion.
16) Resuscitation and Stabilization
These are faculty led, hands-on megacode skills stations, that take place for one hour on the last Tuesday of the month. Resuscitation scenarios follow the topics listed in the Resuscitation and Critical Care Study Module with emphasis placed on code organization, team leadership, and pediatric resuscitation. These are coordinated by Drs. Skip Robey and Leigh Patterson. Mock code scenarios are presented to participants at three different stations, using the Emergency Care Simulator, pediatric models and mannequins, rhythm generators and resuscitation equipment. A designated team leader and team members run each "megacode" for 10-15 minutes. The group critiques the resuscitation effort then rotates to the next station.