Overheard In The Emergency Room

Quick Hit: What Really Happens When You Go to the ER with Stomach Pain (ER Doctor Explains)

10 min · 8. maj 2026
episode Quick Hit: What Really Happens When You Go to the ER with Stomach Pain (ER Doctor Explains) cover

Description

“Dr Cois, I’ve got abdominal pain. What will happen to me when I come to the ED?”  It’s one of the most common questions in my inbox — and one of the top 3 reasons people present to my Emergency Department. In this Quick Hit, I walk you through what actually happens when you come in with stomach pain: the conversation we have, the 4 diagnoses we cannot miss, and the bigger story most patients never hear. Inside this episode: •  How emergency physicians use the SOCRATES framework to find the diagnosis before any test is ordered •  The 4 can’t-miss diagnoses — cholecystitis, appendicitis, diverticulitis, and small bowel obstruction — and how each one classically presents •  Non-GI causes of abdominal pain we always consider,including kidney stones, UTIs, aortic emergencies, and mesenteric ischaemia •  Why most recurrent abdominal pain comes back toconstipation, reflux, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease •  A practical, week-by-week plan to safely increase yourfiber from 15 g to 40 g a day •  Why a CT scan isn’t always the right answer, and how to think about radiation risk in the ER •  The bold takeaway: if we don’t find a life threat, your next step isn’t another scan — it’s your Tier 1 habits Key Takeaways •  Most abdominal pain in the ER goes home safely •  80% of your plate should be plant foods •  Increase fiber gradually — not 15 g to 40 g overnight •  PPIs are a 2–6 week tool, not a forever medication •  Establish care with a primary care provider for any recurrent abdominal symptoms Chapter Markers Chapter timestamps available on the YouTube version of this episode — use that as the master reference. Disclaimer This episode is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. If you have symptoms that concern you, please contact your physician or local emergency services. Closing Send your next Quick Hit question via the contact form at DrCois.com or DM @dr_cois on socials. Fewer bad days. More good decades.

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23 episodes

episode Quick Hits: How an ED Doctor Reads a Medical Paper artwork

Quick Hits: How an ED Doctor Reads a Medical Paper

Quick Hits Episode 6. A listener wrote in asking for a framework to read a medical paper — and it could not be timelier. Misinformation has now been ranked the most severe short-term risk facing the world by the World Economic Forum, ahead of armed conflict and cyber attacks. One in four Gen Z respondents turns to TikTok for medical advice, and viral medical content is consistently more likely to be wrong than non-viral content. In this episode, Dr Cois walks through the three-question framework that every medical student is taught — and that he still uses today on every paper he reads. Then he pressure-tests it by walking you through three different studies that have tried to answer the same question: does saturated fat raise your cardiovascular risk? A human-and-overfeeding mechanism study, an umbrella review of cohort data, and a Cochrane meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials — same question, three different weights of evidence, one converging answer. If you have ever wanted to push back on the loudest voice in the room without needing a medical degree, this is your playbook. Key Takeaways •  Misinformation is the #1 short-term global risk; thefirehose is not slowing down •  Three-question framework: study type and journal,funding and authors, PICO •  PICO unpacks to Population, Intervention, Comparator,and Outcome •  The body of evidence is what matters — convergenceacross study designs is the signal •  Five red flags: single studies, surrogate outcomes, relative risk without absolute risk, cherry-picking, and conclusions that don’t match the data •  Your homework: track one social-media health claim back to the paper and run the PICO Disclaimer This podcast is for educational purposes only and does not provide medical advice or establish a physician patient relationship. Always consult a qualified clinician for personal health questions.

19. juni 202611 min
episode Quick Hits | Why the Same Drug Can Cost $90 or $9 at the Same Pharmacy — A Doctor Explains artwork

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12. juni 202611 min
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29. maj 20269 min
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