CardioWebinar

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CardioWebinar

CardioWebinar

@CardioWebinar

Free Cardio-webinars, organised by @vish_luther, @balrik & @damandev - 3 UK Cardiologists. In partnership with @LHCHFT

Liverpool, England Katılım Nisan 2020
19 Takip Edilen2.3K Takipçiler
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CardioWebinar
CardioWebinar@CardioWebinar·
📢Today we launch cardiowebinar.com ⚡️Free access to our 60 prior webinars since the start of the pandemic ⚡️For doctors, nurses, physiologists - everyone, across the globe! ⚡️Certificates of attendance ⚡️Home to all our future events Thanks to our sponsors @LHCHFT
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Rob Galloway
Rob Galloway@DrRobgalloway·
Thoughts on the NHS….. Einstein said the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. But this is what is happening in the NHS right now; hoping things will improve when just giving the same failing medicine. As an A&E doctor, I am proud of what I do and would not want any other job But I am getting increasingly demoralised that despite best efforts, it can seem like we are moving deckchairs on the NHS titanic and just applying a sticky plaster to ever expanding gaping wounds of deep routed societal problems. The relentless pressures are getting worse and we are insane if we think the same solutions will solve the problems we have – even with more money and slightly different politics. We need to have a different approach if we are to have a functioning NHS in the future We need to look at the issues and potential solutions 1) A large amount of the problems we see are preventable - problems from poor diet, lack of exercise, smoking, drugs and crucially poverty and people’s lack of opportunity and optimism about the future. Efforts should be made to prevent the problems not react to them 2) We must ask ourselves are we doing too much for people and extending their length of life but not addressing if it gives them a quality of life that they would want. Just because we can do so much for patients, doesn’t mean we should. 3) On the whole, the clinician treating you now, are feeling less happy with taking on risk than those ten years ago – hence why there is often over investigation instead of simple reassurance. The risk of being complained about and being sued is one reason. But how to take risk is not taught explicitly and we are losing significant numbers of highly experienced senior decision makers such as GPs who have learnt these skills through years of practice and are replacing them with much more junior staff who are good at working within their defined skills and protocols but who do not have the training and experience to be good “riskaticians”. This is also true of algorhythm based triage systems where the default position is often 999 ambulance and A&E without consideration of this decisions on other patients whose care is delayed because there are only finite resources. 4) We are providing care in the wrong place. I see so many people who could have been cared for by out of hours senior decision makers who can make a judgment call to treat at home, rather than coming to hospital. Instead, paramedics have to bring these complex elderly patients into hospital where they are then seen by junior staff who often can over investigate and admit which leads to deconditioning and deterioration. 5) Medical services are designed around 9-5 Monday to Friday working. This needs complete overhaul so that the same quality of care is provided 24/7 6) The private sector is not the solution. Where profit becomes before patients there is often a hidden bias to overinvesting and over-treating. The money spent on private sector investment run diagnostic centres may well be used in a better way. 7) Mental health care needs to be prioritised as much as medical care. Both are under resourced but the lack of beds and community care for mental health patients creates enormous pressures on emergency services and crucially leads to unacceptable care for the most vulnerable of patients. 8) Any remodelling of the NHS has to be a phased approach – stabilise the current crisis with investment in community as well as hospital care and then longer term transformation so that we truly become a health service rather than a reaction to illness service, 9) Key to a needed NHS transformation is keeping experienced staff and the only way to do this is empowerment of their decision making, flexible working and appropriate renumeration and recognition. The biggest risk to the NHS is that staff will soon stop caring and just go into self-preservation mode. So worry when people like me stop writing messages like this, rather than when we do! My biggest worry is that politicians won’t want to face up to these incredibly difficult problems and will try and kid themselves and us that a bit more money and tinkering will solve the issue. It wont. We need radical new thinking now and the politicians to realise this. Without this, the NHS will wither away to be replaced by privatised medicine and the care which will all deserve, will only be available to the richest in society. Please feel free to share these thoughts so that politicians of all shades can see the reality and thoughts of someone on the front line rather than just the sanitised version of the NHS they are shown. Thank you for reading my post weekend literary catharsis Rob Galloway , a tired but still optimistic (just) A&E Doctor. 📷
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CardioWebinar
CardioWebinar@CardioWebinar·
📢 Major announcement: 📢 Our new webinar series 'Fundamental Cardiology' is now live! 🫀Sessions targeted at a more junior level 🫀Guide you from the basics to more advanced concepts 🫀Case-based sessions, ECG interpretation, PACES pearls and more!
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CardioWebinar
CardioWebinar@CardioWebinar·
🚀 Get ready for something big! Our dedicated SHO committee team is working tirelessly to bring you an exciting series, launching in mid-September. Stay tuned for updates! 💼🩺
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Dr Vishal Luther
Dr Vishal Luther@vish_luther·
-We welcomed back @ChristianHeeger to @CardioWebinar: PVC ablation in the Aortic Cusps using #QDOT⚡️ -Includes his demo👀cusps & coronaries with contrast through the catheter -Watch at cardiowebinar.com (front page) -Register (free) to see our other 29 advanced EP webinars
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CardioWebinar
CardioWebinar@CardioWebinar·
📣 Join us for an exciting webinar tailor-made for ANPs! “A Day in Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinic" by Antonia Hardiman from Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital (@NNUH) 📅 May 5th, 2023 at 1:00 PM Register at cardiowebinar.com 🖥️👩‍⚕️👨‍⚕️ @nmcnews @TheBJCA
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CardioWebinar
CardioWebinar@CardioWebinar·
👨‍⚕️👩‍⚕️ Calling all specialist nurses in Cardiology! 🚨Join our national teaching programme delivered by experts ✅ Engaging webinars ✅ Common Cardiology presentations ✅ MDT discussions,Q&A sessions 📆Stay tuned for finalized dates! @m4ggiesimpson @ACNAPPresident @BritishCardioSo
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Tin Lwin
Tin Lwin@TinLwin9·
🔥Final session of #ACHD series. Last but not least! Must-attend talk for trainees, GP colleagues to understand referral system of ACHD pts and managing pregnancy and advices about contraception! Essential topic will be conducted by excellent speaker @YiotaMitropoul1 🙏🏻
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