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CanadiEM Podcasts: CRACKCast, ClerkCast, CarmsCast, First Year Diaries

CanadiEM Podcasts: CRACKCast, ClerkCast, CarmsCast, First Year Diaries

The CanadiEM.org Team · Brent Thoma

291 episodesEN

Show overview

CanadiEM Podcasts: CRACKCast, ClerkCast, CarmsCast, First Year Diaries has been publishing since 2016, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 291 episodes, alongside 1 trailer or bonus episode. That works out to roughly 130 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a fortnightly cadence.

Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 18 min and 34 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. It is catalogued as a EN-language Health & Fitness show.

The catalogue appears to be on hiatus or wound down — the most recent episode landed 3 years ago, with no new episodes in over a year. The busiest year was 2017, with 88 episodes published. Published by Brent Thoma.

Episodes
291
Running
2016–2023 · 7y
Median length
26 min
Cadence
Fortnightly

From the publisher

CanadiEM aims to improve emergency care in Canada by building an online community of practice for healthcare practitioners and providing them with high quality, freely available educational resources. Our podcasts are found on this channel and include: CRACKCast (Core Rosen's and Clinical Knowledge) helps residents to "Turn on their learn on" through podcasts that assist with exam prep by covering essential core content. ClerkCast: A podcast focused on clinical clerks and their time in emergency medicine. It provides an overview of key topics that help you to rock your EM rotations. First Year Diaries: A podcast focused on the first year of independent clinical practice in emergency medicine and all of its trials and tribulations. Physicians as Humans explores the struggles that physicians face and how they have overcome them. From addictions, mental health issues, and all manner of personal crises will be discussed to help let those who are currently struggling know that they are not alone.

Latest Episodes

View all 291 episodes

S1 Ep 4CAEP Capsule 23: Day 3 [E04]

In the final episode of the series, Sam Savard interviews Dr. Kevin Wasko on the power packed panel he hosted. Additionally, we highlight a member of the CanadiEM team who was featured in the conference.

Jun 4, 202324 min

S1 Ep 3CAEP Capsule 23: Day 2 [E03]

The second day of CAEP truly embodied the essence of phrase "Work Hard, Play Hard." It was a jam-packed day filled with remarkable talks, enlightening presentations, and a thought-provoking plenary by Dr. Heather Patterson on using photography to cope with burnout.Tune in to our podcast, where our host, Sam Savard, provides a comprehensive summary of the day.

May 31, 202313 min

S1 Ep 2CAEP Capsule 23: Day 1 [E02]

In this episode, our host, Sam Savard, conducts an insightful interview with Dr. Sunil Mangal to capture the essence of the remarkable first day at CAEP alongside a glimpse into the numerous other captivating sessions and discussions that took place throughout the day.

May 29, 202319 min

S1 Ep 1CAEP Capsule 23: The Intro [E01]

trailer

As the highly anticipated annual CAEP conference approaches, we are thrilled to announce our partnership with CanadiEM to bring you "The CAEP Capsule," a dynamic podcast series that will give you a brief overview of each conference day. Get ready for insightful interviews, succinct summaries, and thought-provoking discussions, all designed to capture the essence of this renowned conference. The first episode serves as a trailer to both the conference and the series. Stay tuned for more amazing summaries from CAEP 2023!

May 25, 20232 min

Social Justice EM Podcast E02: Metis Worldview and Emergency Medicine with Dr. Jill Roberge

E

In this episode, Amie speaks with Dr. Jill Roberge, a Métis physician about how she integrates Métis Worldview into her practice. We discuss her upbringing and background, why she chose emergency medicine and her experiences with racism in healthcare. We also discuss how the Métis worldview can be practiced every day through a compassionate lens. Dr. Roberge also provides some tangible tips on dealing with racism in healthcare for providers and how she addresses it in her everyday life and practice. Warning: Explicit language in this episode.

Jul 6, 202233 min

Tales From The Trenches E06 : Covid Transitions- Resident to Med Staff

Overview: In this episode, Tiffany shares her transition from Resident to Med Staff during the COVID pandemic. She candidly shares her challenges balancing job uncertainty, family, kid zoom classes, finishing residency and a cross country move. Take a listen! Host: Tiffany Proffitt DO, Staff Emergency Medicine Physician Honor Health Short Bio: Dr. Tiffany Proffitt is an Emergency Medicine Physician in Scottsdale, Arizona, USA. I completed residency in Michigan, USA with Spectrum Health Lakeland. During my time I graduated from the Medical Education Track. I am honored to be one of the inaugural fellows of EMRACAST, the official resident run podcast of EMRA. In my Med Staff life I am the co-founder of the HonorHealth Women Physicians Leadership Council, advancing leadership opportunities for over 550 women physicians. In my spare time, I cart my twin eight-year-olds to various activities, laugh with my husband and podcast! I am a MedEd enthusiast and proud to be part of the CanadiEM team!

Jun 22, 202224 min

Tales From The Trenches E06 : Covid Transitions- Resident to Med Staff

Overview: In this episode, Tiffany shares her transition from Resident to Med Staff during the COVID pandemic. She candidly shares her challenges balancing job uncertainty, family, kid zoom classes, finishing residency and a cross country move. Take a listen! Host: Tiffany Proffitt DO, Staff Emergency Medicine Physician Honor Health Short Bio: Dr. Tiffany Proffitt is an Emergency Medicine Physician in Scottsdale, Arizona, USA. I completed residency in Michigan, USA with Spectrum Health Lakeland. During my time I graduated from the Medical Education Track. I am honored to be one of the inaugural fellows of EMRACAST, the official resident run podcast of EMRA. In my Med Staff life I am the co-founder of the HonorHealth Women Physicians Leadership Council, advancing leadership opportunities for over 550 women physicians. In my spare time, I cart my twin eight-year-olds to various activities, laugh with my husband and podcast! I am a MedEd enthusiast and proud to be part of the CanadiEM team!

Jun 22, 202224 min

Ep 231CRACKCast E231 - Genitourinary System

This updated episode of CRACKCast reviews Chapter 40 - Genitourinary System in Rosen's 9th Edition.

Apr 1, 202233 min

Journal Club by CanadiEM E05: The ARREST trial and ECMO programs

In this episode, hosts Jayneel Limbachia, Dakoda Herman, and Jake Domm discuss ECMO and mature ECMO programs, appraise the ARREST trial and consider the future of cardiac arrest care with expert guest Dr. James Gould. References: Yannopoulos D, Bartos J, Raveendran G, Walser E, Connett J, Murray TA, Collins G, Zhang L, Kalra R, Kosmopoulos M, John R, Shaffer A, Frascone RJ, Wesley K, Conterato M, Biros M, Tolar J, Aufderheide TP. Advanced reperfusion strategies for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and refractory ventricular fibrillation (ARREST): a phase 2, single centre, open-label, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2020 Dec 5;396(10265):1807-1816. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)32338-2. Epub 2020 Nov 13. PMID: 33197396; PMCID: PMC7856571. Lamhaut L, Hutin A, Puymirat E, Jouan J, Raphalen JH, Jouffroy R, Jaffry M, Dagron C, An K, Dumas F, Marijon E, Bougouin W, Tourtier JP, Baud F, Jouven X, Danchin N, Spaulding C, Carli P. A Pre-Hospital Extracorporeal Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (ECPR) strategy for treatment of refractory out hospital cardiac arrest: An observational study and propensity analysis. Resuscitation. 2017 Aug;117:109-117. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2017.04.014. Epub 2017 Apr 14. PMID: 28414164. Matsuoka Y, Goto R, Atsumi T, Morimura N, Nagao K, Tahara Y, Asai Y, Yokota H, Ariyoshi K, Yamamoto Y, Sakamoto T; SAVE-J Study Group. Cost-effectiveness of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A multi-centre prospective cohort study. Resuscitation. 2020 Dec;157:32-38. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.10.009. Epub 2020 Oct 17. PMID: 33080369. Grunau B, Shemie SD, Wilson LC, Dainty KN, Nagpal D, Hornby L, Lamarche Y, van Diepen S, Kanji HD, Gould J, Saczkowski R, Brooks SC. Current Use, Capacity, and Perceived Barriers to the Use of Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation for Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Canada. CJC Open. 2020 Nov 13;3(3):327-336. doi: 10.1016/j.cjco.2020.11.005. PMID: 33778449; PMCID: PMC7985000. Sun T, Guy A, Sidhu A, Finlayson G, Grunau B, Ding L, Harle S, Dewar L, Cook R, Kanji HD. Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) for emergency cardiac support. J Crit Care. 2018 Apr;44:31-38. doi: 10.1016/j.jcrc.2017.10.011. Epub 2017 Oct 12. PMID: 29040883. Hsu CH, Meurer WJ, Domeier R, Fowler J, Whitmore SP, Bassin BS, Gunnerson KJ, Haft JW, Lynch WR, Nallamothu BK, Havey RA, Kidwell KM, Stacey WC, Silbergleit R, Bartlett RH, Neumar RW. Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation for Refractory Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (EROCA): Results of a Randomized Feasibility Trial of Expedited Out-of-Hospital Transport. Ann Emerg Med. 2021 Jul;78(1):92-101. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2020.11.011. Epub 2021 Feb 1. PMID: 33541748; PMCID: PMC8238799.

Mar 1, 20221h 3m

Tales From The Trenches E05: Two Years in a Pandemic

In this episode, Tiffany talks with Dr. Kevin Dong from Hamilton, Canada, and CanadiEM podcast extraordinaire! We reflect on two years of practicing medicine during the COVID pandemic and share our own unique challenges, lessons learned and motivation to continue to work in the department as we enter our third year of the pandemic. Take a listen! Short Bio: Dr. Kevin Dong. Kevin is an Emergency Medicine physician at the Hamilton Health Sciences in Hamilton, Canada. He is an assistant clinical professor at McMaster University and he is currently the Director of Continuing Professional Development with the Tri-Divisions of Emergency Medicine. He is a FOAMed enthusiast and is heavily involved in the CanadiEM world. Twitter: @kevinjdongMD

Feb 23, 202228 min

Social Justice EM E01: What's Nuclear Energy Got To Do With It? Emergency Medicine and Climate Change

In this episode, Amie Archibald-Varley talks to Dr. Chris Keefer, an Emergency Medicine physician is who is a pro-nuclear climate and clean air activist and the host of the Decouple Podcast and WeCANDUIt! podcast. We discuss Dr. Keefer's trip to The UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, on how the summit's outcomes will impact climate action and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). We discuss the impact of waste in hospitals as well as tackle the conversation in relation to sustainable energy sources for healthcare.

Feb 15, 202228 min

Tales From the Trenches E04: COVID in India

Oct 18, 202126 min

Ep 228CRACKCast E228 - Neck Trauma

Core Questions Outline the anatomic borders of the anterior and posterior triangles of the neck. Detail the borders and associated contents of the three zones of the neck.(Box 37.1) List 5 hard and 5 soft signs of penetrating neck trauma (Box 37.2) List 5 hard and 5 soft signs of vascular injury Outline an approach to the management of a patient with a hemorrhaging penetrating neck wound. Describe the management of a patient with a suspected venous air embolism. Outline the steps in performing an awake intubation. Outline the indications for imaging to screen for blunt cerebrovascular injury.(Table 37.2) Detail the appropriate imaging studies to order in the patient at risk for or with suspected blunt cerebrovascular injury. Wisecracks What structure, if violated, should make you suspect injury to the deep tissues of the neck? What study or studies is/are indicated to evaluate a patient for suspected esophageal injury. List 4 mechanisms of morbidity and mortality that occur as the result of vascular injury in the neck. What is the most common mechanism of injury causing blunt cerebrovascular injury? List 3 mechanisms that cause pulmonary edema in a patient post-hanging.

Aug 7, 202138 min

Ep 227CRACKCast E227 - Spinal Injuries

Core Questions Outline the Denis Classification system for determining the stability of spinal injuries List 5 flexion, 2 flexion-rotation, 3 extension, and 2 vertical compression spinal injuries (Table 36.1) Wedge Fracture Flexion Teardrop Fracture Clay Shoveler's Fracture Spinal Subluxation Bilateral Facet Dislocation Altlanto-occipital Dislocation Anterior Atlanto-axial Dislocation Unilateral Facet Dislocation Posterior Neural Arch Fracture Hangman's Fracture Extension Tear Drop Fracture Burst Fracture Jefferson Fracture Outline the mechanisms and potential complications of the following injuries: How are odontoid fractures classified and what causes them? Organize the spinal motor, sensory, and reflex examinations based on spinal levels. (Tables 36.3, 36.4, 36.5) Central Cord Anterior Cord Brown-Sequard Detail the following cord syndromes: List the components of the following imaging decision-making tools: Canadian C-Spine Rule, NEXUS C-Spine Rule. Wisecracks How do you calculate Power's Ratio and why is it important? What injuries is the open-mouth odontoid radiograph best at visualizing? How are whiplash-associated injuries classified? At what spinal level would you expect an injury to potentially cause Horner's Syndrome? What is spinal shock and what physical exam finding indicates its end?

Jul 16, 202136 min

Journal Club by CanadiEM - E04 Approach to Systematic Reviews and Meta Analyses

CanadiEM Journal Club E04 Systematic reviews and meta analyses show notes Welcome back to Journal Club by CanadiEM! In this episode we go over an approach to systematic reviews and meta analyses based on Oxford centre of EBM, and learn about diagnosing pneumothorax with ultrasound vs X-ray Using the Oxford centre of EBM tool, we will ask: What question(s) did the systematic review address? Is it likely that important, relevant studies were missed? Were the criteria used to select articles for inclusion appropriate? Were the included studies sufficiently valid for the type of question asked? Were the results similar from study to study? What were the results? What is the clinical significance of the results? and then a clinical pearl on pneumothorax!! Hosts: Dakoda Herman Jayneel Limbachia Jake Domm Paper: "Chest ultrasonography versus supine chest radiography for diagnosis of pneumothorax in trauma patients in the emergency department" Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews by Chan KK, Joo DA, McRae AD, Takwoingi Y, Premji ZA, Lang E, Wakai A What question(s) did the systematic review address? P: Trauma patients in the ER I: chest ultrasonography by non rad physicians C: Chest xray O: diagnosis of pneumothorax, improved patient safety Secondary: investigate potential sources of hetero such as type of CUS operator, type of trauma, type of US probe on test accuracy T: inception to 10 April 2020 Is it unlikely that important, relevant studies were missed? This study included prospective, paired comparative accuracy studies in which patients were suspected of having pneumothorax. Patients must have undergone both CUS by a frontline non-radiologist and CXR, as well as CT of the chest or tube thoracostomy as the reference standard. The authors carried out systematic searches in the following electronic databases: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials; MEDLINE; Embase; Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) Plus; Database of Abstracts of Reviews of EIects; Web of Science core collection (which includes: Science Citation Index Expanded; Social Sciences Citation Index; Arts & Humanities Citation Index; Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science; Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Sciences & Humanities; and Emerging Sources Citation Index; and Clinicaltrials.gov from database creation to April 2020. The authors also handsearched reference lists of included articles and reviews, retrieved via electronic searching, for potentially eligible studies. Additionally, they carried out forward citation searching of relevant articles in Google Scholar and looked at the "Related articles" on PubMed. They did not limit the search to Englsih language only and included articles published in all languages. Their search strategy in volved the use of MeSH terms such as Pneumothorax, Radiography, Ultrasonography, and focused assessment with ultrasonography for trauma. They also used many text words. Using this search strategy 3473 records were identified. 1180 duplicated records were removed, leaving 2293 records to be screened. These records were screened by two of the authors for their relevance, when there was a discrepancy a third author decided whether to include the record or not. 2268 records were excluded, leaving 25 full-text articles that were assessed for eligibility. 12 studies were excluded - 5 missing CUS/CXR/CT chest/chest tube, 4 CUS not performed by frontline non-radiologist physicians, 2 wrong patient population, 1 wrong study design. A total of 13 studies were included in qualitative and quantitative analysis. 9 studies using patients as units of analysis included in primary analysis. 4 studies using lung fields as units of analysis included in secondary analysis. Authors provide a nice figure depicting this. Authors did not contact experts for unpublished data but were very thorough and transparent in their search strategy. I think it is unlikely that important, relevant studies were missed. Were the criteria used to select articles for inclusion appropriate? The authors of this study clearly outlined their study inclusion and exclusion criteria. They included prospective, comparative accuracy studies in which patients were suspected of having pneumothorax. They included trauma patients in the emergency department setting. Patients must have undergone both CUS by frontline non-radiologist physicians and CXR as index tests, as well as CT of the chest or tube thoracostomy as the reference standard. The two main index tests were CUS completed by a frontline nonradiologist physician and CXR, both being performed in the supine position. If data on specific CUS findings (such as the absence of lung sliding, absence of B-lines or comet-tail artefact, presence of lung point, and absence of lung pulse) were available, they planned to assess the diagnostic accuracy of these individual CUS findings. The target condition was traumati

Jul 5, 202137 min

Carmscast Episode 04: Reflections

Welcome to Carmscast, the podcast that aims to answer all the questions medical students have when creating a competitive CARMS application. In today's episode, our co-hosts, Kara and Dakoda, mix up the podcast format and reflect on their CaRMS experience over the last year. Dr. Kara Tastad is now a graduate of the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine. She will soon be starting her first year of emergency medicine residency at the University of Toronto. Dr. Dakoda Herman just graduated from the Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. He will be trading places with Kara as he begins residency in Family Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. For shownotes Click Here

Jun 29, 20211h 9m

CAEP Daily: Day 3 (June 17)

Jun 17, 20218 min

CAEP Daily: Day 2 (June 16)

This year, CanadiEM has partnered with the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, EMOttawa, and the Skeptic's Guide to Emergency Medicine to help promote #CAEP21: CAEP at the Forks - Rising to the Challenge. From June 15-17, 2021 we will be publishing The CAEP Daily, a journalistic summary of highlights from the conference. Please join the discussion!

Jun 15, 202111 min

The CAEP Daily: Day 1 (June 15)

CanadiEM has partnered with the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, EMOttawa, and the Skeptic's Guide to Emergency Medicine to help promote CAEP at the Forks - Rising to the Challenge. From June 15-17, 2021 we will be publishing The CAEP Daily, a journalistic summary of highlights from the conference. Please join the discussion!

Jun 15, 20219 min

Ep 226CRACKCast E226 - Facial Trauma

Core Questions Detail the nerve supply of the face. What bones form the borders of the orbit? Outline the LeFort fracture classification system. What is the tongue blade test and how is it performed? Outline the Ellis System for dental fracture classification. Outline an approach to the management of ingested/aspirated teeth. Describe three techniques for the reduction of anterior TMJ dislocations. List four indications for Panorex X-rays. Wisecracks At what age do the following sinuses become aerated: Mastoid Ethmoid Facial Maxillary Sphenoid What is the association between the presence of facial injuries and the presence of intracranial injuries/cervical spine injuries? What facial lacerations require prophylactic antibiotics? List three solutions in which avulsed teeth can be placed to preserve them.

Jun 10, 202130 min