Abstract

In line with several other journals we co-publish the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care Low Back Pain Clinical Care Standard. It describes the early clinical management of people who present with a new acute episode of low back pain. The background to how the standard was developed and finalised are described in an introductory editorial. Coronial findings and royal commissions have repeatedly identified deficiencies in the emergency health care provided to prisoners in Australia. These deficiencies are operational, clinical and stigmatic and not limited to a single prison or jurisdiction. Applying a health quality of care framework focused on prevention and chronic health management appropriate assessment and escalation when urgent medical assistance is requested, and a structured audit framework could avoid future preventable deaths in prisons. We publish an editorial on this topic to accompany the paper written by a team from Victoria and Queensland. A group from the neurosurgery department of the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital report that the availability of cranial access equipment outside Queensland tertiary centres is limited. Inter-hospital transfers are likely to persist in Queensland and so improving access to cranial access equipment in hospitals where it is currently lacking is highly warranted. They surveyed senior theatre nurse or surgical service directors from rural and regional Queensland hospitals located outside the local catchment of a tertiary centre and had a CT scanner. Questions regarded availability, location and storage conditions of mechanical cranial access kits, as well as last usage, and associated patient outcomes. Life-threatening thoracic trauma requires emergency pleural decompression, and thoracostomy and chest drain insertion are core trauma procedures. Reliably determining a safe site for pleural decompression in children is challenging, even for experienced clinicians. A team from Melbourne report that the Mid-Arm-Point (MAP) technique, a procedural aid for use with injured adults, is also a safe site for pleural decompression in children <4 years and with a very minor modification is safe in children ≥4 years. An excellent study from Queensland describes the demographics, presentation characteristics, clinical features and cardiac outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients who present to a regional cardiac referral centre ED with suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The authors conclude this cohort with suspected ACS have a high burden of traditional cardiac risk factors, regardless of whether they are eventually diagnosed with ACS. These patients may benefit from assessment for coronary artery disease regardless of age at presentation. In a nice paper, James Mallows explores the concept of collegiality, something considered to be any extra-role behaviour that is discretionary, not recognised by a formal reward system and that promotes the effective functioning of the organisation. There are few studies examining collegiality in the medical profession and none looking at collegiality among emergency physicians (EPs). He explores the perceptions of different ED health care professionals on the meaning of collegiality among EPs, the benefits of collegiality and behaviours they identify as indicative of collegiality. He identifies distinct themes and behaviours indicative of collegiality among EPs. Promoting these behaviours could improve staff well-being, ED efficiency, patient safety and productivity. Continuing with the previous theme, team culture underpins team performance. Psychological safety is a critical component of team culture for high performing teams. A group from the Gold Coast Hospital decided to explore this further. They conclude that familiarity of team members and leaders is critical to the development of psychological safety within the ED. Fostering familiarity should be a focus for frontline leadership each shift and a priority in broader departmental decisions for those seeking to enhance the psychological safety of their teams. The focus in this issue is on the anaesthetic component of the Fellowship training programme.

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