

Ep 274 - What medical conferences offer in 2025 (and how they’ve changed)
Episode summary
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Why in‑person conferences still matter in a post‑COVID world.
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What formats work now: short talks, interviews, demos, strong hosting.
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How to turn “a great day out” into Monday‑morning change.
Guests
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David Carr — EM physician (Toronto). Leads the Annual Update in EM at Whistler. Focus: inclusive, high‑energy, “hard‑core EM” content.
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Haney Mallemat — EM & Critical Care (South Jersey/Philadelphia). Founder of ResusX; designs short, high‑engagement sessions that feel like live conversations.
Key themes
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Why travel when content is online?
Being in the room changes attention, reflection, and recall. Learning happens in corridors, evening sessions, and next‑day conversations. -
From lectures to experiences.
Shift to shorter talks, couch discussions, live demos, and deliberate hosting. Format follows audience and venue. -
Programme design starts with the audience.
Build for how people learn now. Coach faculty. Pick speakers for delivery and credibility. -
Strong hosting is part of pedagogy.
Good chairs manage flow, time, and psychological safety so the audience can relax and learn. -
Social learning drives change.
Purposeful social time and small‑group evening sessions create the “stickiness” that leads to projects and practice updates.
Practical takeaways for clinicians
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Arrive with intent: bring 1–2 real patient problems to solve.
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Choose your format: prioritise short talks, interviews, and hands‑on if your attention is fragmented.
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Make it stick on Monday: debrief with a colleague, write one practice change, set a review date. Present a short “what I learned” to your team.
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Borrow authority wisely: take clear, referenced points (e.g., contrast allergy/nephropathy policies) back to local committees.
Practical takeaways for organisers
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Audience first: define who you serve; let that drive length, tone, and format.
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Shorten and vary: fewer bullet‑heavy lectures; more interviews, panels, and no‑slide formats when it helps educators shine.
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Coach and curate: select speakers for content and delivery; build a pipeline for new voices.
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Invest in hosting: treat chairs as educators; they safeguard pacing, transitions, and safety.
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Design the socials: plan purposeful evening micro‑teaching and cross‑disciplinary meet‑ups.
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Measure impact: mandate feedback tied to CPD; analyse themes and close the loop next year.
Risks and tensions
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Edutainment vs evidence: keep the energy without losing rigour.
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Access and equity: budgets, visas, disability, and caring responsibilities exclude many; amplify content post‑event.
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“Too innovative?” Novel formats can struggle with recognition and funding; meet audiences halfway and iterate.
How conferences translate to patient care
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Prioritise topics that solve common bottlenecks.
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Put change agents on stage with take‑home resources (e.g., clear radiology guidance on contrast “allergy” and nephropathy).
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Encourage attendees to form local groups to implement one change within two weeks.