@blankcheckpod Your latest pod inspired me to post. I've been keeping movie ticket stubs for almost 30 years. 2 movies, same director, almost exactly 25 years apart. Man, ticket prices sure have gone up. #TrapMovie
@AADowd Look. As a 12 year old I called my local paper to complain about @mikebaboon and his review of Jurassic Park. He gave it a 3/5 as well. He went on to great things, and I went on to work for him and then went on to great things. Was the movie Jurassic Park?
@BowyerLibby@PhDVoice Interesting. I am part of a writing class and someone's self published book just magically appeared on B&N without his knowledge. He was incredibly proud of it as a sign that he had "made it" but I wonder if there is some algorithm snapping up unlicensed works?
🔐Just how good are wearable clinical monitoring devices?
This new #FreeForAWeek systematic review from @PeterYChan finds that studies of these devices were of low quality, typically not blinded and often used inappropriate statistical techniques.
🔗https://t.co/TxJdOAttfQ
We used AI to track Nursing Workload in the ICU. Surprise, surprise, delirious patients take a lot of work, at greater than 1:1 ratios. Thanks @Aus_CC
https://t.co/6py2XMWNxr
🔐Novel wearable and contactless heart rate, respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation monitoring devices: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
This great new paper from @PeterYChan is now #FreeForAWeek!
🔗https://t.co/TxJdOAsVqi
🔐This new systematic review and meta-analysis from @PeterYChan finds only a small proportion of the many novel wearable devices to monitor patients has been tested in the clinical setting.
Most of these studies have significant problems.
🔗https://t.co/TxJdOAKwhQ
How do those dozens of novel wearable and wireless vital signs devices fare in clinical practice? Answer: Pretty much all the same. Thanks @Anaes_Journal for publishing our work!
https://t.co/TvnySUvnBz
How do novel wearable and contactless monitoring devices perform in the clinical setting? For an answer, have at look this paper. https://t.co/fyHSdmCukO
@precordialthump To think it was only last year that @MonashUni NHMRC researchers published their paper, and quoted with “Big Pharma hates the idea of a cheap drug that might work... it is time for the world to start trying to save lives rather than exploit the situation as an ‘opportunity’.”
Congratulations to a team of our anaesthetists who won Article of the Year in the @Anaes_Journal.
Dr Kariem El-Boghdadly, Dr Imran Ahmad, Dr Danny Wong and Dr Craig Johnstone were recognised for their international study on airway management in patients with COVID-19.
Potential ICU colleagues- Last year Melbourne braced for a pandemic surge that never arrived. We prepared expanded workforce and then you were stood down… Well Melbourne needs you now! I know you’re tired. We can do this with you. And we can’t without.