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Accident and Emergency

bulletRCGP Joint Statement
bulletWest Midlands

RCGP Joint Statement:
Faculty of Accident and Emergency's Curriculum

Accident and Emergency Medicine features a large volume of patients with a wide breadth of presenting complaints requiring rapid assessment, management or referral. The specialty is at the interface between the hospital and community medicine. The correct management of the patient depends on good communication skills as well as medical knowledge and technical skills.

A local induction course is essential and should include an introduction to the working practice in the Department, orientation with equipment and include a lecture on the overall management of the A&E patient.

This Curriculum outlines the subjects that should be covered during a six month Senior House Officer post. Only a minority of doctors will get practical experience in all the topics covered.

If available, an audit of the departmental computer should record the number and variety of procedures undertaken. The Senior House Officer will be expected to present one audit topic during his or her tenure.

The following curriculum is comprehensive. The intention is that SHOs should have a depth of knowledge/experience of each section appropriate to their workload and future career.

Overview of Management of the A&E Patient

a)     Role of the Paramedic

b)     Triage in A&E

c)      History Taking

d)     Clinical examination

e)     Teamwork

f)        Appropriate Tests and Investigations

g)     Documentation

h)      The Decision to Admit, Refer, Follow Up or Discharge

i)        Communication with General Practitioners

Knowledge Base

1)     Poisoning

a)     Substance Abuse

b)     Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

c)      Drug Overdose (Management of common overdoses and specific therapy)

d)     Use of Poison's Centre

2)     Cardiovascular

a)     Advanced Cardiac Life Support

b)     Acute Cardiac Failure

c)      Collapse Cause Recognition and treatment of Arrhythmias.

d)     (e)

e)     Chest Pain Evaluation and Management of Myocardial Infarction

f)        Hypertensive Emergencies

3)     Neurology

a)     Epilepsy including management of Status Epilepticus

b)     Headache, differential diagnosis including Subarachnoid Haemorrhage.

c)      Assessment and Management of the Unconscious Patient

d)     Cord Compression

4)     Respiratory

a)     Dyspnoea (differential diagnosis)

b)     Acute Asthma in Adults

c)      Acute Hyperventilation

d)     Pneumothorax

e)     Acute Respiratory Failure

f)        Pulmonary Embolus

g)     Pneumonia

h)      Chronic Obstructive Airways Disease

5)     Shock

a)     Definition and Clinical Findings

b)     Types: hypovolaemic, septic, anaphylactic, cardiogenic, neurogenic

c)      Principles of fluid resuscitation

d)     Treatment of Anaphylaxis

6)     Severe Infections

a)     Bone and Joint Infection

b)     Septicaemia

c)      Recognition and treatment of Meningitis

d)     HIV associated illness

7)     Metabolic Emergencies

a)     Diabetic Emergencies: Hypoglycaemia, Hyperosmolar coma and Ketoacidosis

b)     Electrolyte abnormalities

c)      Acid base abnormalities

8)     The Elderly

a)     Collapse in the Elderly

b)     Social Problems of the Elderly

c)      Causes of Being "Off Legs"

d)     Hypothermia in the Elderly

e)     Organic Confusion

f)        Dementia

9)     Paediatric - General

a)     Principles of Paediatric Life Support

b)     Recognition of the seriously ill child including septicaemia / meningitis

c)      Airway Obstruction in Children

d)     Acute Respiratory Illness in Children including asthma / bronchiolitis / pneumonia

e)     Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and Near Misses

f)        Status Epilepticus

g)     Febrile Convulsions

h)      Poisoning in Children

i)        Diarrhoea and Vomiting

j)        Child Abuse

10) Paediatric - Trauma

a)     Paediatric Trauma - Fractures

b)     The Limping child

c)      Paediatric Abdominal and Chest Trauma

d)     Paediatric Head Injury

e)     Burns and Scalds in Children

11) ATLS System

a)     Primary Survey and Resuscitation

b)     Secondary Survey

c)      Definitive Care

12) Surgical Emergencies - Trauma

a)     Trauma in Pregnancy

b)     Gunshot Wounds

c)      Management of Stabbings in A&E

d)     Bomb Blast

e)     The Major Incident

13) Soft Tissue Injury and Infection

a)     Strains and ligamentous injuries

b)     Musculotendinous injury

c)      Haematomas

d)     Bites

e)     Needle Stick Injury

f)        Indications for Physiotherapy

g)     Peripheral Nerve Injury

h)      Cellulitis

i)        Abscess

j)        Compartment Syndrome

14) Wound Management

a)     Wound Management and closure

b)     Wound Dressings

c)      Tetanus Prophylaxis

d)     Antibiotic Usage in A&E

e)     Splints and Bandages

f)        Foreign Bodies in Wounds

15) The Hand

a)     Examination of the Hand

b)     Soft Tissue Injuries of the Hand

c)      Tendon and Nerve Injuries

d)     Fractures of the Hand

e)     Hand Infections

16) Orthopaedic. Upper limb and Neck

a)     Neck Sprain including Wry Neck

b)     Acute Shoulder Injuries

c)      Elbow Injuries

d)     Wrist Injuries

e)     Fracture and Dislocation reduction

f)        Non-traumatic orthopaedic problems

17) Orthopaedic - Lower limb and Back

a)     Back Pain

b)     Pelvis and Hip injuries

c)      Knee Injury

d)     Ankle and Foot Injury

e)     Fracture and Dislocation reduction

f)        Differential Diagnosis of Painful Swollen Leg

18) Craniofacial Problems

a)     Maxillo-Facial Injuries

b)     Dental Emergencies

19) Regional Injury

a)     Head Injuries

b)     The Spine and Spinal Cord

c)      Chest Trauma

d)     Abdominal Trauma

e)     Genito-urinary Trauma

20) Surgical Emergencies - Non-Trauma

a)     Vascular Emergencies (including peripheral vascular disease and aortic aneurysm)

b)     Acute Abdomen

c)      Ingested foreign bodies

d)     G.I. Bleed

21) Gynaecological and Genito-Urinary Emergencies

a)     Vaginal Bleeding

b)     Sexually transmitted disease and Pelvic Inflammatory disease

c)      Scrotal emergencies

d)     Renal Colic

e)     Urinary Tract Infection

f)        Obstetric Emergencies

22) Environmental

a)     Major burns

b)     Minor burns

c)      Inhalation injury

d)     Electrical injury

e)     Near drowning

f)        Heat Stroke and Hypothermia

g)     Casualty decontamination

23) ENT Problems

a)     Epistaxis, Septal haematoma and Nasal Fractures

b)     ENT Infections

c)      Foreign body in Throat and Ear

d)     Upper Airways obstruction

e)     Painful ear

24) Ophthalmological problems

a)     The Red eye

b)     Eye trauma

c)      Sudden visual loss

d)     Orbital cellulitis

25) Anaesthetic Techniques

a)     Airway Management and intubation

b)     Entonox and Sedation

c)      Local Anaesthetic procedures

d)     Regional Intravenous anaesthesia

e)     Peripheral Nerve blocks

26) Pain Control (Trauma)

a)     Drugs and modes of administration

b)     Use of splints and non-pharmacological methods for pain control

c)      Paediatric pain relief

27) Radiographic investigation

a)     Indications for plain radiography, ultrasound and CT scan.

b)     General Rules of X-ray Interpretation

c)      Implications of "Misses" on X-rays, common errors.

28) Psychiatric and behavioural problems in A&E

a)     Deliberate Self Harm - physical & drugs

b)     Drug and Alcohol abuse - management

c)      The violent patient

d)     management of drunk patients

e)     Mental Health Act 1983 - Sectioning in A&E

f)        Acute psychosis

g)     Depression - risk factors for suicide

h)      Munchausen patients

29) A&E and the Law - Police and Courts

a)     Documentation

b)     Patient confidentiality

c)      Police Statements

d)     The Court Appearance

e)     Consent

f)        Sudden Death and the Coroner

g)     Alcohol and Accidents

30) Ethics

a)     Religious practices and conflicts

b)     Self discharge against medical advice

c)      Common Law and Restraint

d)     Organ donation

Skills

1)     Clinical Skills

Areas to be covered include theory, practical and patient experience

a)     Basic Life Support

b)     Oral and Nasopharyngeal Airways

c)      Mask Ventilation

d)     Intubation

e)     Needle cricothyroidotomy

f)        Heimlich Manoeuvre

g)     Defibrillation

h)      CVP

i)        Gaining peripheral intravenous access in adults and children

j)        Insertion of intraosseous needle

k)      Reduction of fractures and dislocations

l)        Needle aspiration of pneumothorax

m)   Insertion of a chest drain

n)      Bladder catheterisation

o)     Plastering techniques

p)     Log rolling and spinal immobilisation

q)     Limb splinting

r)       Surgical skills appropriate to the A & E Department

s)      Suturing and other wound closure techniques

t)        Wound management - dressings

u)      Local anaesthetic techniques

v)      Acute subcutaneous abscess - drainage/incision

w)    Joint examination

x)      Joint aspiration and injection

y)      Nasal packing

z)      A single day spent with a paramedic crew 'in the field' is valuable, though this may need to be in the Senior House Officers' own time.

2)     Communication Skills

a)     Communication Skills in A&E

b)     Multi-Disciplinary Team Working

c)      Talking to Bereaved and Distressed Relatives

d)     Dealing with Difficult Patients and Relatives

e)     Complaints

f)        Accident Prevention and Health Promotion

3)     Managerial Skills

a)     Audit - performance & presentation

b)     Administration

Attitudes

c)      Reliability

d)     Teamwork

e)     Self-motivation

f)        Relationship with:

·        colleagues

·        patients

·        other staff

 

West Midlands

Learning experience in the subject

Emergency Care 

bulletEvaluation of seriously ill patients, initiation of emergency treatment
bulletAssess minor conditions
bulletMajor incidents. Triage
bulletCardiovascular Disease 
bulletCPR: One & two person, infant CPR, assessment of conscious & unconscious patient
bulletCardiac arrest (ACLS)
bulletChest pain. Hypertensive emergencies.

Trauma 

bulletPriorities in trauma - ATLS approach
bulletHead injuries
bulletShock assessment. Differential diagnosis. Principles of fluid resuscitation.
bulletTrauma affecting: Head, face, spine, chest, abdomen, GU, extremity, Burns.

Pulmonary Disease 

bulletAssessment of the dyspnoeic patient.
bulletEmergency treatment of acute asthma.
bulletEmergency treatment of acute respiratory failure.
bulletPulmonary oedema, pulmonary embolus,
bulletChoking - foreign body, pneumothorax, pneumonia, inhalation injury, Carbon monoxide poisoning.

Metabolic & Toxicological Emergencies 

bulletManagement of Ketoacidosis, Hypoglycaemia, electrolyte and acid/base emergencies.
bulletInitial recognition, treatment and removal of poisons. Role of Poison centres.
Management of common poisonings e.g. aspirin, paracetamol, narcotics.

Gastrointestinal Disease 

bulletAcute GI bleed
bulletDiarrhoea & vomiting. Dehydration Abdominal pain.

Genitourinary & Gynae Emergencies 

bulletManagement of renal colic. UTIs. Testicular pain.
bulletBleeding in pregnancy.
bulletPregnant patient with abdominal pain.
bulletEctopic pregnancy.
bulletSexual assault assessment

Ophthalmology Emergencies 

bulletRed eye. Foreign body, corneal abrasion, conjunctivitis, keratitis, iritis, and glaucoma.
bulletTrauma. Chemical burns. Hyphaema.
bulletSudden visual impairment.
bulletHerpes simplex, herpes zoster.
bulletOrbital cellulitis.

ENT Emergencies 

bulletAcute otitis media
bulletEpistaxis
bulletAcute tonsillitis / pharyngitis. Quinsy
bulletDental pain

Neurological Emergencies 

bulletComatose patients.
bulletSevere headache.
bulletFitting patients. Confused patients
bulletEffect of alcohol on findings.

Psychiatric Emergencies 

bulletSuicide/ Parasuicide
bulletAcute psychoses
bulletAcute confusional state
bulletMental Health Act

Paediatric Emergencies 

bulletDehydration
bulletRespiratory distress
bulletSepticaemia/Meningitis
bulletAccidental poisoning
bulletSeizures
bulletAcute abdomen
bulletAcute epiglotitis

Orthopaedic Emergencies 

bulletFractures & dislocations.
bulletHand injuries.
bulletTreatment of sprains & strains. Soft tissue injury, infection.
bulletSeptic arthritis.
bulletOrthopaedic and neuro-vascular examination.

Environmental Emergencies 

bulletHypothermia. Anaphylaxis
bulletNear drowning.
bulletElectrical injury.
bulletBites.

 

Source: D Rapley Surviving GP Training (Download Word version)

 

 

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