Victoria Brazil: Present Better with Tech
Brazil gets you clued up in the art of presentations from newbie to tech savvy in 30 minutes.

Brazil gets you clued up in the art of presentations from newbie to tech savvy in 30 minutes.
Julian Walter clarifies what 21st century tech activities you ought to avoid to keep your medical career in optimum health.
Casey Parker offers up some juicy generalist knowledge from his experience in the far north west of Australia.
Johnston draws us away from the the dry aptness of medical texts to prise open our more expressive, sensitive selves with sage words.
Joe Lex offers up his hard won advice on succeeding as an emergency physician.
Wahl brings her technological know-how to smacc to help you maximise your foamed presence.
Lex reflects upon the art of learning in the field of medicine as an indispensible practise for medical professionals.
Carley delineates the potential of an anarchistic mindset to bring developments in the field of medical care.
Join Weingart on the path to excellence strewn with medical books, and a list of journals which is truly insane. Once Weingart has your head in the right space, revel in the reading at EMCrit's Recommended Reading page.
Cadogan fronts up on the creation of #foamed and current developments in free open access medical education.
Victoria Brazil, Mike Cadogan, Simon Carley, Joe Lex, Chris Nickson, Ming Le Cong, and Anthony Holley consider the pitfalls and potential of free open access medical education and social media.
Carley considers the future of open access and traditional forms of education.
Brazil sizes up the limitations and possibilities of technology and social media applied to medical education.
Joe Lex, Osler, and Hippocrates on free open access medical education as a tenet of medical practice.
A meander through the grounding ideas and aspirations of social media and critical care with Joe Lex, Scott Weingart, Mike Cadogan, Simon Carley, Chris Nickson, Nadie Levick, and Oliver Flower.
Kane Guthrie packs all the Free Open Access Meducation highlights from the past year as he can into 30 minutes.
Alex Tzannes talks reviews areas of advancement and contention in pre-hospital and retrieval medicine for the past year.
Paolini considers key talking points in Emergency Medicine from the past year, including high sensitivity trop T, non invasive real time vital sign measurement, and new forms of anti coagulants.
Seppelt ranges over a year of fraudulent behaviour, reviews, and news in intensive care.
Paul Young's talk suggests how honey bees, senegalese grasshoppers, and desert iguanas might prompt a large RCT investigating paracetamol use in the context of fever.
Goudie expounds upon the virtues of being approximately right rather than precisely wrong when performing cardiac ultrasound.
Marek Nalos gives us the finer details of using ultrasound as a diagnostic tool for respiratory illness.
Bowra examines the possibility of 'turning off the machine' and behaving like a doctor versus a detailed examination of the IVC.
Brian Burns on managing trauma patients in extremis and extreme conditions.
Michael Parr's 'how-to' for maximising hospital care: systematic, protocol driven, and technology intense.
Anthony Holley brings a military perspective to advances made in trauma management on and off the battlefield.
Cath Hurn chews through some data and gives us some of the finer points of fluid resuscitation.
Michelle Johnston gets past the numbers and puts gestalt back into managing a shocked patient.
The erudite John Myburgh condenses fluid resuscitation data down to a palatable brew.
Anthony Delaney examines the evidence for usefulness of goal directed therapy in the septic patient.