A 14-year-old girl is haemodynamically unstable following an RTC.
A 27-year-old man presents to the ED with a history of collapse whilst on a treadmill at his local gym. He was witnessed to have been briefly unresponsive but there was no seizure activity.
A 45-year-old man attends the ED 3 days after a motorbike accident.
An 18-month old boy is brought in to the ED by his grandmother with a cough, mild constitutional upset and increasing stridor for approximately 12 hours. He is previously well and immunised up to date
A 21-year-old man presents with a chainsaw injury to his neck on the left side.
A 52-year-old male electrician presents in the ED with a complaint of abdominal pain.
A 54-year-old driver of a pick-up truck is involved in a head on collision with a stationary vehicle at approximately 30mph.
You are met with a patient who you believe is suffering an anaphylactic reaction, however the adrenaline is not having the desired effect. Why might this be and what would you do next?
A 68-year-old man attends the ED one evening with a painful right knee.
A 41-year-old gentleman presented to the ED with a three day history of vomiting blood and the passage of bright red blood rectally.
A 45-year-old man attends the department with a 48 hour history of nausea and vomiting. He also has a diffuse upper abdominal pain.
Palpitations in a young woman for the last week. Her GP says probably a panic attack. Can you stream her to the in-house GP?
Struggling to negotiate CT imaging requests for your paediatric patients? Let the guiding principles of ALARA come to your rescue!
You are asked to see a 51-year-old lady who has been taken to the resus room. The ambulance crew tell you she has taken an overdose 5 hours previously.
A previously fit and well, fully immunised 10-month-old is brought into your ED with a 3 hour history of drowsiness.
An 8-year-old girl is brought into the ED with a head injury. She was out sledging with her family when she lost control and collided with a tree.
A 55-year-old woman, who is usually fit and well, is brought in on a spinal board having fallen off her bicycle whilst going downhill at high speed.
A 40-year-old female is brought in by ambulance having collapsed. She has vomited several times.
You take a history from a 16-year-old American boy and his parents who are on holiday in the UK for the next 2 weeks. He is complaining of a severe sore throat of 5 days duration.
A 7-year-old girl is brought into the ED by her mother on a busy Saturday afternoon after experiencing several nose bleeds at home over the preceding few hours.
Management of Heat Stroke in the ED
An 8-month-old boy is brought to A&E by his mother. He became unwell 2 days ago with vomiting and abdominal pain.
Patients present to ED with complications of etiologies that might not yet have been diagnosed. As ED physicians, its imperative to connect the dots and identify themes, beyond the acute complaints.
Trauma Pre-alert for a 35-year-old gentleman who sustained injury to head and back after diving into the shallow end of a swimming pool.