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30 questions. 30 minutes. Test yourself against your colleagues and the clock to see if you can top the Leaderboard!
A 45-year-old male with a history of hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome presents to the ED with paroxysmal headaches and elevated blood pressure.
You've just arrived for your first ED shift, excited to be allocated to resus. The red phone rings. A 45-year-old female, amitriptyline overdose, P120, BP85/45, GCS 5, ETA 5 minutes.
Sudden visual loss is a presentation one should expect and be prepared to see, as an emergency physician.
This month we have Ketamine and Ondansetron, Hyperemesis Gravidarum, an interview with Vicky Price (SAM), Antibiotics for brain injury and New Online
A cyanosed young lady sitting comfortably in the waiting room.
A 3-year-old child presents to your emergency department with a rash, fever and vomiting.
As emergency medicine clinicians you’ll be used to patients with behaviours that are really challenging. Did you know that there’s an actual definition of this?
A man in his 20s attends the ED after injuring his foot while playing football.