

Coda Change
Coda Change
Coda Conference: Clinical Knowledge, Advocacy and Community.
Melbourne: 11-14 Sept 2022
codachange.org
Melbourne: 11-14 Sept 2022
codachange.org
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 30, 2015 • 28min
REBOA: Who, What and Why - Deborah Stein
Hemorrhage is the leading cause of preventable death following trauma. Deborah Stein talks REBOA - who, what and why...

Oct 29, 2015 • 18min
Beating Sepsis in South America: What are the challenges? - Flavia Machado
Beating sepsis in Latin America is a serious challenge. Flavia Machado descibes the 5 major issues & how they're being tackled.

Oct 28, 2015 • 27min
Education Theory for the Clinician by Sherbino
Education Theory for the Clinician - Jonathan Sherbino will improve the quality and efficiency of how you teach.

Oct 23, 2015 • 19min
What is a Good Death? by Ashley Shreves
Shreves shows palliative care providers how to re-align with their patients and provide the highest quality end-of-life experience.

Oct 22, 2015 • 25min
Karim Brohi on Tranexamic Acid in Trauma
Karim Brohi on tranexamic acid in trauma. With the "TXA denier's handbook" laminated with sarcasm, Karim's talk is a must-hear.

Oct 22, 2015 • 10min
smaccDUB Rego Information
Roger & Oli go through the latest information about registration for smaccDUB, discussing the program, workshops, student rego, the ticket release, why Dublin, other pre-confernece events, the social program and accommodation. See you in Dublin!

Oct 21, 2015 • 32min
Peter Brindley on The battle of Heroism vs Safety in healthcare
The battle is on...who will win out? The heroic healthcare individual or the faceless safety checklist? Brindley takes saftey talks to a new level. A true SMACC highlight.

Oct 21, 2015 • 20min
HINDS: Crack the Chest. Get Crucified.
John Hinds shows us why he will be so dearly missed in this superb talk from SMACC Chicago. This is about resuscitative thoracotomy but really so much more.

Oct 16, 2015 • 27min
Opioids - Pain, Compassion, Addiction, Malingering
Opioids are extraordinary agents that have been used for millennia for the relief of pain and suffering; however, the history of opioids is also one of abuse and addiction. In the US, we are in the midst of a devastating iatrogenic chapter in this history, a prescription opioid epidemic that kills 15,000 Americans per year by overdose and destroys hundreds of thousands of lives and families.In this presentation we will consider the magnitude and consequences of the current epidemic; describe how clinical organizations and clinicians were appropriated by the pharmaceutical industry so that Americans–5% of the world’s population–consume more prescription opioids than the rest of the world combined; and discuss strategies for managing patients who present to emergency departments with acute or chronic pain complaints that account for our competing mandates to palliate and protect.These strategies center on an assessment of the likelihood that using opioids will deliver benefit or cause harm. For patients at low risk to be harmed by opioids, utilize aggressive multimodal analgesia, including opioids as needed to control acute pain, and prescribe optimal outpatient non-opioid analgesia with a small number of breakthrough opioids if indicated. For patients at high risk to be harmed by opioids, including patients with chronic pain and patients with flags for opioid misuse, avoid using opioids in the ED and outpatient settings, utilize non-opioids to manage symptoms, and, when misuse is suspected, nudge the patient to addiction treatment. The goals of optimal opioid stewardship are to provide effective symptom relief while preventing de novo cases of addiction, to control the supply of opioids in the community, and to protect existing addicts from further harm while promoting recovery. For slides, the HELPCard treatment referral business card, and phraseology to use when managing patients at risk for opioid misuse, go to http://emupdates.com/help

Oct 15, 2015 • 26min
Maitland - Fluids and Kids: What Now?
Kath Maitland, the author of the FEAST study, talks about where we go now with fluids in kids, following FEAST


