Showing posts with label Training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Training. Show all posts

12 May 2012

Advances in Trauma?


Well I’ve just got back from an EMST Refresher course in Adelaide.  This is the first time I’ve taught on a refresher course and it was nice to meet other experienced faculty as well as (mostly) rural doctors doing this refresher course. The Provider courses that I usually teach on are not usually so filled with rural doctors - more junior RMOs doing EMSt as a requirement for surgical training ANZCA no longer has EMST as a requirement for their trainees).


EMST is very much an entry-level course, but is well suited to the needs of rural doctors who often have to manage trauma as a solo doctor with limited resources. It should be borne in mind that over 40% of major trauma originates in rural Australia, so there is real bang for buck in getting effective trauma care delivered to these patients, whether y rural GPs or aeromedical services.
On this Refresher course, the hands on scenario-based skills stations seemed well received. I also had an hour after the MCQ to talk about ‘Trauma Teams and Advances in Trauma’ - a golden opportunity to chat about things like human factors in trauma team dynamics, as well as to draw on experiences from the group about well-run and not-so-well run traumas.
But what about ‘advances in trauma’ that are not covered in the EMST Provider course? Well, I reckon they can be broken down by category and it was this approach I used to guide discussion in the 30 minutes or so available to me for each group:
AIRWAY
Videolaryngoscopy as an adjunct for difficult intubation
Ketamine for trauma intubation
Andy Heard’s excellent youtube videos on CICV
Cliff Reid’s notorious ‘propofol assassins’ rant
Weingart/Levitan’s paper on preoxygenation
BREATHING
Finger thoracostomy
Ultrasound for evaluation of pneumothorax
CIRCULATION
Minimal volume resuscitation
C-ABC and tourniquets for catastrophic compressible haemorrhage
Tranexamic acid, CRASH II trial & applicability to rural Australia
Managing major traumatic bleeding in rural hospitals (big shout out to Casey Parker’s excellent blog on this at Broome Docs)
We didn’t get as far as DISABILITY but I daresay that discussion of hypertonic saline in head injury would have come up...
The discussion really made me think just how knowledge-hungry the rural doctors I met were, but how hard it was for information to be disseminated to these guys.   It cemented my belief that a  rural masterclass course would have a willing audience. There’s lots of new stuff to discuss in trauma alone, but add in other (non-trauma) areas of interest to the rural proceduralist and you’d have a gutsy, useful, evolving course with enough content for 2-3 days. I could rant about this for ages...
All I could do was relate my own experience in past year or so, and the value of internet-based learning and discussion which has re-vitalised my own enthusiasm for learning. Big shout outs to the rural docs for the education resources below :
Minh le Cong’s retrieval resources for ACRRM members at www.rrmeo.com and his new PreHospital And Rural Medicine (PHARM) blog at www.prehospitalmed.com
Cliff Reid’s excellent blog at www.resus.me
Casey Parker’s excellent Broome Docs, the central repository for all things relevant to the rural proceduralist
Those UCEM rascals over at Life In The Fast Lane
Scott Weingart's EM-crit blog

Common themes amongst the rural proceduralists I spoke to remained
  • difficulty accessing medical equipment (videolaryngoscopy, infusion pumps and fluid warmers were common ‘wish lists’)
  • difficulty with triage and training for nursing staff in rural hospitals
  • desire for cross-training with RFDS/Retrieval service in terms of infusion regiments, SOPs and equipment
In Country Health SA, there are nominated rural doctors as ‘consultants’ in each of the areas of emergency medicine, anaesthetics, obstetrics & surgery. According to CHSA, their role is to :


  • be responsible for providing clinical system advice and broad support to rural resident medical practitioners in country South Australia, in their identified area of expertise
  • act as a point of contact for clinicians in country regarding system issues, as related to their specialty area, and participate in problem resolution
  • participate in the development of policy and procedures that guide clinical practice in country. In addition, the Chief Consultants will work with the Chief Medical Adviser, Country Health SA and other country health staff related to decision making and policy setting as related to their speciality area 

With the exception of obstetrics, for which there seems to be a proactive rural proceduralist, it is hard to point the finger firmly at any positive attempt to address the above issues by present incumbents. In fact the rural doctors I spoke to (those with EM or anaes skills) were not aware of any initiatives in past year or so by the CHSA EM or Anaes consultants.
Which is a shame, as it seems these rural docs were struggling with similar issues in their own institutions, but lacking a top-down approach to streamline equipment, protocols & training. Rather they were having to push for equipment/training by dealing with local DONs of the hospital, usually being rebuffed as 'no money' in CHSA. It seems that my problems on Kangaroo Island with equipment/training are the same as those in Port Lincoln, the Riverland, the South East etc...and we are all trying to fix in our own manner, which mostly comes down to enthusiasm for a particular issue at any one time. No wonder things are fragmented.

Meanwhile not a week goes by without another meaningless diktat arriving in rural doctors email from CHSA detailing the latest policy. Useful stuff...for example I've learned that dabigatran can cause bleeding (well, duh!)...and that I probably should not inject chlorhexidine down an epidural catheter. I only wish the same regard for safety was applied to trauma management and crisis management in theatre or the ED of rural hospitals...
Phil Tideman of iCCNet has revolutionised how cardiac patients are cared for in rural South Australia, with an initiative over past decade to place point-of-care troponin, proBNP and iStat machines into all rural EDs, as well as standardised protocols for management of ACS/STEMI & heart failure patients relevant to rural practitioners. Whilst I am not a huge fan of centralisation of services, such standardisation in equipment and protocols has had demonstrable benefits for these patients...similar with obstetrics under Steve Holmes' wise guidance. Why not extend the same to trauma, emergency and theatre patients by assessing needs of rural doctors and addressing their common issues?


A simple issue, like availability of difficult airway equipment or new advances like tranexamic acid could and should be addressed by these consultants.


Perhaps it’s time for some new blood in CHSA to represent the rural proceduralists in SA?







4 Apr 2012

iSimulate

Well, finally my wife's iPad3 with the spanking retina display has arrived. I'm a tad jealous, but more importantly it now means I have two iPads to play with...


...and that has been vital for running a groovy piece of software called iSimulate.


I dunno about the rest of you medicos, but I've been to a fair few simulation training sessions, mostly as a junior doctor doing basic and advanced life support. More recently I've been through the simulation lab at the Royal North Shore, doing the thoroughly excellent 'emergency management of anaesthetic crisis' or EMAC course.


These sims are high fidelity and rely on life-like mannikins, realistic environments with monitors, emergency room or operating theatre equipment etc. Moreover, such training tends to only happen as part of a dedicated training session - which may be only a few days every few years.


So I was intrigued when I saw a pre-launch version of iSimulate a few months ago at an EMST course - in fact, there were a bunch of senior EMST instructors there (intensivists, emergency physicians, surgeons and self) who all agreed that the concept was brilliant. 


iSimulate is an app for the iPad - using two iPads and a wireless netowrk connection, one iPad serves as a monitor and the other is driven by the instructor.


The beauty is that the iPad screen has been set up to look just like a standard monitor, with displays for ECG, SpO2, invasive BP, ETCO2, RR and manual BP. The iPad also has realistic alarms, just like standard monitoring equipment. Pressing the 'BP' button even causes a realistic 'cuff inflation' sound which will be familiar to anyone who's worked in resus or theatre.




So now one can run a realistic simulation 'on the run' - at anytime, in any place.


No more reliance on a simulation lab, purpose-built mannikin or dedicated time off to run turgid BLS/ALS courses - with this app one can run a mock resus every shift, or at the end of a theatre list in the standard work environment, in the clinic, at the roadside.


I think it's a game changer potentially. And my baby roo (Boo) thinks it's a wonderful device...


What's that Skip? He's in haemorrhagic shock?
Instructor iPad on left, Student iPad on right


There is however one drawback - it's $2000 initially then $500 per annum thereafter...and you'll need to buy two iPads and a wireless connection (would be mayhem if ran over 3G).


There is a version for $4900 which gives 'lifetime' support and licensing. You can see more and a video using a teddy bear (Hugh Grantham's idea) of the app in action at iSimulate.com.au


However, I think this price still puts the app out of reach of small country hospitals and individuals. The big organisations will be able to afford this easily...but no doubt organisational issues will mean that simulation training continues to be rolled out in the usual 'once a year compulsory training session' covering just ALS and BLS.


Which is a shame, because the portability and flexibility of this app mean that meaningful sim could be delivered whenever and wherever needed


I'm in theatre next week, and I reckon we'll use the demo version to run a mock malignant hyperthermia or anaphylaxis under anaesthesia scenario, just for a giggle.


That would be brilliant. But $4900 to educate the hospital staff at my own expense? Probably not...


Boo the Roo explores the possibilities of iSimulate
...but baulks at the price tag

29 Mar 2012

A Course..a Course! My Kingdom for a Course!

[adapted from King Richard III, Shakespeare, W 1594]

Well, this week I am up in Darwin teaching on an EMST course. The Early Management of Severe Trauma course is the Australasian version of the worldwide Advanced Trauma Life Support course from the American College of Surgeons. The history behind it is interesting, but the bottom line is that this course teaches a uniform, practical and structured approach to the management of trauma...identifying and treating immediately life-threatening injuries (hence early management of severe trauma).

I’ve been teaching on this for a few years now and I enjoy the interaction with other Faculty. Although badged under the College of Surgeons, Faculty are a hotch-potch of surgeons, anaesthetists, intensivists, retrievalists, emergency physicians and the odd rural doctor. I think they put me on the Faculty for comedy value.

But I always learn something from fellow doctors who teach...and hopefully the 16 Candidates on each course benefit from our combined experience. It’s something I am pretty passionate about...and later this year I will be taking up the mantle of Course Director which will be interesting.

EMST is just one of the many courses ‘out there’. For rural doctors like me, who need to be able to manage pretty much whatever comes through the door (at least initially until the cavalry arrive), there are many entry-level courses such as:
Advanced Paediatric Life Support (APLS)
Emergency Life Support (ELS)
Rural Emergency Skills Training (REST)
Advanced Life Support Obstetrics (ALSO)
Major Obstetric Emergencies & Trauma (MOET)
...plus a few courses run by State agencies such as rural doctor workforce groups and trauma/retrieval services. Minh le Cong’s RFDS STAR programme looks interesting and I’ve done some components of the James Cook University ‘Aeromedical Skills course’ along with colleagues at MedSTAR. But they are aimed at the prehospital/retrieval audience.

When I am teaching on EMST I often feel constrained by the limitations of the course. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a great programme, and aimed squarely at junior doctors who are developing their skills and involvement in trauma management. But there is just so much more out there...and a lot of ‘current’ thinking is not taught on these courses as it takes time to translate through course manuals, materials and instructors.

I’ve just been reading about finger thoracostomy over on the Scancrit.com blog. It’s a technique I always try to explain & demonstrate in the animal lab and on thoracic trauma skills stations, but it’s not (yet) in the standard EMST teaching.  So I reckon there’s scope for a ‘masterclass’ course, constantly evolving and reflecting some of the topics and discussions that one comes across on the net or that are used day-to-day by experienced practitioners.

After all, medicine evolves and our learning should be lifelong. Why then just have a series of entry-level courses for the rural docs - especially when access to hands-on learning for them is often difficult. Rather than repeat the course, better to advance to a new level.

Such a course would be a great addition to the entry-level courses...the knowledge of which is assumed. It’d be aimed squarely at the experienced rural doctor and could be delivered by our College, ACRRM. Of course they also deliver the REST course - so an advanced course would frighteningly be called something like ‘advanced rural & remote skills training’ or ARREST!


Regardless of the name (and I think something along the lines of ‘rural masterclass’ or ‘current topics in...’ etc work better), one can imagine a two day course covering things like:
  • ECG phenomena such as Brugada etc
  • use of ultrasound inc FAST/RUSH
  • difficult airway gadgets and protocols
  • what’s new in paeds/O&G
Content would be delivered by experienced rural or specialty docs, with content shaped by participant’s needs and reflecting current thinking. Getting along a few of the reps such as KingVision, Ambu, Laederal, iSimulate and SonoSite would seem sensible and allow hands on of equipment that your cash-strapped, time-poor rural health service would not otherwise have had access to.

Now THAT would be worth the $2K a day procedural upskilling grant that is available.

8 Dec 2011

Nearly home...

Well, had my viva for the JCCA anaesthetic credentialling earlier this week - glad to report it was successful. Four more weeks to go in Orange NSW then I'm headed back to Kangaroo Island with anaesthetic credentials under my belt.


This video clip says it all really:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rJ8nCTgZ2Q&sns=fb


Now, where's my fibreoptic scope and some local anaesthetic spray? I've gotta try this at home.



15 Nov 2011

Exciting news

Well, those who know me are aware that (apart from roadkill recipes), two of my current interests are to try and develop a national network of prehospital doctors drawn from the rural workforce and also to improve training in skills and equipment for rural doctors.


I'm grateful for recent email exchanges with Drs Minh Le Cong (RFDS Qld) and Dr Ray Gadd (on an EM secondment in the wilder parts of Tasmania). Minh has gained a reputation as a 'promiscuous blogger' and his pearls of wisdom crop up on websites such as LifeInTheFastLane, EM-crit, Resus.me and Broome Docs. he's also been the main driving force behind the excellent retrieval medicine module on RRMEO (the ACRRM online portal). He's a rural doctor now working as a retrieval specialist and clearly 'gets' the issues facing rural communities. Ray's down in Tasmania doing some EM upskilling and has made me awestruck with his knowledge of obscure cardiac arrhythmias, ready-grasp of ultrasound and sheer passion for rural medicine.


I've been buoyed recently by Minh's tacit support for some sort of organisation akin to the UK BASICS, but he correctly points out that this has to be driven from the rural doc workforce. My opinions on this are laid out elsewhere on this site. Meanwhile Ray and I have chatted about perhaps creating a new upskilling course for rural doctors - a sort of 'masterclass' building on the best bits of courses such as APLS, ELS, RESP, EMST, ALSO, MOET, PHTLS etc but with constantly evolving content (such as that on the abovementioned blogs) of relevance to the rural workforce (apnoeic preoxygenation, USS for PTX, RUSH, etc etc). 


Ideally such a course (or clinical update) could be delivered in regional areas, with small groups and immersive scenario-training and hands on with lots of equipment (ultrasound, videolaryngoscopes, airway adjuncts, emergency kit etc and an opportunity for cross-training with local ambulance/retrieval/emergency services for the trauma component).


Anyhow, there has been some more good news this week from my home State of South Australia - a new programme for creating 'home grown' procedural GPs in SA has been endorsed by Country Health SA and looks set to deliver both training posts and a sustainable workforce for the future. Called 'Road to Rural General Practice' this model is well overdue. Currently SA procedural doctors may have to travel interstate to upskill (I did my obs in Tasmania, my anaesthetics in NSW) and indeed opportunities for procedural doctors can be tempting interstate...if this system trains and retains doctors in SA, that'd be great.


Launch of Careflight's mobile MedSIm at Orange Hospital, rural NSW


Meanwhile, back in Orange, NSW where I am upskilling in anaesthetics, I was asked to give a lecture on massive transfusion to candidates on the TART course (delivered by the NSW ITM, a course I'd not heard of previously). CareFlight were involved (hi to Zoe Rodgers and co. if you're reading)...and later in the hospital carpark I spotted Careflight's excellent MedSim mobile sim-lab and their dedicated car wreck trainer.


Seeing this has got me all enthused again - so projects for 2012 will be to try and get an Australian 'BASICs' up and running...and to try and sell the idea of a course aimed squarely at the rural doctor, preferably badged under ACRRM and offering immersive, hands-on, up-to-date education at a level above existing courses but perhaps spending half a day on each of EM, Obs, Anaes, Trauma and Paeds/Psych, with guest speaker, equipment demos and scenario-based small-group learning.


I'm excited. I hope others will want to join in...

11 Nov 2011

Teaching old dogs new tricks

I have just got back from the Airway Skills course held in Sydney and run by Paul Baker (airwayskills.com). Unlike other courses, this was was genuine small group learning with plenty of opportunity to discuss cases, get hands on with a variety of equipment and was suitable not just for anaesthetists, but also intensivists, ED docs and rural proceduralists.

Its amazing how much one can learn even when one is doing a job on a daily basis. Paul Baker is well known as the author of numerous papers and the ANZCA 'difficult airway' equipment recommendations. As such, he brings a calm authority to discussion of airway and was a patient teacher.

I got a chance to play with a variety of equipment, including understanding the vital difference between proseal and supreme LMAs, play with combitubes, fiddle with Frova's, Aintree catheters and confirm my choice of scalpel-bougie-tube for surgical airways. Also a great session on AFOI, as well as discussion of using 15l/min O2 via nasal specs as an adjunct to preoxygention/RSI and Levitan's excellent airway book...

Only one thing was missing - a 'soiled airway' mannikin, to simulate the emergency airway that is the province of trauma and emergency docs...I know Minh le Cong has been muttering about such a simulator, but I reckon it'd be a great chance to wet test some ideas like Weingart's ETT as suction catheter.

Rural docs have a plethora of courses to choose from - EMST, APLS, ELS, RESP, MOET, ALSO etc, as well as clinical attachments for procedural upskilling. I've blogged previously about the excellent Rural Doctors NSW procedural conference (combined with a day at the sim lab for GP-anaesthetists) and how I'd love to bring a conference with similar content to South Australia. The Baker airway skills course is so good that I reckon it'll soon become oversubscribed, and the rural proceduralist cohort may miss out...wouldn't it be great to bring this paradigm to a wider audience, rather than just 3-4 courses per annum on Oz and NZ?