| Spicing up those CME Classes
Spicing up those
CME Classes
by Valerie
DeFrance
"Boring!"
That's what many of us hear or say, as EMS personnel who face getting those CME
hours done. As students, each already knows (one hopes) a significant percentage
of what the lecture is going to be about. For an instructor attending a CME
class, the percentage of knowledge is, or should be, still higher.
If you're the one leading the CME class, it can make it difficult to keep
students' attention long enough to get that missing or forgotten percentage
across.
If you are instructing BLS, ACLS, PALS, and so on, you're guaranteed a sure
class winner with all the recent AHA changes. There's nothing like major changes
in curriculum and guidelines to get students to pay close attention.
But what about instruction the rest of the year? What about the continuing
education and review of the so-called everyday subjects? Well, your job is to
spice it up a little. Go a bit off the beaten track with tidbits that help hold
students' attention. For example, in an airway class, I present a "History
of Intubation" that is usually a big hit and helps keep their attention.
Warning! Warning! This may actually take a little extra work
Explore the industry. What is the latest in equipment (even if in your wildest
dreams you'll never be able to afford it for the class or the service)? You can
usually get pictures online, or seek out brochures and posters — even samples
— from company representatives. What is the latest trend (besides the hot
amiodarone debate)? The LMA? 12 leads? Why? What do they think of it?
Add some offbeat information. It may not be exactly relevant to EMS, but
will help keep the group's attention as you intersperse these tidbits into the
regular lecture. Sometimes they act as a great springboard to other discussions.
The following could be tied into a session about airways, pediatric respiratory
muscles, or oxygen tents (sometime you just have to be a bit creative)!
Until recently, it was thought
that no mammal ever breathes through its skin the way some amphibians do. Most
mammals have thick skin designed to keep in their body heat, making it
impossible to exchange gas through it. But a newborn Julia Creek dunnart (Sminthopsis
douglasi) manages the trick.
A dunnart is a tiny, mouse-like marsupial found in Australia. A newborn Julia
Creek dunnart is just 1/6 of an inch long (4 mm), and is so undeveloped that
its breathing muscles don't work. While it grows, protected within its
mother's pouch, the young dunnart breathes through its very thin skin. Even
after three weeks, the growing baby dunnart still gets a third of its oxygen
directly through its skin.
Dunnarts are among Australia's smallest marsupials. They live in grasslands
and mixed woodlands, where they eat mostly insects and an occasional lizard or
mouse.
Reviewing head trauma? Here's one
I like.
How do woodpeckers avoid brain
damage?" Recent research using high-speed films of acorn woodpeckers (Melanerpes
formicivorus) shows that their heads can endure up to 1,200 gravities of force
when the beak hits the wood. Despite this force, their brains do not suffer
damage.
The woodpecker's brain is tightly packed into a capsule of dense but spongy
bone tissue, which absorbs some of the force of sudden shocks to the outside
of the brain case. There is very little fluid surrounding the brain, so it
isn't free to jerk around. In addition, there are special muscles in the
woodpecker's head that contract at just the right moment to absorb still more
of the shock. There are also support structures that pass around the back of
the skull, starting near the base of the tongue.
The woodpecker's brain is not the only part of the bird's head that must be
protected. If it didn't close its eyes just before each peck, they would fly
clear out of their sockets.
So where can you go to find
these tidbits? Just about anywhere. Internet searches, "Fact of the
Day" lists, calendars, your kid's science books and projects. Information
you get from friends, relatives, even that strange trivia freak down the street.
Now ask me about the animal with two sets of vocal cords and how that fits into
an intubation class...
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