Preface.
Part 1: Emergency Medicine Topics.
Advanced Life Support.
Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/advanced Cardiac Life Support.
Cardiac Arrest.
Arrest Drug Rationales.
Cardiac and Respiratory Arrest in Children.
Failed Airway Management.
Respiratory Emergencies.
Severe Asthma.
Pulmonary Oedema.
Pulmonary Embolism.
Pneumothorax.
Cardiac Emergencies.
Management of Other Arrhythmias.
Myocardial Infarction/thrombolysis.
Thrombolysis Protocols in AMI.
Trauma.
Multi-trauma.
Burns.
Volume Resuscitation.
Head Injury.
Cervical Spine X-rays.
Shoulder dislocations.
Colles Fracture.
Procedures.
Intravenous Cannulation.
Central Lines.
Arterial Puncture.
Intravenous Arm Block.
Intravenous Sedation.
Simple Nerve Blocks.
Suturing.
Urinary Catheter Insertion.
Lumbar Puncture.
Environmental Emergencies.
Hypothermia.
Hyperthermia.
Near Drowning.
Aeromedical Transport.
Poisoning and Envenomation.
Toxicology: Common Ingestions.
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning.
Snake Envenomation.
Redback Spider Bite.
Box Jellyfish Envenomation.
Stonefish Envenomation.
Blue-ringed Octopus Envenomation.
Neurological Emergencies.
Status Epilepticus.
Migraine.
Subarachnoid Haemorrhage.
Coma.
Paediatrics.
Croup / Epiglottitis / Bronchiolitis.
The Child at Risk.
The Febrile Child.
Intraosseous Infusions.
Other Emergencies.
Diabetic Emergencies.
Acute Anaphylaxis.
Acute Pain Management.
Epistaxis.
Suicide Risk Assessment.
Triage.
Standard Precautions.
Part 2: Clinical Problems for Students.
Problem 1 (poisoning).
Problem 2 (acute shortness of breath).
Problem 3 (acute chest pain).
Problem 4 (trauma).
Problem 5 (near drowning / hypothermia).
Problem 6 (arrhythmias)
"...an excellent introduction to major emergency medicine
topics.
The practical approach adopted, and the addition of six clinical
problems highlighting important points, make it a good primer for
students during their emergency department attachment...well
written, easy to read, and laid out so simply that an index is not
required. Its clinical examples would make useful teaching tools
during an emergency department rotation, and indeed, were probably
conceived as tutorial exercises." Medical Journal of Australia
"Topics are nicely laid out and the authors are very successfully
cut out all the waffle, which makes this book quite fun and easy to
read...I think this is an excellent buy for medical students,
especially for those in their first two clinical years. Rating 4
out of 5" Barts and the London Chronicle
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