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Simon Laing, Rob Fenwick & James Yates
The Resus Room
Medicine
Science
English
Emergency Medicine podcasts based on evidence based medicine focussed on practice in and around the resus room.
Website
Episodes
281
14 May 2026
Reframing Anaphylaxis; Roadside to Resus
Anaphylaxis is one of those conditions we think we have got pretty well sorted. Recognise it early, give adrenaline, support the airway and circulation, and crack on. And in fairness, for the vast majority of patients, that approach works really well. But in this Roadside to Resus episode we take a step back and ask a pretty uncomfortable question, have we actually been thinking about anaphylaxis...
44 min
01 May 2026
May 2026; papers of the month
This month's Papers of the Month is a real mix of papers that challenge some of the things we think we know, whilst also highlighting just how important systems and processes are in improving patient care. We start with intracerebral haemorrhage and the tricky issue of blood pressure management. We've all been taught that early, aggressive blood pressure reduction is key, but this paper raises...
33 min
08 April 2026
Excellence in Defibrillation; Roadside to Resus
Timely and effective defibrillation is fundamental to excellent outcomes in cardiac arrest care. But there is a growing body of evidence suggesting that how we deliver those shocks may matter just as much as when we deliver them. Over the last few years we've seen increasing interest in alternative defibrillation strategies, particularly AP pad positioning and double sequential external...
47 min
01 April 2026
April 2026; papers of the month
This month we're heading firmly into the prehospital and community space, looking at how we make decisions when the diagnostics are limited and the system around us is evolving. We start with a really practical question around traumatic pneumothorax. How good are we, clinically, at spotting the patients who actually need urgent decompression? This paper takes a hard look at the performance of the...
34 min
16 March 2026
Decision Making; Roadside to Resus
Decision making sounds like a slightly academic, niche topic… but in reality, it sits underneath every single thing we do in emergency and pre-hospital care. Every patient contact, every test we order, every treatment we start and every one we choose not to – is a decision made in an environment that is time critical, information-light and full of uncertainty. In this episode we take a step back...
44 min
01 March 2026
March 2026; papers of the month
March's Papers of the Month is here and we've got three absolute crackers to get stuck into. First up, we head prehospital to explore pseudo-pulseless electrical activity. This review challenges us to rethink how we approach organised electrical activity without a pulse. We discuss the role of POCUS, the concept of treating profound shock rather than "arrest," and what this means for...
32 min
12 February 2026
Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus
This episode is an absolute cracker! And we can say that as we've got outsider help... We've all been involved with patients where securing the airway with a prehospital anaesthetic feels intuitively right; the patient with a severe head injury after a fall from height, the unrestrained driver in a high-speed collision with devastating chest injuries, or the patient with significant maxillofacial...
58 min
01 February 2026
February 2026; papers of the month
Welcome back to February's Papers of the Month! We start this month looking a the right place to perform a prehospital anaesthetic. Traditionally we've been taught it should be somewhere with 360-degree access to allow the greatest safety, which means intubating in an ambulance and other locations are a no-go. But does it actually reduce complications, and what about other locations and...
32 min
14 January 2026
Paediatric Seizures; Roadside to Resus
Paediatric seizures are common, time-critical events and they're something most of us will deal with, whether that's pre-hospital, in the emergency department, or on the ward. They make up around 1–2% of ED attendances, and about 1 in 20 children will have a seizure at some point. Most seizures self-terminate, but the longer they go on the harder they are to stop, and the higher the risk of harm....
1 h 12 min
01 January 2026
January 2026; papers of the month
Welcome to January's Papers of the Month, which marks 10 years of the podcast! First up, we look at a large multicentre cohort study from the East of England examining the association between prehospital post-intubation hypotension and mortality in severe traumatic brain injury. Preventing secondary brain injury sits at the centre of what we're try to achieve in early TBI care, but this paper...
32 min