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A UK based Emergency Medicine podcast for anyone who works in emergency care. The St Emlyn ’s team are all passionate educators and clinicians who strive to bring you the best evidence based education. Our four pillars of learning are evidence-based medicine, clinical excellence, personal development and the philosophical overview of emergency care. We have a strong academic faculty and reputation for high quality education presented through multimedia platforms and articles. St Emlyn’s is a name given to a fictionalised emergency care system. This online clinical space is designed to allow clinical care to be discussed without compromising the safety or confidentiality of patients or clinicians.
Episodes

2 days ago
2 days ago
In this episode of the St Emlyn’s Podcast, Iain Beardsell and Simon Carley talk with Caroline Leech at the BASICs Conference about resuscitative hysterotomy following maternal cardiac arrest.
This is a calm, evidence-led discussion of a rare, high-stakes intervention that most clinicians will encounter once, if at all — and still need to get right.
What we cover
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Why the term resuscitative hysterotomy has replaced perimortem caesarean section
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The physiological rationale: relieving aortocaval compression to improve maternal resuscitation
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What the evidence actually shows about timing, maternal survival, and neonatal outcomes
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Findings from Caroline’s systematic review of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in pregnancy
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Why the “4–5 minute rule” does not reflect real-world pre-hospital care
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Neonatal survival at far longer timelines than traditionally taught
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Practical decision-making in pre-hospital and emergency department settings
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Who should perform the procedure, and why speed matters more than seniority
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Aftercare challenges: open abdomen, placenta management, bleeding (or lack of it)
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Team cognitive load, role allocation, and when termination at scene is appropriate
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The emotional and professional impact on clinicians and families
Key takeaways
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Maternal survival after out-of-hospital arrest is rare, but not zero
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Neonatal survival is higher than often appreciated, even with prolonged timelines
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Delaying purely to reach hospital or a specialist may reduce benefit
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The hardest part is not the incision — it is the decision, coordination, and aftermath
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Training should focus as much on judgement and communication as on technical skill
This episode is not about heroics.
It is about realism, evidence, and being prepared for one of the most confronting moments in emergency care.
About MedPod Learn
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Available on the App Store and Google Play.
IncrEMentum 2026 - April 22 - 24
IncrEMentuM was born to revolutionise how we approach emergency medicine. It’s not a traditional conference — it’s an immersive experience that pushes professionals to act, think, and make decisions in real time.
Our mission is to bring together healthcare providers, experts, and emergency personnel from around the world to share experiences, train in realistic scenarios, and test their skills under extreme pressure.
In 2026, we return with an even more intense and lifelike edition — all with one clear goal: to prepare you for what cannot be predicted.
Tactical Trauma - April 22 - 24
This is an international conference covering various aspects of working in high-stakes environments, primarily related to pre-hospital trauma and critical care, with a tactical twist.
Our program is rich and diverse, featuring state-of-the-art lectures from world-class speakers. We aim to bring together all organisations working with pre-hospital trauma in tactical/hostile environments, including physicians, HEMS, EMS, police anti-terror units, military, fire and rescue services and more.

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