CJEM
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Review
Education about sexual and gender minorities within Canadian emergency medicine residency programs.
The CAEP 2021 2SLGBTQIA +i panel sought whether a gap exists within Canadian emergency medicine training pertaining to sexual and gender minority communities. This panel aimed to generate practical recommendations on improving emergency medicine education about sexual and gender minorities, thereby improving access to equitable healthcare. ⋯ The panel outlines eight recommendations for closing the curricular gap. It identifies three perceived or real barriers to the inclusion of sexual and gender minority content in emergency medicine residency curricula. It acknowledges three enabling recommendations that are beyond the scope of individual emergency medicine programs or emergency departments (EDs), that if enacted would enable the implementation of the recommendations. Each recommendation is accompanied by two action items as a guide to implementation. Each of the three barriers is accompanied by two action items that offer specific solutions to overcome these obstacles. Each enabling recommendation suggests an action that would shift emergency medicine towards sociocultural competence nationally. These recommendations set the primary steps towards closing the educational gap.
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Racism and colonialism impact health, physician advancement, professional development and medical education in Canada. The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) has committed to addressing inequities in health in their recent statement on racism. The objective of this project was to develop recommendations for addressing racism and colonialism in emergency medicine. ⋯ Emergency physicians are uniquely positioned to promote equity at each encounter with patients, peers and learners. The 16 recommendations presented here are practical steps to countering racism and colonialism everyday in emergency medicine.
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Delivery of low-value healthcare impacts patients, resources, and overall healthcare sustainability. In Canada, an estimated 30% of tests, treatments, and procedures are unnecessary. As primary decision-makers, physicians have a major influence on healthcare utilisation. Despite numerous approaches to reduce low-value testing, success has been limited. Audit and feedback strategies have demonstrated variable effects in changing physician practice and often do not consider resource requirements. The objective of this study is to evaluate a resource-effective approach to decrease low-value testing in the emergency department (ED) through online education and personalised audit and feedback scorecards for two common ED tests. ⋯ The combination of online education and personalised audit and feedback scorecards may present a resource-effective approach to change physician practice and reduce low-value testing in the ED. Further studies are needed to examine this approach in other departments and clinical topics in Canada.
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Progression in Anglo-American models of out-of-hospital care has resulted in the development of alternative roles for paramedics, including advanced paramedics providing teleconsultations to frontline paramedics. Traditionally provided by physicians, little is known about how paramedics perceive peer-to-peer teleconsultations. This research aimed to explore paramedic perceptions of paramedic-delivered teleconsultations. ⋯ Paramedics reported a number of areas in which paramedic-delivered teleconsultations provided benefits not seen with traditional physician-delivered teleconsultation model. Emergency health systems delivering an Anglo-American model of care should consider the possible benefits of paramedic-delivered teleconsultations.