Academic Life in Emergency Medicine

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Channel Reputation Rank

#238
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Activity Status

Stale

last updated

According to the data and stats that were collected, ' Academic Life in Emergency Medicine' channel has an excellent rank. Despite such a rank, the feed was last updated more than a year ago. In addition ' Academic Life in Emergency Medicine' includes a significant share of images in comparison to the text content. The channel mostly uses long articles along with sentence constructions of the intermediate readability level, which is a result that may indicate difficult texts on the channel, probably due to a big amount of industrial or scientific terms.

About ' Academic Life in Emergency Medicine' Channel

     Collaborating, meeting, and sharing with inspiring people in the academic world of EM

? Updates History Monthly Yearly
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? Content Ratio
JavaScript chart by amCharts 3.13.1TextsLinksVideosImages
? Average Article Length

Long articles are widely used on ' Academic Life in Emergency Medicine' as elaborated and interesting content can help the channel to reach a high number of subscribers. In addition there are some medium length articles making up more than a quarter of all textual items.

short

long

? Readability Level

Intermediate readability level is common for ' Academic Life in Emergency Medicine' articles as it addresses the matters that demand certain level of education to be understood. Sometimes the channel gets even more difficult by issuing pieces of advanced readability level (there are just a few of them). In addition the channel contains some materials of a basic readability level.

advanced

basic

? Sentiment Analysis

Positive emotional expressions prevail throughout the texts: they may include favorable reviews, appreciation or praise in regard to the subjects addressed on the channel. However, the channel also contains some rather negative or critical records that make up just a small amount of all its content.

positive

negative

Recent News
Wellens' Syndrome: Is it on your radar?

Wellen’s Syndrome was first described in 1982 in which 75% of patients with t wave inversions in V2-V4 went on to have an acute myocardial infarction...

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aVR: The Forgotten 12th Lead

Image from PMID: 22412103 Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE Augmented leads (aVR, aVF, and aVL) were developed to derive more localized...

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Must We Avoid Nitrofurantoin with Impaired Renal Function?

Acute uncomplicated cystitis is becoming more difficult to treat in the setting of increasing antimicrobial resistance. In the 2010 IDSA Guideline, nitrofurantoin...

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ALiEM has moved

ALiEM has moved

Academic Life in Emergency Medicine has outgrown this blog platform and moved. Please reset your browser bookmark to: http://ALiEM.com Thanks and see...

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The blog is moving!

The blog is moving!

The blog is now four years old! Our birthday wish that we could upgrade and move our blog to a new platform is coming true! Before this happens though...

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RUSH protocol: Rapid Ultrasound for Shock and Hypotension

Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE Patients with hypotension or shock have high mortality...

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Navigating the Waters of Medical Education and Social Media

SUNY Downstate Department of Emergency Medicine held a lecture series May 22, 2013 as a primer for the EM residents on how to use social media to enhance...

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PV card: Pediatric Assessment Triangle

Have you heard of the Pediatric Assessment Triangle? Taught in the Pediatric Education for Prehospital Professionals (PEPP) certification course, it provides...

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Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest and Prehospital Intubation

Worldwide, death from cardiac arrest in the out-of-hospital setting remains the leading cause of mortality. Focuses have aimed at improving bystander...

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Welcome new blog team member: Dr. Matt Astin

Matt Astin, MD MPH Clinical Assistant Professor of EM and IM Medical Center of Central Georgia Mercer University School of Medicine Twitter: @mastinmd...

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EM-IM Residency Training: Is 5 Years Worth It?

As a new member of the ALiEM team, I am joining Dr. Salim Rezaie as the second member to be board certified in both Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine...

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Unfortunately  Academic Life in Emergency Medicine has no news yet.

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