Clinical Cases and Images has a nice list of procedure guides, in formats such as video, powerpoint and illustrations.
Topics include:
Central line placement. See also Central line placement with ultrasound guidance.
Thoracentesis (pleural tap)
Paracentesis (ascites tap)
Arthrocentesis (joint tap)
Arterial line placement is illustrated in The Internet Journal of Health.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
ECG Wave Maven
ECG Wave Maven is a self assessment program for students and clinicians, developed by physicians from Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital and Harvard University, as a way to improve ECG literacy.
Registration Required
Browse the Case List (quiz mode)
Browse with Diagnoses (reference mode)
View a Random Case
View the Most Recent Case
Search Cases by Diagnosis
Provide Feedback to the Authors
Related Post:
Emergency ECG Module
Registration Required
Browse the Case List (quiz mode)
Browse with Diagnoses (reference mode)
View a Random Case
View the Most Recent Case
Search Cases by Diagnosis
Provide Feedback to the Authors
Related Post:
Emergency ECG Module
CT is us: Radiology Pearls and More
CT is us is created and maintained by The Advanced Medical Imaging Laboratory (AMIL). AMIL is a multidisciplinary team dedicated to research, education, and the advancement of patient care using medical imaging with a focus on spiral CT and 3D imaging.
25 CT pearls added each month.
Teaching files with 1,000's of cases
Radiology Quiz each month with chance to win prizes
All of the quizzes from April 2006 onward have the answers presented in a Vodcast discussion format. To subscribe to the quiz Vodcasts please see instructions page! This month's prize is a CD: No Line on the Horizon by U2.This month's quiz deadline is March 31. They will post the answers and a new quiz on April 1st
Related Posts on Pearls:
Current Psychiatry Online Pearls
PURL's from Journal of Family Practice
Tips on Prescribing for Walmart
Clinical Cases Online
Neurology E-Pearls of the Week
25 CT pearls added each month.
Teaching files with 1,000's of cases
Radiology Quiz each month with chance to win prizes
All of the quizzes from April 2006 onward have the answers presented in a Vodcast discussion format. To subscribe to the quiz Vodcasts please see instructions page! This month's prize is a CD: No Line on the Horizon by U2.This month's quiz deadline is March 31. They will post the answers and a new quiz on April 1st
Related Posts on Pearls:
Current Psychiatry Online Pearls
PURL's from Journal of Family Practice
Tips on Prescribing for Walmart
Clinical Cases Online
Neurology E-Pearls of the Week
Monday, February 23, 2009
What are your patients reading or watching?
Health News Review reviews news stories that make a therapeutic claim about:• Specific treatments• Procedures• Investigational drugs or devices• Vitamins or nutritional supplements• Diagnostic and screening tests A multi-disciplinary team of reviewers from journalism, medicine, health services research and public health assesses the quality of the stories using a standardized rating systerm. Stories are graded and critiques are published on this website.
If your patient asks you about something they heard on the news this site is helpful for evaluating the credibility of the claims.
If your patient asks you about something they heard on the news this site is helpful for evaluating the credibility of the claims.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Information Overload
I have been giving links to different sources of information, and that can be a good thing(as a librarian I tend to think this!), but there is also the challenge of information overload.The ability to find relevant, accurate, helpful information to answer clinical questions is a skill that can be learned, but it's not all about looking at more and more sites.
Ask yourself:
- Which sites are easier for me to navigate? Medline comes in many interfaces from PubMed to Ebsco Medline, plus many others.
- Have I looked at the sources that are respected by others in my field, or who are experts in their field? Medical Associations often issue guidelines based on extensive research and discussion.
- Am I avoiding looking things up because I don't know where to start and feel overwhelmed? If you work backwards, starting with a guideline from a site like Guideline.gov, or a chapter from Uptodate, you can see where the writers got their information in their list of references.
Remember that I am available for questions you might have, which is another way to deal with information overload.
BMC Family Practice Journal
BMC Family Practice is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of primary health care, including clinical management of patients, professional training, shared decision making, and the organisation and evaluation of health care in the community.
Monday, February 2, 2009
How do I find an article? Part 2: PMID number
The PMID number is a unique identifier for medical articles. While it's nice to have authors, title, page numbers etc., the PMID is a quick and easy way to capture that information. You'll find the PMID number at the end of each reference in PubMed. It also pops up in Uptodate--they provide a list of articles the author consulted for whatever section you are reading. So for example:
- If you want to read one of these original articles, go to the references at the end of the section.
- Click on the one you are interested in.
- Look at the bottom of the page for the PMID number.
- The PMID number is a unique identifier for articles in Medline, and if you type it into the search box, either you will get the full text article(yay!!) or need to provide a credit card number to the publisher for "pay per view."
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