ACEP Frontline - Emergency Medicine
Ryan A. Stanton MD, FACEP
ACEP Frontline, hosted by Dr. Ryan Stanton, features in-depth conversations on the hottest topics in emergency medicine and critical care.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 21, 2019 • 19min
Dr. Kathryn Hawk from Yale Medicine on Opioid Overdoses in the ED
In this episode of ACEP Frontline, Dr. Kathryn Hawk joins us once again to talk about the management and approach to opioid overdoses in the emergency department. She is one of our "opioid specialists" and always brings great information on the opioid epidemic and the management of addiction and overdoses in emergency medicine.

Oct 16, 2019 • 38min
EMS Updates and Trends from the 2019 Emerald Coast Conference
In this episode of ACEP Frontline, we talk to a couple of EMS leaders about the current course and trends in EMS and how the traditional "walls" between emergency medicine and EMS are coming down.

Oct 7, 2019 • 32min
Atrial Fibrillation Update- Management and Anticoagulation- Dr. Jim Williams
Atrial fibrillation is a common emergency department presentation. Dr. Jim Williams returns to The Frontline to discuss the current management, trends, and anticoagulation. As the American population ages, we will see a growing number of the patients and emergency medicine will have a front row seat.
Sep 30, 2019 • 16min
Stephen Anderson, MD, FACEP - Emergency Medicine Foundation
Forty-seven years ago, the Emergency Medicine Foundation was created to help define the specialty and move it forward. Dr. Stephen Anderson and Dr. Ryan Stanton sat down to talk about how the EMF is improving the specialty of Emergency Medicine with funding for research and advocacy.
www.emfoundation.org
Sep 23, 2019 • 25min
David Wang, MD - Palliative Care
Today on ACEP Frontline Dr Ryan Stanton talks with his guest Dr. David Wang about Palliative Care and how to have difficult conversations with patients and their loved ones.
For more resources, please visit ACEP's Palliative Care page: https://www.acep.org/by-medical-focus/palliative-medicine/

Sep 16, 2019 • 27min
James Neuenschwander, II, MD, FACEP - Pacemaker Interrogation
Today on ACEP Frontline we’re talking interrogations. In a community hospital setting, it can be tough to get a pacemaker or ICD interrogated in a timely fashion after hours or on the weekends. Dr. Neuenschwander is doing some great research looking into the ED providers doing their own interrogations in a fraction of the time it would take to get a rep in. According to him, it’s all about improving patient care as well as the specialty of Emergency Medicine.
Sep 9, 2019 • 29min
Daniel Moore, MD - Efficiency and ED Flow
Today’s ACEP Frontline was recorded at the Emerald Coast Conference in Destin Florida earlier this spring. Dr. Ryan Stanton talked with Dr. Daniel Moore about capacity and throughput in Emergency Medicine. Dr. Moore took data from his department and came up with solutions tailored for their needs and has solved their front-end patient wait times and created capacity for transfers.

Sep 2, 2019 • 31min
Dr. Andrea Brault- Billing And Networks- ECC19
In this episode of ACEP Frontline, Dr. Ryan Stanton interviews Dr. Andrea Brault, a national leader in physician billing, reimbursement, and legislation, about some of the things we can do to reflect the care provided AND where we are going in the future.
Aug 26, 2019 • 21min
Joseph Piktel, MD, FACEP – Research Forum Highlights (ACEP18)
Today we talk to Dr. Joe Piktel about Primetime Practice Changers at the ACEP18 Research Forum. On the docket: research and its place in social media, medication assisted therapy for OUD in the ED, the chest pain patient, sepsis and more. What’s the evidence and where’s the research? We’re talking about it, on ACEP Frontline!
Aug 19, 2019 • 17min
Puneet Gupta, MD, FACEP – EMRA Leaders and Future Leaders, LAC19
Recorded at #LAC19, we sat down with Dr. Puneet Gupta to talk about leaders in EMRA and the movers and shakers who are shaping the face of emergency medicine and health care. Listen in to see just what these disrupters are doing to make EM better, from mitigating gun violence to taking an active role in the wellness of the EM physician.


