EMOttawa Blog
  • Ottawa Handbook of Emergency Medicine
  • EMOttawa Podcast
  • Point-of-Care Echo
  • Grand Round Summaries
  • Journal Club
  • Commentary
  • Ultrasound
  • Infographics
  • Canadian TIA Score
  • EDI
  • Prehospital and Transport Medicine
  • Ottawa Acute Care Resources
  • About Us
Select Page
“Is there a doctor on board?”: In-Flight Emergencies

“Is there a doctor on board?”: In-Flight Emergencies

by Steven Sanders, Sam Wilson, Josee Malette | May 12, 2022 | Featured, Grand Round Summaries

  As global COVID-19 travel restrictions loosen, many people are finally taking the vacations they’ve been putting off for the last two years. As passenger air traffic climbs, in-flight medical emergencies will become increasingly frequent. Will you be ready when...
Confronting Implicit Bias and Microaggressions

Confronting Implicit Bias and Microaggressions

by Shahbaz Syed | May 5, 2022 | Commentary, Featured

We’ve previously spent some time talking about implicit bias and its impact on patient care.It is of course important to recognize that we all have elements of implicit bias – these blindspots are programmed within us, and recognizing them is an important...
Pericarditis and Myocarditis in the ED

Pericarditis and Myocarditis in the ED

by Maria Doubova, Lucy Karp | Apr 28, 2022 | Cardiology, COVID-19, emergency, Featured, Grand Round Summaries

Chest pain is one of the most common presentations to the emergency department (ED) and includes a wide differential diagnosis. In today’s post, we will review a less common cause of chest pain seen in the ED: pericarditis and myocarditis. We will also review...
Did You Do a Pelvic Exam?

Did You Do a Pelvic Exam?

by Kathleen O'Connell | Apr 21, 2022 | Featured, Grand Round Summaries, OBGYN, Public health

The role of the emergency department pelvic exam has come under debate for some time. Clinicians have raised concerns regarding whether or not it changes management, whether or not our findings are reliable, and of course the logistic barriers regarding space, time...
Tacit Knowledge: The ER Physician’s Secret Weapon

Tacit Knowledge: The ER Physician’s Secret Weapon

by Stella Yiu, Marianne Yeung | Nov 25, 2021 | Commentary, Featured, Grand Round Summaries

Onboarding and transition to independent practice are challenging (1–3). New attending physicians need knowledge to function in novel roles (4), (Yeung, Cheung et al, personal communication) However,  this knowledge is often tacit. By improving our understanding of ...
« Older Entries
Next Entries »
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Mission Statement

World-Class Emergency Medicine: To provide outstanding compassionate emergency care through practice-changing research and innovative medical education. For more about our department, visit us at EMOttawa.

Categories

Mission Statement

World-Class Emergency Medicine: To provide outstanding compassionate emergency care through practice-changing research and innovative medical education. For more about our department, visit us at EMOttawa.

Categories

Archives

Free Open Access Medical Education content by EMOttawa is under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License.