Tasty Morsels of Critical Care 000 | Introduction and Premise

27 Oct

At this stage (Oct 2020), PGY17 and still in training I have done a fair number of exams and I feel that now, pushing 40 and vowing never to do another exam, I may have finally perfected my examination technique. But that’s for another post.

I have accumulated a large number of summarised and truncated notes across two specialties (three if you include the echo stuff…) and they exists as a useful compilation of information that I felt tricky enough and important enough to create a note for.

Like many people on t’internet, I feel it’s somewhat of a shame to keep these hidden behind my somewhat poorly secured google account and have tried to translate them to this here forum for public appreciation/scorn. In addition the transposition of said notes from brief notary form to the longer, and better hyperlinked form is an exercise in curation and improvement itself.

Ultimately I am engaged in an ongoing project to turn these notes into spoken word in the style of the great Mark Crislip’s “Gobbet of pus” to which this podcast is a humble and greatly inferior derivative of.

The Goal

The aim here is brief, <5min episodes that address a topic in hopefully just enough detail to stick in the mind in a manner that might be retrievable in a situation of extreme stress – namely a fellowship examination. The knowledge contained will hopefully be sufficient to allow you to not look completely clueless on the ICU round when the topic of PR3+ve ANCA vasculitis comes up.

They are not designed to be comprehensive coverage of a topic and the concepts included are deliberately simplified to maximise retention. As such this hopefully will occupy the niche of “exam prep/board review” in the already somewhat crowded critical care podcast scene.

While tagged and categorised on the site to some degree, I have decided to mix and match the EM with the ICM in the hopes of upholding the shared knowledge base and skill set that the two specialties enjoy. If the ortho turns off the intensivists and the antifungals turns off the emergentologists then apologies in advance and I strongly encourage the healthy use of the “skip” button on your podcatcher/player/thingamadoodle.

While not exactly a podcast of me reading aloud the LITFL or Deranged Physiology entry, it’s hard to overemphasise the importance and primacy of these resources in this publication and any suggestions that some of the material is derivative is entirely valid.

You can find all the details on the podcast on the dedicated page

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