Dr Egerton-Warburton |
Monash
Emergency clinicians and researchers were well represented at the highlight of
the Australasian Emergency Medicine scientific calendar, the 2014 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine (ACEM) annual conference last week, with a
record 999 delegates attending the event in Melbourne.
Conference
scientific convenor and Director of emergency medicine research at Monash Medical Centre, Dr Diana Egerton-Warburton presented two sessions on alcohol harm
that attracted significant media attention.
Dr
Egerton-Warburton also presented a paper on Monash Health’s “Just Say No to
Just in case cannula" policy. This
successful change initiative at Monash Medical Centre has demonstrated at 20%
absolute reduction of PIVC insertion as well as a reduction in PIVC associated
staph bacteraemia rates.
Professor
Andis Graudins presented in the best fellows paper session about the PICHFORK
trial. Published recently in Annals of Emergency Medicine, the randomised
controlled trial compared intranasal fentanyl and ketamine for moderate to
severe pain in children with isolated limb injury in the emergency department
(ED), giving paediatric clinicians a choice for the first time in the
analgesics they can now offer intranasally.
A
leading clinical toxicologist, Professor Graudins was also involved in two
platform sessions at the conference: one discussing the management of severe
cardiovascular drug poisoning and the use of novel and emerging antidotal
treatments in this class of poisoning and the second about the course and
management of modified-release paracetamol poisoning in Australia.
Meanwhile,
Monash Health trainee Dr Deidre Glynn received the award for best abstract
presentation by an ACEM trainee. Dr
Glynn’s paper, “An accelerated diagnostic pathway for the assessment of chest
pain in the emergency department:
clinical outcome and risk stratification,” was an audit of the current
accelerated diagnostic pathway (ADP) and showed that ADP was safe and effective
in assessing and stratifying low-risk cardiac chest pain presentations to the ED
with a negligible rate of major adverse cardiac events in the study population.
Monash
University adjunct lecturer and Monash Health physician Dr Michaela Mee organised
day four of the program, “Our Patients, Ourselves” together with colleague Dr
Chris Mobbs. Focussing on physician
wellness, the sessions focussed on the benefits to patients of physicians who
look after themselves. Topics included
burnout, work-life balance, cultural aspects of emergency medicine,
ethics, and medicine and creativity.
Monash
Health emergency department’s Drs Simon Craig and John Cheek also presented
original research and plenary sessions in the paediatric emergency medicine
stream at the conference. These included presentations on paediatric UTI,
recent literature in PEM, procedural pain and distress, drug safety during
paediatric resuscitation, and paediatric fracture management. Additional
presentations from Monash Children’s staff included Sharon Teo presenting on
urine clean catch contamination rates, and Daryl Cheng presenting on the effect
of a category 2 pager on clinical outcomes in paediatric patients.
Of
note, a number of BMedSci students from the School of Clinical Sciences (SCS) also
presented at the conference, including Shirley Wong on Rational CTU ordering in
suspected renal colic, Lucia Nguyen on critical procedures in paediatric
emergency medicine, Jess Deitch on paediatric appendicitis, and Sarah McBride
on paediatric PIVC.
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