Sunday, June 05, 2011

3rd Malaysian International MMA Medical Students Conference on Trauma

The 3rd Malaysian International MMA Medical Students conference held at Melaka-Manipal college has just concluded (2nd - 5th June 2011).

I must say that it was a huge success given the limited resources they have, especially since the committee members themselves are busy medical students, many of whom are clinical students.

I wish that more medical students from Universiti Sains Malaysia could attend, and I hope that the Persatuan Sains Perubatan USM can play a bigger and more active role in promoting the conference to the students and at the same time, actively presenting free papers. I am impressed by the quality of the papers presented by the students, from Melaka-Manipal, Universiti Malaya, IMU, Penang Medical, UNIMAS, etc. And these student presenters are not just the 4th and 5th years, but many of them are 3rd years. In fact, one of the participants who won the 2nd place of oral paper is a 3rd year student from Universiti Malaya. I am pretty impressed by the methodology and statistics that he presented. USM students should actively get themselves involved in such projects -- projects that can be simple, yet meaningful and clinically relevant (instead of just doing it for the sake of doing as a chore or pre-requisite on something irrelevant).

I talked on 2 topics: 1) Pitfalls in the management and resuscitation of a trauma patient 2) Tips on interpreting X-rays in emergency department. Besides I was also asked to be one of the judges the oral and poster presentation. Overall, the clinical students were appreciative of my talks, but from my conversation with the pre-clinical students (year 2 and some year 3s), they were lost and not able to follow through the presentation. Nonetheless, the theme of the conference is a rather clinical one: Trauma - Constructing The Future, Growing From the Past.

In my first talk, I first talked about the various sources of errors (right from pre-hospital and triaging to patient disposition) in managing patients in emergency department, particularly in a case of trauma patient. I talked about the Rasmussen model of human error -- skill-based errors, rule-based errors and knowledge-based errors, and then move on to talk about three common erroneous attitudes that can render a healthcare provider prone to error: diagnostic labeling, false negative prediction and false attribution. Most of us as doctors are prone to commit the 'sin' of diagnostic labeling. I then use detection of hemorrhagic shock in trauma as a specific model of discussion because undetected hemorrhagic shock is one of the most tragic thing that can happen to a trauma patient. I talked about the dangers of depending on a drop of BP before diagnosing hemorrhagic shock, and how we should use Shock Index, Mean Arterial Pressure as well as newer markers such as lactate level and lactate clearance to assist us in early detection of hemorrhagic shock.

In the 2nd presentation, I talked about the common useful X-rays in managing a trauma patient -- I focussed particularly on three important X-rays - Cervical, chest and pelvic X-ray. I taught them about how to interpret cervical X-ray in the context of trauma and used hangman fracture and Jefferson fracture as particular topics for discussion. I talked about chest x-ray: criteria to qualify for an adequate good chest x-ray film, and discussed on pneumothorax and traumatic aortic dissection. I reminded the students that tension pneumothorax is not supposed to the radiological diagnosis, it is a clinical diagnosis; and a doctor is supposed to "destroy" the radiological evidence of a tension pneumothorax rather than allowing it to manifest. I also talked about the tips on interpreting a pelvic X-ray -- the importance of visualizing the integrity of the three pelvic rings, tracing the integrity of iliopubic and ilio-ischial line, radiologic 'U' as well as the tear-drop sign. I talked a bit on maxillofacial X-ray, tracing the elephant trunks of Dolan lines, as well as a quick introduction on tripod # and Le Fort #. And then we run through some important things on interpreting wrist, elbow and lower limb X-ray. It is not possible to go through every details in a single talk. I also made the disclaimer that I am not a radiologist, and my talk is geared rather on correlate X-ray findings in the context of clinical setting of managing a trauma patient and therefore the talk would be pragmatic rather than technical.

Below are the slides that I used for my presentations:




5 comments:

xin said...

Thank you Dr.Chew for your passion to teach and contribution in this conference,and also the slides that u had put up in your blog.Unfortunately i could not join both of your talk and thus the slides are very helpful for me. By the way,thanks for coming to the oral and poster scientific presentation. :)

xin said...

Hi,Dr.Chew, I am Hui Xin from Melaka Manipal Medical College.Thanks for your slides.I was not able to attend your talk thus they are very helpful to me. And now i find a great blog for medical students as well!:)

ME said...

Thnx a lot Dr for all the knowledge+tips you shared during the conference. I am very grateful that I join this conference and learnt a lot from it. thnx again:)

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