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Key Advances

Prepare for Your MyEMCert Module

Each MyEMCert module will include a section of questions based on Key Advances in the practice of Emergency Medicine. They include clinical policy alerts, practice advances, and suggestions from the literature.

Key Advances can be pulled from any current synopsis provided by ABEM and will not necessarily be related to the module topic. You can download all the synopses or view them below.

ACEP Seizure Patients

ACEP Acute Headache

ACEP Acute Heart Failure

ACEP Opioids

AHA ACLS Updates

AHA Pediatric Advanced Life Support

Adult Patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia

Neonatal Resuscitation

Febrile Infants

Pediatric Readiness

Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy

Pulmonary Embolism

Acute Asthma in Adults

Anticoagulant Reversal Strategies in the ED

ED Management of A-Fib with RVR

HEART Score

Noninvasive Respiratory Support 

Oxygen for MI

Pediatric Status Epilepticus

Procedural Sedation for Adults

Procedural Sedation for Children

Stroke

Demystifying Lactate in the ED 

Video-Assisted Intubation 

Looking for Knowledge Advancements in EMS or MedTox instead?

Why Do MyEMCert Modules Include Key Advances?

To facilitate learning. Stay up-to-date with clinically relevant emerging literature.

To amplify medical discoveries that you can use to improve patient care.

To keep up with an evolving specialty. Once widely adopted, Key Advances can move to the core section of modules.

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Do you have an idea for a Key Advance topic?

Submit your recommendations! The ABEM Board reviews suggestions, and some are integrated into modules.

MyEMCert integrates emerging concepts with patient care. Due to the dynamic nature of research and adoption of advances into clinical practice, some of the key advances will become the standard of care and others will be replaced or modified as more information accumulates.

The information in the Key Advance synopses cannot replace physician judgment, cannot describe every possible clinical variation, and cannot be construed to be inflexible standards. Every medical encounter must integrate a physician’s clinical judgment. The treatments, procedures, and medical conditions described in MyEMCert do not constitute any representation of a de facto standard of care.

In choosing a specific topic, clinical policy, or citing an article, ABEM is not endorsing the authors or findings; rather it is purely an attempt to advance knowledge translation in the specialty of Emergency Medicine. This lack of endorsement is especially true for medical blogs or Free Open Access Medical Education (FOAM) websites that ABEM adds for additional reading. Those sites frequently include non-peer reviewed narratives and opinions. Articles, research, and blogs may present controversial or divergent opinions.

Neither the authors nor any other party who has been involved in the preparation or publication of this work warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they disclaim all responsibility for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from use of the information contained in this work. Readers are encouraged to confirm the information contained herein with other sources and to consider every clinical decision with respect to the unique characteristics of each patient.

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