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The Importance of Civility in Critical Care Resuscitation A 3-year-old patient with diabetic ketoacidosis arrives at your ED. While you are leading the resuscitation, one of your senior colleagues belittles a junior staff member for struggling to site an IV line. These are often hallmarks of healthcare workplaces.
This talk, from Clare Skinner, on music, medicine and leadership , comes from our 2022 DFTB conference in Brisbane. I have learned a lot about life, love, and leadership through my adventures in music. There is leadership operating at many levels. Musicianship, collaboration, and leadership, creating beauty in action.
Today, we will be discussing the article entitled, Gender-focused training improves leadership of female medical students: A randomised trial. In medical emergencies, provider qualities which lead to greater performance and patient outcomes include leadership and teamwork. link] ,Why is this article important?
Clinically, your enthusiasm for providing maximal quality care needs balanced against rescue practicalities and a hostile environment (very different to your warm, dry resuscitation bay) – the cold makes all veins disappear…and you may be the only clinician responder at the scene. So many skills are required other than clinical ones.
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