EMS: Erik & Matt Show

GI Bleeds in EMS

52 min · 23 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio GI Bleeds in EMS

Descripción

In this episode of The Erik and Matt Show (EMS), Erik and Matt tackle one of the most common and potentially deadly emergencies in prehospital medicine: gastrointestinal bleeding. They break down the differences between upper and lower GI bleeds, what coffee ground emesis, bright red hematemesis, melena, and hematochezia each tell you about the source and severity of the bleed, and how to make critical treatment decisions in the back of the ambulance. They also cover why TXA is no longer indicated for GI bleeds, when blood transfusion is appropriate using the shock index, and how simple interventions like leg elevation can buy you time when you do not carry blood on your unit.

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episode Cognitive Bias in EMS artwork

Cognitive Bias in EMS

In this episode of The Erik and Matt Show (EMS), Erik and Matt unpack the 12 cognitive biases that quietly drive missed diagnoses and bad calls in prehospital medicine. They cover anchoring, confirmation bias, premature closure, availability bias, framing, overconfidence, diagnostic momentum, action bias, search satisfaction, the Dunning-Kruger effect, authority bias, and sunk cost. Each bias is paired with a real field story, including Erik's anxiety patient who turned out to be in florid DKA, the SVT call that was actually WPW, the prolonged extrication where the patient was secretly having a STEMI and a fractured spleen, and Erik's now famous case of lecturing his medics about not anchoring while completely missing a necrotic appendix in the back of the ambulance.

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