Anaphylaxis gets the adrenaline going presentation

This recording is from 2018 or earlier, prior to national registration for paramedics being implemented in Australia and Aotearoa. Please note that while there is some excellent content that pre-dates registration, some may be out of date or no longer relevant to current guidelines and standards.

Anaphylaxis gets the adrenaline going presentation

About

Professor Anthony FT Brown Senior Staff Specialist, Department of Emergency Medicine, Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital

Trained in general medicine in the UK, Prof. Brown emigrated to Australia in 1987 and completed his emergency medicine training in Perth. He then moved to Brisbane in 1991 and is now senior staff specialist in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital. He was appointed inaugural Professor of Emergency Medicine in January 2009 for the Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, School of Medicine at the University of Queensland.

Prof. Brown is the recent past Editor-in-Chief of Emergency Medicine Australasia as well as being an accomplished and well respected editor and author of numerous texted books and Journals.

Prof. Brown has other interests in research, one of which includes Anaphylaxis and Allergies, and has authored the chapter on ‘Anaphylaxis’ in the Oxford Textbook of Medicine, (4th and 5th editions).

This presentation runs for 105 minutes.


Lessons

Lesson 1: Anaphylaxis gets the adrenaline going presentation

Lesson 2: Self Reflection

Details

Length

105 minutes

Released

4th May 2016

Cost

Member free
Non-member $29

Share this course

Logo

The College is the peak professional body representing and supporting paramedics and student paramedics across Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand since 1973.

The College acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the traditional custodians of the land and sea in which we live and work, we recognise their continuing connection to land, sea and culture and pay our respects to Elders past, present and future.

The College acknowledges Māori as tangata whenua and Treaty of Waitangi partners in Aotearoa New Zealand.