Will social media make or break medical conferences?
(2015)
Journal Article
Lyttle, M. D., Body, R., Roland, D., May, N., Body, R., Carley, S., & Lyttle, M. (2015). Will social media make or break medical conferences?. British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 76(6), 318-319. https://doi.org/10.12968/hmed.2015.76.6.318
All Outputs (7)
Investigation of children with suspected skull fracture - service evaluation at two centres (2015)
Presentation / Conference
Stone, K., & Lyttle, M. (2015, April). Investigation of children with suspected skull fracture - service evaluation at two centres. Paper presented at Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Annual Conference 2015, Birmingham, UK
Identifying challenges with paediatric procedural sedation in the ED setting in Ireland and the UK: A Paediatric Emergency Research in the United Kingdom and Ireland (PERUKI) study (2015)
Presentation / Conference
McCoy, S., Lyttle, M., Hartshorn, S., Larkin, P., Brenner, M., & O'Sullivan, R. (2015, April). Identifying challenges with paediatric procedural sedation in the ED setting in Ireland and the UK: A Paediatric Emergency Research in the United Kingdom and Ireland (PERUKI) study. Paper presented at Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Annual Conference 2015, Birmingham, UK
Emergency department management of children with decompensating inherited metabolic disease (2015)
Presentation / Conference
Gillam, M., Chronopoulou, E., & Lyttle, M. (2015, April). Emergency department management of children with decompensating inherited metabolic disease. Paper presented at Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Annual Conference 2015, Birmingham, UK
Psychosocial care for injured children: The views of 2500 emergency department physicians and nurses from around the world (2015)
Presentation / Conference
around the world. Paper presented at Trauma Association of Canada Annual Scientific Meeting, Calgary, Canada
Applicability of the CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN paediatric head injury clinical decision rules: Pilot data from a single Australian centre (2013)
Journal Article
Lyttle, M. D., Lyttle, M., Cheek, J. A., Blackburn, C., Oakley, E., Ward, B., …Babl, F. E. (2013). Applicability of the CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN paediatric head injury clinical decision rules: Pilot data from a single Australian centre. Emergency Medicine Journal, 30(10), 790-794. https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2012-201887Background Clinical decision rules (CDRs) for paediatric head injury (HI) exist to identify children at risk of traumatic brain injury. Those of the highest quality are the Canadian assessment of tomography for childhood head injury (CATCH), Children... Read More about Applicability of the CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN paediatric head injury clinical decision rules: Pilot data from a single Australian centre.
Comparing CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN clinical decision rules for paediatric head injuries (2012)
Journal Article
Lyttle, M., Crowe, L., Crowe, E., Dunning, J., & Babl, F. E. (2012). Comparing CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN clinical decision rules for paediatric head injuries. Emergency Medicine Journal, 29(10), 785-794. https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2011-200225Many children present to emergency departments following head injury (HI), with a small number at risk of avoidable poor outcome. Difficulty identifying such children, coupled with increased availability of cranial CT, has led to variation in practic... Read More about Comparing CATCH, CHALICE and PECARN clinical decision rules for paediatric head injuries.