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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Rodger, Jakob, Cichowski, Ryan
Natura: Recurso digital
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Pubblicazione: Zenodo 2026
Accesso online:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18174645
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  • <p>In this <strong>Best of 2025</strong> episode of <em>The Inflection Point</em>, we revisit one of the most critical—and frequently misunderstood—topics in prehospital medicine: <strong>airway management</strong>.</p> <p>This episode reframes airway decision-making around a central principle supported by evidence and frontline experience: <strong>oxygenation, not intubation, is the primary driver of outcomes</strong> in critically ill and brain-injured patients.</p> <p>Drawing on systematic reviews, major airway trials, and real-world prehospital practice, the discussion explores <strong>when endotracheal intubation improves outcomes, when supraglottic airways (SGAs) are the better first-line option, and when intubation should be avoided altogether</strong>.</p> <p>Rather than promoting a rigid algorithm, this episode emphasizes <strong>clinical judgment, physiological reasoning, and context-aware decision-making</strong>—the hallmarks of high-quality prehospital care.</p> <h2>Key Learning Themes</h2> <ul> <li> <p>Oxygenation vs intubation in traumatic brain injury</p> </li> <li> <p>Hypoxia, hypercarbia, and hypotension as secondary brain insults</p> </li> <li> <p>First-pass success and its impact on neurological outcomes</p> </li> <li> <p>SGAs vs ETTs in cardiac arrest and pediatric patients</p> </li> <li> <p>Airway decisions based on physiology, transport time, and available resources</p> </li> <li> <p>Why intubation location matters (on scene vs parked ambulance vs during transport)</p> </li> </ul> <h2>Episode Timestamps</h2> <p><strong>00:00</strong> Oxygenation vs Intubation: Why It Matters<br><strong>00:56</strong> When Not to Intubate: Key Clinical Signals<br><strong>01:15</strong> SGAs vs ETTs: Evidence, Outcomes, and Use Cases<br><strong>02:51</strong> Where You Intubate Matters: Scene vs Ambulance<br><strong>03:55</strong> Supporting the Podcast & Acknowledgements<br><strong>04:36</strong> Disclaimer & Professional Boundaries</p> <h2>Disclaimer</h2> <p>This podcast is intended for <strong>educational and informational purposes only</strong>. The views expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not constitute medical advice, clinical direction, or instruction.</p> <p>Content discussed may not reflect current local medical directives, protocols, or scope of practice. Listeners are responsible for practicing within their regulated scope, institutional policies, and medical oversight. Clinical decisions must always align with local guidelines, medical direction, and individual patient circumstances.</p> <p>This podcast is independent of our professional roles, employers, and affiliated organizations. No content should be interpreted as representing the positions, policies, or endorsements of any ambulance service, hospital, academic institution, regulator, or governing body.</p> <h2>About the Podcast</h2> <h3><em>The Inflection Point</em></h3> <p><em>The Inflection Point</em> is a Canadian paramedic podcast focused on <strong>evidence-informed practice, system design, and human performance in prehospital care</strong>.</p> <p>Hosted by <strong>Ryan Cichowski</strong> and <strong>Jakob Rodger</strong>, both experienced paramedics and educators, the podcast explores how <strong>clinical reasoning, leadership, research, and real-world constraints</strong> intersect to shape better outcomes for patients and providers.</p> <p>Each episode features thoughtful conversations with clinicians, researchers, and system leaders—focusing not just on <em>what</em> experts do, but <strong>how they think, decide, adapt, and perform under pressure</strong>.</p>