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The Podcasts of the Royal New Zealand College of Urgent Care
A caddy offers words of wisdom to their golfer. Some of their advice is relevant to urgent care. Check out the paper mentioned Gotlieb R, Praska C, Hendrickson MA, Marmet J, Charpentier V, Hause E, Allen KA, Lunos S, Pitt MB. Accuracy in Patient Understanding of Common Medical Phrases. JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Nov 1;5(11):e2242972. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.42972. PMID: 36449293; PMCID: PMC9713608. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9713608/ Check out the LITFL article, by Chris Nickson, Nov 2020 https://litfl.com/communication-in-a-crisis/ www.rnzcuc.org.nz podcast@rnzcuc.org.nz https://www.facebook.com/rnzcuc https://twitter.com/rnzcuc Music licensed from www.premiumbeat.com Full Grip by Score Squad This podcast is intended to assist in ongoing medical education and peer discussion for qualified health professionals. Please ensure you work within your scope of practice at all times. For personal medical advice always consult your usual doctor
Welcome to the Critical Care Commute Podcast! In today's episode, we delve into the field medical education. Joining us is Dr. Chris Nickson, to explore the question: "Are we training intensivists for the future?" As advancements in medical technology and our understanding of critical care continue to evolve, it's essential to assess whether our current training programs adequately equip intensivists with the skills and knowledge needed for the challenges ahead. Dr. Chris Nickson, with his wealth of experience and insights, provides a deep dive into the current state of intensive care training, identifies potential gaps, and offers valuable perspectives on how we can better prepare the next generation of intensivists. Whether you're a healthcare professional, a medical student, or someone interested in the future of critical care, this episode promises to be enlightening and thought-provoking. Tune in as we navigate the landscape of intensive care training and explore the measures needed to ensure that intensivists are well-prepared to meet the demands of the ever-evolving healthcare landscape.
In this episode of Tales from The Leeds Library we talk to author Chris Nickson about his life as a music journalist in America, the changing face of Leeds over the years, and the importance of historical research and veracity in his own historical fiction. We also discuss Chris's latest book in his DI Inspector Tom Harper series: Brass Lives. Chris's website: https://chrisnickson.co.uk/ Buy Brass Lives here: https://www.fantasticfiction.com/n/chris-nickson/brass-lives.htm The Opening and Ending Song is Book Bag - E's Jammy Jams which can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbeUbgO2AJc Listen to the Podcast on your favourite Podcast Platforms: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1ZrmYIJS8y84kzsEqHu2OG Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/d39e4765-fd96-4751-bef4-ff47313ef5a9/tales-from-the-leeds-library Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL3RhbGVzZnJvbXRoZWxlZWRzbGlicmFyeS9mZWVkLnhtbA Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/tales-from-the-leeds-library/id1584141498 Podcast Website: https://talesfromtheleedslibrary.podbean.com/ Social Media Links Twitter: https://twitter.com/theleedslibrary Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/leedslibrary/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theleedslib... Website: https://www.theleedslibrary.org.uk/
Chris Nickson has been a published author for ten years - he was a guest on Episode 3 and has come back to tell me about his new role as the Writer in Residence at the Abbey House Museum.The track this week is “Prince Charming” by the wonderful jazz singer Beverley Beirne. She has a new album coming out later this year “Dream Dancer” so do keep an eye out for that. https://www.chrisnickson.co.ukhttp://www.beverleybeirne.com/
We can't immediately change the process of medicine, the stuff that is kind of a drag and wears us down. What we can change, however, is our mindset. In this episode, we dissect several practices for shift preparation with a common goal of operating at a peak level of performance and experiencing more joy in what we do. Today we learn how to pregame, like a pro. We discuss: When the process of practicing medicine becomes your purpose for being a doctor, you’re at risk for burnout, if not worse. [00:30] The system will not adjust to what you need right now. You have to adjust yourself. [1:45] How accepting gratitude, and other small changes in mindset, can have a logarithmic return on investment. [4:50] The ways that many elite-level performers pregame. They rely on their rituals for peak performance. [07:15] Physicians are elite-level performers who rarely have the time to mentally prepare for each day. [8:40] How some doctors pregame (or not).... Mike Weinstock doesn't pregame [12:06] Clay Smith's pregame distraction [13:20] Joshua Russell's sequence of physical, emotional and mental prep [15:10] Sabrina Adams the BAFERD [18:00] Jaime Hope thinks of her 4 professional identities [19:10] Mizuho Morrison's 3 steps of self talk [21:40] Ran Ran biking to work. [24:20] Joe Dubois walks to work Chris Nickson walks to work Ross Fisher calms during his commute. Haney Mallemat uses mental visualization. Luz Silverio's pregame ritual is to arrive to work 15 minutes early to “chit-chat” with members of her team.[28:40] Alan Sielaff allows sufficient time before the shift to get prepared. [29:30]: Dan McCollum starts the day mentally preparing with the 5 Minute Journal.[31:00] Reuben Strayer mentally prepare for a shift by practicing mindfulness [32:50] Salim Rezaie isolates himself from social media and email for at least 1-2 hours prior to each shift.[35:30] Mike Mallin uses intermittent fasting to improve his focus, attitude, and endurance at work. [37:15] Rich Hamilton treats a shift like it’s a competitive sport. [38:30] Rob's 2 pregame exercises. [41:10] Jocko Willink’s “Good” [44:06] Learn More: https://www.stimuluspodcast.com/ Complete shownotes for this episode: https://www.stimuluspodcast.com/post/2-pregame-like-a-pro
We can't immediately change the process of medicine, the stuff that is kind of a drag and wears us down. What we can change, however, is our mindset. In this episode, we dissect several practices for shift preparation with a common goal of operating at a peak level of performance and experiencing more joy in what we do. Today we learn how to pregame, like a pro. We discuss: When the process of practicing medicine becomes your purpose for being a doctor, you’re at risk for burnout, if not worse. [00:30] The system will not adjust to what you need right now. You have to adjust yourself. [1:45] How accepting gratitude, and other small changes in mindset, can have a logarithmic return on investment. [4:50] The ways that many elite-level performers pregame. They rely on their rituals for peak performance. [07:15] Physicians are elite-level performers who rarely have the time to mentally prepare for each day. [8:40] How some doctors pregame (or not).... Mike Weinstock doesn't pregame [12:06] Clay Smith's pregame distraction [13:20] Joshua Russell's sequence of physical, emotional and mental prep [15:10] Sabrina Adams the BAFERD [18:00] Jaime Hope thinks of her 4 professional identities [19:10] Mizuho Morrison's 3 steps of self talk [21:40] Ran Ran biking to work. [24:20] Joe Dubois walks to work Chris Nickson walks to work Ross Fisher calms during his commute. Haney Mallemat uses mental visualization. Luz Silverio's pregame ritual is to arrive to work 15 minutes early to “chit-chat” with members of her team.[28:40] Alan Sielaff allows sufficient time before the shift to get prepared. [29:30]: Dan McCollum starts the day mentally preparing with the 5 Minute Journal.[31:00] Reuben Strayer mentally prepare for a shift by practicing mindfulness [32:50] Salim Rezaie isolates himself from social media and email for at least 1-2 hours prior to each shift.[35:30] Mike Mallin uses intermittent fasting to improve his focus, attitude, and endurance at work. [37:15] Rich Hamilton treats a shift like it’s a competitive sport. [38:30] Rob's 2 pregame exercises. [41:10] Jocko Willink’s “Good” [44:06] Learn More: https://www.stimuluspodcast.com/ Complete shownotes for this episode: https://www.stimuluspodcast.com/post/2-pregame-like-a-pro
In this podcast, Chris Nickson from Down Under talks about the launch of Clinician Incubator Programme a novel initiative for budding intensive care educators in Australia & New Zealand.
Chris Nickson talks about personal moments in his career in critical care that have really challenged him. Jenny Rudolph then builds on the work in the previous sessions. She shows us how to react, accept, reset and engage and outlines the psychological principles which underpin these concepts. Hopefully, these sessions will really help us deal with the workplace stressors we all encounter.
The RAGE Podcast - The Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything
Cliff Reid, Geoff Healy, and Chris Nickson discuss a fictionalised case from the Resuscitology course: "Oncology patient in resus", including airway management and failure of video laryngoscopy, and the challenges of resuscitation in the context of potentially terminal illness.
“Re-sequence your approach based on physiologic priorities” -Petro“Customize, then optimize” -ChrisATLS provides a useful and structured approach to the patient with multiple injuries. However, strict adherence to the ABCDE script can cause harm in certain circumstances. In this talk, Chris and Petro discuss how to customize resuscitation based on physiologic priorities. (18:36)
“Experience and expertise are not the same thing” -Chris resusTO was designed to bring simulation and resuscitation together in an inter-professional environment. Chris describes the rationale for training like you fight, using simulation to help teams manage complexity and develop collective competence at the level of teams, systems and organizations. (21:38)
This weeks guest is Chris Nickson. Author, music journalist and veritable gold mine of facts about Leeds!This episode features music from The Jolly Code.Produced by Will Gurrey and engineered by Jess Penn.http://www.instagram.com/thejollycodehttp://facebook.com/thejollycodehttp://www.twitter.com/thejollycodehttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Nicksonhttps://chrisnickson.co.uk/https://www.fantasticfiction.com/n/chris-nickson/https://m.facebook.com/chris.nicksonhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Leeds-Changed-World-Mick-McCann/dp/0955469937https://twitter.com/chrisnickson2?lang=en
FOAMed is just not for English speakers. We love a bit of FOAMote (FOAM other than English) At SMACC I set out to meet the international visitors to find out about their version of Critical Care. And let me tell you, the Chilean version is pretty impressive. Chile is special. The longest country in the world with the driest desert, the highest lakes, the highest volcano, a huge mountain range making it strangely isolated and then they have Patagonia. The health system is highly developed. Emergency medicine has been growing for 25 years and there are conspicuous local and imported protagonists to thank. https://developingem.com/2014/08/14/presenter-profile-billy-mallon/ If you only read one article to accompany this podcast let it be this one: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0716864017300299 These days the home grown talent is taking up the reins and I was lucky to meet 4 of them at SMACC. Chile probably has the most high functioning health system in South and Central America. Based on a solid economy and a long history of professional advocacy the discipline of Emergency Medicine is now formally recognised by the Ministry of Health and by the rest of the world. Chile could become a power house of critical and emergency care in the Spanish speaking world. Do not underestimate these people. Cesar, Loreto, Manuela and Josefina came to SMACC in Sydney where I was waiting to meet them. Have a listen to what this group have to say. Challenges do, of course, remain. Chile has long since made the “epidemiological transition” to 1st world pathologies. The delivery of care still varies depending on location. Santiago is very well served but the regional and rural areas less so. They have robust public health and vaccination programs, but there is a resurgence of some infectious diseases in part related to population movement. Their economy is strong and their government has been increasingly willing to take on the responsibilities that go with being a regional power. Their borders are long and they have had a huge increase in asylums seekers, refugees and other immigration in recent years. Not insignificant numbers of French Creole speakers have come from Haiti, perhaps related to the presence of Chilean peace keepers. Mass immigration is new. The challenges it brings are huge. It’s a steep learning curve. But, let’s face it, we like steep learning curves! Some links, links are good; The App Josefina Larraín spoke about is Reanimapp ( @reanimapp ) The city with the large indigenous population is Temuco. The indigenous language spoken in the hospital is Mapudungun. “Do not underestimate the South American countries.” So said a wise woman from Santiago. Chilean Spanish Language #FOAMed resources; Mueve www.mue.cl Twitter @MUE_14 Sociedad de Chilena Medicina Urgencias www.socihmu.cl Twitter @Sochimu MonKeyEM www.MonkeyEM.com Twitter @MonKey__EM MCU Universidad de Chile www.mdu.cl Twitter @UChileEM Conferences Sochimu has its first Congreso Medicina de urgency 21-22 Nov. 2019 https://www.sochimu.cl/noticias/1%C2%BA-congreso-medicina-de-urgencia The conceptos conference is in 11-14 September 2019 http://www.urgencia.uc.cl/conceptos/ These are not small events; Chris Nickson, Cliff Reid, Amal Mattu and Vic Brazil have spoken there. They know a bit about this sort of thing. Chile is amazing. But don’t take my word for it.
Chris Nickson, soon to be Dr. Nickson gave his expert and personal advice on transitioning into a better version of self. He’s a expert on life and manhood as many of us are, but his point of views and insight is unique. For it’s not the similarities, but our differences that causes a change in the social make up of manhood. Dr. Nickson stated that discomfort with self will cause you to change. How many of us “Men” aren’t in a state of comfort when it comes to who we are? Just the fellowship on manhood!
Chris nickson is a novelist and music journalist, the author of many books set between the 1730s and 1950s in Leeds, as well as others in medieval Chesterfield and 1980s Seattle.Above all, though, its Leeds I love, the people, the sense of the place changing with time. Yes, I write mysteries, but ultmiateoly they're books about people and their relationships, and the crime becomes a moral framework for the story.
In this podcast, intensivist and blogger Dr Chris Nickson expresses his thought about digital media in healthcare professional education.
The RAGE Podcast - The Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything
In this talk from the '2017 Performance Psychology in Medicine Conference' run by the Institute of Prehospital Care in London, Chris Nickson discusses these questions and more: What is elite performance? How is expertise developed? How can we use simulation to develop and maintain expertise, both individually and collectively?
The RAGE Podcast - The Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything
A RAGE session featuring Karel Habig, Cliff Reid, and Chris Nickson: Introduction... kind of (starts 00:00 min) ‘What's bubbling up?' (starts 04:48 min) — an ED checklist for cognitive debiasing, are 'cold' platelets ready for primetime, the ART trial and the open lung approach to ventilation using recruitment manoeuvres ‘What's The Sats Target?' (starts 22:55 min) — the RAGE team discuss what SpO2 targets to aim for, in which patients and diseases, and the tricks and traps of real-world clinical practice. ‘A blast from the past' by Chris Nickson on ‘Rudolph Virchow' (starts 52:52 min) ‘Words of Wisdom' from Cliff Reid (starts 57:10 min)
This talk by Dr Chris Nickson provides an overview of how acute stressors affect performance and introduces techniques that can be used to maintain performance despite them. The target audience is trainees in the critical care specialties.
Chris Nickson, Natalie May and Simon Carley discuss simulation and educational theory on day 2 of the teaching course.
EM Cases Episode 83 - 5 Critical Care Controversies from SMACC Dublin: I had the great opportunity to gather some of the brightest minds in Emergency Medicine and Critical Care from around the world (Mark Forrest from U.K., Chris Nickson from Australia, Chris Hicks from Canada and Scott Weingart from U.S.) at the SMACC Dublin Conference and ask them about 5 Critical Care Controversies and concepts: How to best prepare your team for a resuscitation Optimum fluid management in sepsis Direct vs. video laryngoscopy as first line tool for endotracheal intubation Early vs. late trauma intubation Whether or not to attempt a thoracotomy in non-trauma centres The discussion that ensued was enlightening... The post Episode 83 – 5 Critical Care Controversies from SMACC Dublin appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
EM Cases Episode 83 - 5 Critical Care Controversies from SMACC Dublin: I had the great opportunity to gather some of the brightest minds in Emergency Medicine and Critical Care from around the world (Mark Forrest from U.K., Chris Nickson from Australia, Chris Hicks from Canada and Scott Weingart from U.S.) at the SMACC Dublin Conference and ask them about 5 Critical Care Controversies and concepts: How to best prepare your team for a resuscitation Optimum fluid management in sepsis Direct vs. video laryngoscopy as first line tool for endotracheal intubation Early vs. late trauma intubation Whether or not to attempt a thoracotomy in non-trauma centres The discussion that ensued was enlightening... The post Episode 83 – 5 Critical Care Controversies from SMACC Dublin appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
SMACC Chicago Beat the Bug Q&A session with Kath Maitland, Mark Crislip, Flavia Machado and Chris Nickson.
EM Cases Best Case Ever - Chris Nickson on Hickam's Dictum. Usually we use the heuristic of Occam's razor to help us arrive at one diagnosis that makes sense of all the data points that a particular patient presents to us. However sometimes it's not so straight forward and we need to think about multiple diagnoses that explain a patient's condition - Hickam's Dictum. Dr. Chris Nickson, the brains behind the Life in the Fast Lane blog tells his Best Case Ever from the SMACC Conference in Dublin, in which a patient thrombolysed for massive pulmonary embolism suffers a cardiac arrest, and the thought process he went through to discover the surprising complicating diagnoses that ensue... The post Best Case Ever 46 – Chris Nickson on Hickam's Dictum appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
EM Cases Best Case Ever - Chris Nickson on Hickam's Dictum. Usually we use the heuristic of Occam's razor to help us arrive at one diagnosis that makes sense of all the data points that a particular patient presents to us. However sometimes it's not so straight forward and we need to think about multiple diagnoses that explain a patient's condition - Hickam's Dictum. Dr. Chris Nickson, the brains behind the Life in the Fast Lane blog tells his Best Case Ever from the SMACC Conference in Dublin, in which a patient thrombolysed for massive pulmonary embolism suffers a cardiac arrest, and the thought process he went through to discover the surprising complicating diagnoses that ensue... The post Best Case Ever 46 – Chris Nickson on Hickam’s Dictum appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
Big thanks to Anand Swaminathan @EMSwami, Chris Nickson @precordialthump, Jesse Spurr @Inject_Orange, Chris Hicks @HumanFact0rz, and Tom Evens @doctomevens Their pre-workshop reading/listening recommendations: http://stemlynsblog.org/englishman-south-africa-robert-lloyd-st-emlyns/ http://emcrit.org/podcasts/toughness-michael-lauria-i/ Bandwidth Visualisation tips:
Chris Nickson challenges us to examine lessons that are 150 years old
In this episode, Zack and Joe talk with Deirdre Murphy, the Deputy Director of the ICU, director of the cardiothoracic ICU at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. The Alfred has put itself on the map in so many ways over the past decade. Home to Stephen Bernard (of the original Hypothermia after ROSC without RONF fame), Chris Nickson (@precordialthump, @I_C_N, @intensiveblog, #SMACC, lifeinthefastlane.com), and good friends Jason McClue, Steve McGloughlin, Josh Ihle, Paul Nixon, and Deirdre Murphy, The Alfred is becoming a mecca for advanced resuscitation and ECMO/ECPR. In this episode we sat down with Dr. Murphy to discuss the nuances of weaning a patient from ECMO. As ED Docs, Zack and I find ourselves at the heroic end of the resuscitation spectrum when the dying patient goes on pump...but what happens at the other end? What happens in the hours, days, and weeks that follow? Listen to this episode to find out... The post EDECMO 24 – Weaning VA-ECMO, with Deirdre Murphy appeared first on ED ECMO.
The quest for normality. Chris Nickson reflects on our perpetual number chasing. What constitutes 'normal' in critical care patients.
Podcast version of the original livestream video from DASAIM14. This video is from the FYA session on FOAM with a Q&A session. Featuring Scott Weingart (www.emcrit.org) and Chris Nickson (www.lifeinthefastlane.com and much more). The unedited video (higher quality) can be watched on youtube or at FYAs website.
The RAGE Podcast - The Resuscitationist's Awesome Guide to Everything
The RAGE team are joined by many friends to recap the smaccGOLD experience: Rich Levitan (@airwaycam) Scott Weingart (@emcrit) Haney Mallemat (@CriticalCareNow) Michaela Cartner (@mjcartner) Karel Habig (@karelhabig) Chris Nickson (@precordialthump) John Hinds (@docjohnhinds) Cliff Reid (@cliffreid) Mark Wilson (@markhwilson) Oli Flower (@oliflower)
The third of the three part literature review extravaganza with Chris Nickson and Rob Mac Sweeney. This time, it's the best of the rest...
Back in the very early days I just went out wandering with my mic. I still do that but I get better audio now. This was Chris Nickson and I sat in what was basically a Bar at the first SMACC. This wasn't the first Jellybean though. This was the first one published on www.lifeinthefastlane.com and so I am sticking with the numbers as they were on the LITFL Jellybean Collection. Confused? Me too. It will get easier. Foamed FOAM Podcast SMACC Sydney RAGE Intensive Critical Medicine Emergency Paramedic Nurse Education.
We caught up with former Vanderbilt quarterback Chris Nickson. Chris had a lot to say about his time at Vandy including learning from Jay Cutler, a Music City Bowl win and conservative playcalling.
Chris Nickson and Rob MacSweeney discuss the top 10 RCTs of 2013 in critical care.
Nickson steps back to consider the metacognition of it all in the pursuit of minimising medical errors.
Victoria Brazil, Mike Cadogan, Simon Carley, Joe Lex, Chris Nickson, Ming Le Cong, and Anthony Holley consider the pitfalls and potential of free open access medical education and social media.
A meander through the grounding ideas and aspirations of social media and critical care with Joe Lex, Scott Weingart, Mike Cadogan, Simon Carley, Chris Nickson, Nadie Levick, and Oliver Flower.
Chris Nickson of www.lifeinthefastlane.com fame gave this great, punchy 10 minute lecture on ABG's on the Registrar day at the Bedside Critical Care conference this year. The slides can be found at www.intensivecarenetwork.com.
Chris Nickson (AKA @precordialthump) gave the after dinner speech at Bedside Critical Care 2012 (#BCC3) and it was a cracker. See www.intensivecarenetwork.com for the hilarious slides. Powerful-talks-101 from the http://iteachem.net/ guru himself... Intro and exit snippets credit to M.I.A., buy the track here.
Chris and I natter about the latest in his Richard Nottingham series; his upcoming book launch on Sept 14th and the various projects he's juggling!
Chris Nickson - author of the Richard Nottingham Series (The Broken Token, Cold Cruel Winter and the Constant Lovers) chats with us about all kinds of everything!