Critical Care Medicine
Upon completion of this activity, you should be able to:
info_outline Professor Andrew Udy: "Brain Monitoring in Traumatic Brain Injury"Critical Care Medicine
Upon completion of this activity, you should be able to:
info_outline Professor Michael O'Leary: "Organ Donation"Critical Care Medicine
After completing this lecture you will be able to:
info_outline Professor Greg Hare: "Patient Blood Management and Treatment of Anemia in Critical Care"Critical Care Medicine
Coming soon
info_outline Ramesh Venkataraman: "Renal Replacement Therapy for AKI"Critical Care Medicine
After watching the lecture you should be able to:
info_outline Professor Kathryn Maitland: "Management of Gastroenteritis in Resource Limited Settings"Critical Care Medicine
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
info_outline Federico Angriman: "Non-Invasive Oxygenation Strategies"Critical Care Medicine
On completion of this lecture, you will be able to:
info_outline Tim Baker: "Essential Emergency & Critical Care"Critical Care Medicine
Upon completion of this activity, you should be able to:
info_outline Professor Charles Sprung: "Foregoing Life-Sustaining Treatment in the ICU"Critical Care Medicine
Upon completion of this activity, you should be able to:
info_outline Paul Young: "Potential Solutions to the Problems of Clinical Trial Science"Critical Care Medicine
On completion of this activity you should be able to:
info_outlineOrgan transplantation using organs donated after death is now the preferred treatment for many end-stage organ failures and is life-changing and life saving for recipients. Outcomes from transplantation are excellent, for example a third of liver transplant recipients are alive 30 years following transplant. Unfortunately, the demand for donor organs outstrips supply. This talk reviews current practice and recommendations.