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EEAST General Broadcast

East of England Ambulance Service

EEAST General Broadcast

An Education, Health and Fitness podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
EEAST General Broadcast

East of England Ambulance Service

EEAST General Broadcast

Episodes
EEAST General Broadcast

East of England Ambulance Service

EEAST General Broadcast

An Education, Health and Fitness podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of EEAST General Broadcast

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TRIGGER WARNING- this podcast talks about the death of premature babies.Working in the community means that clinicians can be faced with any type of incident. This means needing the right equipment to deal with whatever they face.In the tragic
In this episode Joanna Wells talks to Liam Dunn, Head of Patient Safety along with Patient Safety Specialists, Kirsty Wilson, Sancha Dennehy, Jen McClagish.They discuss who the Patient Safety Team are, what do they do as a team, what they look
It's important to think about how we are safe on the front line, doing the work day in and day out, but how do our polices, processes and practices across an entire organisation impact the safety of our work?Steven Shorrock is an interdisciplin
This episode is in two parts. In the first part, Stroke Lead, Dan Philips is in a Q&A session with Kayleigh Martin, where Dan explains the 10-10 project that aims to reduce time on scene for seriously unwell patients. The second part is also wi
Critical care paramedics bring more than just advanced clinical skills, they also have a huge amount of non-technical tricks can help keep patients and staff safe at scene and make the best choices.This week, Patient Safety Integration Lead Jor
In this episode Jo Wells, Patient Safety Improvement Specialist had a chat with Julie Hargreaves, Patient Safety PSIRF Lead about all things related to the new Patient Safety Incident Response Framework (PSIRF) and how it will affect the staff,
Dr Esther Murray is a Health Psychologist working at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry. She has a keen interest in moral injury, the term used when people are witness to shocking or traumatic events that change their outlook
We all have to deal with pressure. Sometimes it's minor like "do I go left or right at the roundabout?". Sometimes it's the difference between life and death. But how can we manage and work with that pressure, rather than against it?Dr Stephen
Childbirth in the community can be one of the most challenging jobs any frontline clinician faces.In this episode, our previous Patient Safety Integration Lead, Jordan, sat down with our Clinical Lead, Daimon Wheddon and Rose Bedford, Consultan
There are few roles like the emergency services, where you train to deal with the unexpected in challenging environments, but most of those roles are based in the military. None more so than flying a jet fighter into a war zone. Having to think
In this episode, our previous Patient Safety Integration Lead, Jordan, sat down with Martin Bromiley to discuss human factors in clinical settings. They discuss what safety truly is, how to check yourself in a stressful situation, how to work w
In this episode, our previous Patient Safety Integration Lead, Jordan, sat down with Andy Collen to discuss investigations and decision making in Paramedic Practice. Andy is a paramedic who has completed a huge range of roles, including being t
This week, Clinical Lead Daimon Wheddon and the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital's Dr Caroline Barry, sit down to talk ReSPECT.The ReSPECT process provides a written record of patients' treatment preference and focuses on treatments to b
Front line crews these days can be called to a wide variety of jobs. More often, the ambulance service is called to patients experiencing episodes of poor mental health. it's important to understand how clinicians can support patients through t
We cannot care for our patients if we don't take care of ourselves.In these incredibly challenging times it is vital that we take time to look after ourselves, to give us the strength and ability to continue during what is likely to be a challe
It's important to think about how we are safe on the front line, doing the work day in and day out, but how do our polices, processes and practices across an entire organisation impact the safety of our work?Steven Shorrock is an interdisciplin
After a short break we're back with even more from the world of safety!With more industry experts, clinical advice and general chat, this is set to be another fantastic series.Thank you all so much for listening so far. The feedback has been in
*Please note this episode contains swearing taken from qualitative research*The only way to learn is to understand what we've done well, and what we can improve on. The only way we can do that is identify events where something's happened.The N
There has never been a wider mix of illnesses and issues seen by the UK ambulance services. There's also never been more different care pathways. It can sometimes be hard to know what the best thing to do is.Choice fatigue, along with patients
With stroke patients, time is brain.Dan Phillips, EEAST Clinical Lead, sits down to talk more about 10-10 and why it's so important on the road. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With stroke patients, time is brain.Dan Phillips, EEAST Clinical Lead, sits down to talk more about 10-10 and why it's so important on the road. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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