DiscoverEMJ PodcastAcute palliative care, hands-free epistaxis relief, and modern laryngoscopy: May 2025 Primary Survey
Acute palliative care, hands-free epistaxis relief, and modern laryngoscopy: May 2025 Primary Survey

Acute palliative care, hands-free epistaxis relief, and modern laryngoscopy: May 2025 Primary Survey

Update: 2025-05-01
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A new survey has found that less than one third of end-of-life patients in Irish emergency departments have their own room. This is only one of the shortcomings found in end-of-life care, explored in two papers to start this episode. Following on from that is a comparison of video and direct laryngosocopy for intubation outcomes. There's also a "Best Evidence" review of the use of nasal clips for stopping nosebleeds, an approach which appears likely to offer advantages over the hands or inventive tongue-depressor contraptions. The finish up this month's episode, there's a return to a topic previously visited one year ago - the RCEM guidelines on cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome. A study from Wales follows up on the adherence to this guidance.


Read the highlights: May 2025 Primary Survey



The EMJ podcast is hosted by:


Dr. Richard Body, EMJ Deputy Editor, University of Manchester, UK (@richardbody)

Dr. Sarah Edwards, EMJ Semior Associate Editor and Social Media Editor, Royal Derby Hospital, UK (@drsarahedwards)


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Acute palliative care, hands-free epistaxis relief, and modern laryngoscopy: May 2025 Primary Survey

Acute palliative care, hands-free epistaxis relief, and modern laryngoscopy: May 2025 Primary Survey

BMJ Group