
May 2026; papers of the month
May 1, 2026 - 33:42
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This episode is an absolute cracker! And we can say that as we've got outsider help... We've all been involved with patients where securing the airway with a prehospital anaesthetic feels intuitively right; the patient w...
Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus is an episode from The Resus Room by Simon Laing. This episode is an absolute cracker! And we can say that as we've got outsider help... We've all been involved with patients where securing the...
This episode belongs to The Resus Room.
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Published Feb 12, 2026, 58:10 long, audio available.
This episode is an absolute cracker! And we can say that as we've got outsider help... We've all been involved with patients where securing the airway with a prehospital anaesthetic feels intuitively right; the patient with a severe head injury after a fall from height, the unrestrained driver in a high-speed collision with devastating chest injuries, or the patient with significant maxillofacial trauma following assault. In these situations, advanced airway management appears clearly beneficial. What remains a bit ambiguous is the effect of that intervention. Does it play out into a mortality benefit and if so how should we redesign systems to meet a 24 hour need for this (with many prehospital critical care services not being available fully around the clock), bearing in mind competing financial priorities for optimum health care. Maybe it's okay that for some patients the anaesthetic is delayed to the Emergency Department? Worldwide, trauma accounts for an estimated 4.4 million deaths annually and carries a substantial economic burden. Despite decades of improvements in trauma systems, medications such as tranexamic acid, and the development of prehospital critical care teams, some key aspects of trauma care remain really difficult to study well. Prehospital emergency anaesthesia is a prime example. It is time-critical, ethically complex, highly operator dependent and almost impossible to study using conventional randomised trial designs. As a result, clinicians have largely been forced to rely on observational studies, despite the well-recognised problems of bias and confounding that accompany them. In this episode, we explore the existing evidence base and then focus on a landmark new study published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine. This paper applies machine-learning techniques to a large UK trauma dataset to address the question; does prehospital intubation improve survival in patients who are predicted to need early airway intervention? We walk through how the authors developed a predictive model to identify high-risk patients, how doubly robust estimation was used to move beyond simple association, and how survival and health-economic outcomes were assessed. The results suggest a clinically meaningful reduction in 30-day mortality for selected high-risk trauma patients who receive prehospital intubation. And we're then joined by two of the study's authors, Amy Nelson and Julian Thompson. Together, we explore what these findings may mean for the future of prehospital emergency anaesthesia, how we should think about evidence in complex emergency care environments, and whether this type of analytical approach could reshape trauma research more broadly. Once again we'd love to hear any thoughts or feedback either on the website or via X @TheResusRoom! Simon & Rob
You can listen to Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus is an episode from The Resus Room by Simon Laing.
This episode is 58:10 long.
This episode was published on Feb 12, 2026.
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You can listen to Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Airway Management in Trauma; Roadside to Resus is from The Resus Room by Simon Laing.
Published Feb 12, 2026 and 58:10 long