The College provides members with hundreds of free recordings to assist you with professional development. You can filter and search for recordings of interest, plus “like” recordings so you can find them easily in the future.
All the recordings are designed to help you meet the requirements of paramedic registration, so they automatically include self reflection, and when completed they are added to your learning record in the CPD Tracker.
Non-members can view a small selection of recordings for free (try before you buy), view all other recordings at a cost, or simply join to access all the content for free. Learn about Membership here.
Paediatric Respiratory Emergencies and Pre-Hospital Decision Making for Paramedics. This session looks at the common paediatric presentations of noisy breathing and explores, via a diagnostic reasoning format, how to decipher which patients have what diagnosis.
This session will discuss pre-hospital paediatric pain management, from distraction to Intranasal Fentanyl and everything inbetween. Joe recently teamed up with fellow Don't Forget The Bubbles (DFTB) team member Dr Dani Hall to publish a well-cited blog on Pre-hospital Analgesia in Paediatrics.
Presentation on burns first aid, epidemiology, pathophysiology and patient disposition.
A presentation on burns first aid, epidemiology, pathophysiology and patient disposition.
The technical helicopter rescue of a paediatric patient with severe open head and chest trauma in remote NSW and the subsequent clinical management.
Kate Whiting presents ten tips for the assessment and identification of the sick child.
Dr Simone Huntingford presents It's.. a baby! with a focus on neonatal resuscitation.
Foreign bodies are an infrequent presentation in paediatrics and can range from benign ingestion to complete airway obstruction.
National Conference 2019. Results of a study published in the British Paramadic Journal in 2019. This session will look at the results of the study on whether paediatric early warning scores relate to emergency department outcomes for children Aged 0-2 years brought in by ambulance?