Welcome

Please sign in to gain full access to RCEMLearning
This month we have: Surgery for Haemorrhagic Stroke | RCEM Best Practice Guidelines for Acute Pain | Laura Howard and Gregory Yates - BestBETs | New Online
A 19-year-old woman of 9 weeks gestation presents to the emergency department with intractable vomiting.
30 questions. 30 minutes. Test yourself against your colleagues and the clock to see if you can top the Leaderboard!
Visiting hospital can be scary at any age. Facilitating a positive hospital experience for children is particularly important as many of them will require further hospital attendances and treatments in their lifetime. We don’t want this to be a frightening place for them.
A 74-year-old female with a known history of left bundle branch block presents to the ED with complaints of general malaise, nausea, vomiting, and weakness.
A 36-year-old female presents with acute thoracic back pain and develops weakness in her right leg, eventually diagnosed as spinal cord ischemia.
As with many things, there are no real concrete or evidence-based answers as to which Inotropes and vasopressors to use and when, but here are some thoughts and definitions.
A man in his 60’s presents to the ED with a syncopal episode.
A 7-year-old girl is bought to ED with painful ankles and a purple rash on her legs.