Jono Brüün, RCoA Chief Executive Officer, looks at how the College is moving forward at pace as we work to implement improvements to our member services and benefits.
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Dr Ramai Santhirapala, Editor of the Bulletin, welcomes you to April 2023's anaesthetist in training (AiT) issue of the Bulletin and looks at why this year's theme 'Adapting to change' is very apt in these uncertain times.
Read the latest letters submitted by members in April's Digital Bulletin.
This article looks at how the Lifelong Learning Platform continues to evolve, having undergone an unprecedented amount of change in the last couple of years.
This article is written by TRIPOM (trainees with an interest in perioperative medicine) and is a brief summary of recent important papers and articles on perioperative medicine from across the spectrum of medical publications.
The following new appointments were approved, and with sadness we record the deaths of some of our fellows.
Welcome to the October Bulletin 2022. We are really excited to be launching our new Digital Bulletin. This month is our Research Edition, packed with features, editor's picks, opinion pieces, and newsworthy topics. We hope you enjoy the new Digital Bulletin experience.
It is safe to say that the laryngoscope is one of the most recognisable tools within anaesthesia. A piece of equipment that has evolved throughout the years to be used by airway specialists, the humble laryngoscope allows us to perform one of the fundamentals of anaesthesia: to intubate an airway.
‘Snowflake’ is a term commonly wielded by our elders to bludgeon what they deem to be a fragile, over-sensitive and under-resilient youth of today. A people unable to cope with life. It does however require a certain amount of historical amnesia to use this slight without some irony catching in the throat. Did they not enjoy rock bottom housing prices, free higher education and high levels of job security, only to then preside over their decimation?
The 2021 SAS contract reform introduced a new strategic role to support the health and wellbeing of the SAS workforce, the ‘SAS Advocate’. This role provides an opportunity to challenge the status quo, and to potentially change the culture and expectations associated with being an SAS doctor.