Training in procedural skills is an essential aspect of emergency medicine education. One approach to providing this training in the emergency department is to use the bodies of patients immediately after the pronouncement of death. This approach raises complex ethical issues
Death is an inevitable end for all livings things, and humans are no exception. While the majority o...
and the dying patient In order to instruct students in the management of the dying patient, we requi...
Israeli author Daniel Sperling brings to a light a disturbing practice that is taking place in some ...
Training in procedural skills is an essential aspect of emergency medicine education. One approach t...
Procedural competency can be taught to learners through a variety of settings, including procedures ...
Emergency medicine and its academic teaching programs face an ethical dilemma surrounding the questi...
A newly dead cadaver simulation is practiced on the physical remains of the dead before ...
Introduction: The newly deceased patients have long been used in medical schools to teach clinical ...
You are the attending surgeon of a homeless pedestrian who sustained multiple injuries when struck b...
In this issue: -- Practicing on Newly Dead Bodies-- Life versus Death: The Ethical Imperative to Pra...
This session demonstrates a unique utilization of human cadavers to teach procedural skills during t...
Death in the emergency department (ED) occurs frequently. Approximately 249,000 patients die in EDs ...
Background Ethics education is an essential component of graduate medical education in emergency med...
Introduction: One important skill that an emergency medicine trainee must learn is the resuscitation...
Abstract Background To investigate the value of a novel simulation-based palliative care educational...
Death is an inevitable end for all livings things, and humans are no exception. While the majority o...
and the dying patient In order to instruct students in the management of the dying patient, we requi...
Israeli author Daniel Sperling brings to a light a disturbing practice that is taking place in some ...
Training in procedural skills is an essential aspect of emergency medicine education. One approach t...
Procedural competency can be taught to learners through a variety of settings, including procedures ...
Emergency medicine and its academic teaching programs face an ethical dilemma surrounding the questi...
A newly dead cadaver simulation is practiced on the physical remains of the dead before ...
Introduction: The newly deceased patients have long been used in medical schools to teach clinical ...
You are the attending surgeon of a homeless pedestrian who sustained multiple injuries when struck b...
In this issue: -- Practicing on Newly Dead Bodies-- Life versus Death: The Ethical Imperative to Pra...
This session demonstrates a unique utilization of human cadavers to teach procedural skills during t...
Death in the emergency department (ED) occurs frequently. Approximately 249,000 patients die in EDs ...
Background Ethics education is an essential component of graduate medical education in emergency med...
Introduction: One important skill that an emergency medicine trainee must learn is the resuscitation...
Abstract Background To investigate the value of a novel simulation-based palliative care educational...
Death is an inevitable end for all livings things, and humans are no exception. While the majority o...
and the dying patient In order to instruct students in the management of the dying patient, we requi...
Israeli author Daniel Sperling brings to a light a disturbing practice that is taking place in some ...