AIR Stamp of Approval and Honorable Mentions
In an effort to truly emphasize the highest quality posts, we have two subsets of recommended resources. The AIR stamp of approval will only be given to posts scoring above a new, strict scoring cut-off of ≥30 points (out of 35 total), based on our scoring instrument. The other subset is for “Honorable Mention” posts. These posts have been flagged by and agreed upon by AIR Board members as worthwhile, accurate, unbiased, and appropriately referenced despite an average score <30. All posts will still be part of the quiz needed to obtain III credit.
AIR Series: GU/Renal
Below we have listed our selection of the 11 highest quality blog posts within the past 12 months (current as of January 2015) related to genitourinary and renal disease, curated and approved for residency training by the AIR Series Board. In this module we have 5 AIRs and 6 Honorable Mentions. We strive for comprehensiveness by selecting from a broad spectrum of blogs from the top 50 listing per the Social Media Index. We found 5 high quality, AIR worthy articles about the recent New England Journal article “ultrasonography versus computed tomography for suspected nephrolithiasis”. We selected the highest scoring post as an official selection, but included the rest in second table below. They have all scored ≥ 30 as well and are well worth a read or listen.
After reading, please take the quiz. Feel free to ask questions in the blog comment section below. The AIR Board faculty will answer them within 48 hours of posting. Be sure to include your email or contact information where requested in the Disqus blog comment area, so that you will be notified when we reply. We recommend programs give 4 hours (just over 20 minutes per article) of III for this module.
Take the quiz at ALiEMU
ALiEMU AIR GU/Renal block quiz
Interested in taking the quiz for fun or asynchronous (Individualized Interactive Instruction) credit? Please go to the above link. You will need to create a one-time login account if you haven’t already.
Highlighted Quality Posts
Article Title | Author | Date | Link | Category |
10 reasons NOT to order a CT scan for suspected renal colic | Daniel Firestone, MD RDMS | March 10, 2014 | ALiEM: No CT for Renal Colic | Approved Instructional Resource |
Ultrasound For The Win: 46F with Right Abdominal and Flank Pain #US4TW | Jeffrey Shih, MD | February 24, 2015 | ALiEM: US4TW Right Abdominal Pain | Approved Instructional Resource |
Does Use of Tamsulosin in Renal Colic Facilitate Stone Passage? | Anand Swaminathan, MD | August 7th, 2015 | Rebel: Tamsulosin for Kidney Stones | Approved Instructional Resource |
RCT of ED Renal Ultrasound for renal colic | Andy Neill, MD | September 22, 2014 | EMIreland: RCT US for Renal Colic | Approved Instructional Resource |
Ultrasound For The Win: 22M with Scrotal Pain #US4TW | Jeffrey Shih, MD | February 12, 2015 | ALiEM: US 4TW, Scrotal Pain | Approved Instructional Resource |
Piperacillin/Tazobactam and Risk of Acute Kidney Injury with Vancomycin | Bryan D. Hayes, PharmD, FAACT | May 20, 2014 | ALiEM: Pip and Vanco and AKI | Honorable Mention |
SGEM#71: Like a Rolling Kidney Stone (A Systematic Review of Renal Colic) | Dr. Anthony (Tony) Seupaul | April 11, 2014 | SGEM: Tamulosin for Renal Colic | Honorable Mention |
Sadly Inadequate Cochrane Review of Renal Colic | Ryan Radecki, MD | April 21, 2014 | EMLitofNote: Tamulosin Cochrane Review | Honorable Mention |
Saving Balls 101: Inguinoscrotal Massess | Camille Wu, MBBS, FRACS | January 31, 2014 | DFTB: Inguinoscrotal Massess | Honorable Mention |
PV Card: Testicular Ultrasound for Torsion and Epididymitis | Scott Kobner, MD | January 22, 2015 | ALiEM: Testicular US | Honorable Mention |
Saving Balls 101: The Acute Scrotum | Camille Wu, MBBS, FRACS | January 6, 2014 | DFTB: The Acute Scrotum | Honorable Mention |
Extra Resources
Article Title | Author | Date | Link | Category |
Author Insight: Ultrasonography versus CT for suspected nephrolithiasis | NEJM | Michelle Lin, MD | March 24th, 2015 | ALiEM: NEJM US vs CT Author Discussion | Approved Instructional Resource |
SGEM#97: Hippy Hippy Shake – Ultrasound Vs. CT Scan for Diagnosing Renal Colic | Dr. Tony Seupaul and Dr. Spencer Wright. | 11/24/2014 | SGEM: NEJM US vs CT scan | Approved Instructional Resource |
Farewell, CT Stone Protocol | Ryan Radecki | 9/19/2014 | EMLitofNote: US vs CT NEJM | Approved Instructional Resource |
The bell tolls for renal colic CT | Rob Orman, MD | 1/23/2015 | ERCast: US vs CT NEJM | Approved Instructional Resource |
If you have any questions or comments, please contact us!
Author information
The post AIR Series: GU/Renal Module 2015 appeared first on ALiEM.