REBEL Cast

Salim R. Rezaie, MD
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Mar 4, 2026 • 28min

REBEL MIND – How to Sleep When the World Says You Can’t

🧭 REBEL Rundown 🔑Key Points Try the coffee nap! Where you combine caffeine and a 30-minute nap to then have that boost energy and alertness by the time it kicks in.💤 Sleep isn’t optional—it’s crucial for memory, mood regulation, and physical recovery. It is fundamentally different from rest❌ Replacing sleep with caffeine isn’t effective and can have negative health impacts. Make getting enough sleep a priority🌞 Sunlight exposure is important for maintaining circadian rhythms and sleep quality. This applies even if you work as a nocturnist💡 Creating a personalized sleep system enhances quality and consistency. It gives you back control of a schedule that you may feel like is out of your hands.🧩 If you’ve tried these strategies and you’re still struggling, consider true sleep pathology (insomnia, shift work disorder, sleep apnea) and get help—this is not a “be tougher” problem.🩺 Better sleep isn’t just about feeling good; it’s directly tied to error reduction, patient safety, and longevity in EM/ICU careers. Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 👀Previously Covered and Related Content: REBEL Core Cast: Sleep HygieneREBEL MIND: Rest Is Not Sleep: The Seven Dimensions of True RecoveryRebellion in EM: Care For Yourself – Sleep HygieneFirst10EM: Some Evidence For Working Night ShiftsREBEL MIND: Dunning Kruger Effect 📝 Introduction Welcome to this episode of REBEL MIND, where MIND stands for Mastering Internal Negativity during Difficulty. Here we sharpen the person behind the practitioner by focusing on things that improve our performance, optimizing team dynamics and the human behavior that embodies the hidden curriculum of medicine. Today we are exploring the imperative topic of rest and why it’s not just about sleeping. The second of a two part series, hosted by Dr. Mark Ramzy with guests Dr. Maureen Aiad and Dr. Amil Badoolah, continue our discussion but this time on the multifaceted nature of sleep, how it serves as medicine and how we can use our tools deliberately to get more of it! Cognitive Question How would your clinical performance, patience with families, and long-term career sustainability change if you treated sleep as a non-negotiable clinical intervention rather than a flexible “nice-to-have”? 💤How is Sleep Different From Rest? 1. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs systemsWe previously talked about the 7 types of rest and you can check that out hereExamples of physical rest include: pausing tasks, stepping away from the monitor, taking a walk, stretching, breathing, journaling, connecting with a colleague. This lightens your cognitive/emotional burden.Sleep is fundamentally different in that it’s an active biologic process that helps:Consolidates memory and learning (yes, including the tough cases from last night).Regulates mood, impulse control, and emotional reactivity.Supports immunity, metabolic health, and cardiovascular function.Repairs tissue, replenishes neurotransmitters, and fine-tunes neural networks.You can have “rested but underslept” days (you took breaks but got 4 hours in bed), and “slept but unrested” days (you got hours, but all junk sleep). Both matter, but they are not interchangeable.2. Sleep architecture vs. “knocking out”True restorative sleep cycles through NREM and REM in predictable patterns.Alcohol, late caffeine, and fragmented nights may help you fall asleep faster but:Suppress REM.Shorten deep sleep.Increase awakenings and light sleep.The result: you technically slept, but your brain didn’t get the “software updates” it needed.Biology isn’t built for your scheduleCircadian rhythms were designed for light-day / dark-night cycles, not:10 pm–7 am ED shifts.24-hour calls.6 nights in a row followed by days.Your body can adapt partially, but not instantly and not perfectly. That’s why:You can feel “jet-lagged” even when you haven’t traveled.Sleep before and after nights feels odd and fragile.Recognizing that “this is biologically unnatural” is key: you’re not weak; you’re fighting physiology. 🏥How This Applies to the Emergency Department or ICU? Performance & safetySleep deprivation:Slows reaction time and increases error rate.Impairs risk assessment and complex decision-making.Drops your frustration tolerance with consultants, families, and staff.In both emergency medicine and critical care, that translates into:Anchoring on the wrong diagnosis.Missing subtle clinical changes.Snapping at a tech, nurse or resident and damaging team culture. Chronic health for chronic shift workLong-term sleep disruption is associated with:Hypertension, diabetes, obesity.Depression, anxiety, burnout.Arrhythmias (e.g., AFib) and increased stroke risk.Possibly increased all-cause mortality.You’re already in a high-stress, high-exposure specialty. Chronically poor sleep amplifies that risk profile and can end a career early—or make you miserable while you’re still in it.Culture of “heroics” vs. healthSkipping sleep to pick up extra shifts, late meetings, or “just one more note” is often praised.We rarely celebrate:The attending who says “no” to a 2 pm meeting post-nights.The resident who defends their blackout-curtains-and-earplugs routine. 🛏️Different Ways to Improve Your Sleep Clarify your “sleep non-negotiables”Decide how many hours you realistically need to function (e.g., 7–9 on off days, realistic blocks on nights).Treat those hours as you would a procedure time—blocked, protected, and respected.Use caffeine like a drug, not a reflexAim for ≤ 2 cups equivalent on most days.Avoid caffeine within 4–6 hours of your planned sleep time (remember: it can hang around up to 12 hours).Consider scheduling caffeine for:Early in the shift for alertness.Strategic “coffee naps” (see below), not late-night chugging.Respect alcohol’s impact on sleepRecognize that even small to moderate doses degrade sleep architecture.Avoid using alcohol as a “sleep aid”—you’ll fall asleep faster but sleep worse.If you do drink, separate it from bedtime and keep it modest.Optimize food and fluid timingHydrate consistently on shift, but taper fluids ~4 hours before bed to reduce nocturnal bathroom trips.Avoid heavy, spicy, or large meals within 2–3 hours of sleep to decrease reflux and discomfort.Plan a light, balanced “pre-sleep” snack if going to bed hungry keeps you awake.Move your body (but not right before bed)Regular exercise improves sleep depth and latency.Try to avoid intense workouts within 2 hours of bedtime.On shift: micro-movement (stairs, brisk walks between pods, quick stretch sessions) can help alertness without wrecking sleep later.Control light exposureMaximize sunlight or bright light after waking (even if that’s 3–4 pm after a night).Minimize bright light and screens before sleep:Dim lights.Use night mode/blue-light filters if you must scroll.For daytime sleep:Use blackout curtains, tinfoil, cardboard, or sleep masks.Yes seriously use tinfoil if you have to, we talk about it on the podcast episode!Aim for “I might be blind” darkness—so dark you can’t see your hand in front of your face.Dial in your sleep environmentCool room temperature (fan or AC if possible).White noise or sound machine to mask household/traffic noise.Earplugs and eye masks as needed.Bed used primarily for sleep (and sex)—not for charting, doom scrolling, or email.Strategic power napsKeep naps ≤ 20–30 minutes to avoid sleep inertia.Prefer early-afternoon or pre-night-shift naps.Coffee nap strategy:Drink a small coffee.Immediately lie down for a 20–30 min nap.Wake up as the caffeine kicks in, combining nap benefit + stimulant.Thoughtful melatonin useRemember melatonin is a hormone, not a vitamin gummy.Lower doses often work as well as (or better than) large OTC doses.Use it intentionally and intermittently, not as a crutch every night.Over-reliance may reduce your own natural production and its effectiveness over time.Build pre-sleep ritualsRepeated, calming habits signal your body it’s time to downshift:Warm shower, gentle stretching, or yoga.Guided breathing or body scan.Brief journaling or “brain dump” of tasks to get them out of your head and onto paper.Protect from pathologic patternsIf despite consistent effort you:Snore heavily, stop breathing, or gasp in sleep.Feel excessively sleepy driving home or at work.Cannot fall asleep or stay asleep for weeks to months.Consider evaluation for sleep apnea, insomnia, or shift-work sleep disorder with your physician or sleep specialist. ⏩Immediate Action Steps for Before/During/After Your Next Shift 1. **Before the Shift**: Plan a 20–90 minute nap before your first night shift (many clinicians find 3–5 hours earlier in the day is ideal).I treat ED and ICU shifts very differently. I always sleep 3-5 hours before my night shifts aiming for the full 5 (sometimes 6 or more) hours for my ED shifts because you always have to be “on”. Depending on the ICU I’m working in, I may have a bit more downtime so 3 to 5 hours is plenty.Set a caffeine plan: decide in advance when your last dose will be (e.g., none after 2–3 am if sleeping at 8–9 am).Tell your household, “This is my sleep block” and agree on a plan for kids, pets, deliveries, etc.On my calendar, I completely block off time called “Pre-call sleep” so no meetings can be scheduled and then put my phone in airplane mode2. **During the Shift** Hydrate early; taper fluids in the last 3–4 hours of your shift Eat something light but adequate; avoid “last-minute” heavy meals right before sign-out.Build in micro-breaks and movement: one or two short walks, a few stretches, even a quick stair run if safe.Get outside or near a window for a few minutes of light exposure if possible.3. **After the Shift**On the way home:Use sunglasses to reduce bright morning light if you’re aiming for sleep soon.Avoid “just checking” email or messages; shift into wind-down mode.At home:Do a brief, calming decompression (shower, light snack, 10–15 minutes of low-stimulation TV or reading).Make your room cold, quiet, and dark (blackout curtains, tinfoil/cardboard, white noise, fan).Put your phone on Do Not Disturb and physically place it away from the bed.On my calendar, I completely block off time called “Post-call sleep” so again no meetings can be scheduled and then I personally don’t just put my phone on Do Not Disturb but rather in airplane mode and WIFI OFF If you can’t sleep after ~20–30 minutes:Get out of bed, do something calming in dim light (breathing, gentle stretching, journaling).Return to bed when sleepy—this trains your brain to associate bed with sleep, not frustration. Conclusion Rest and sleep are both critical—but they’re not interchangeable. Rest helps you step out of the constant “on” of our jobs, while sleep is the biological intervention that restores your ability to show up safely and sustainably. Rest ≠ sleep. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs your brain and body. You need both, on purpose.As EM and ICU clinicians, we’re trying to perform formula-one-level medicine with engines that often only see half their maintenance. You won’t fix shift work. You can build a sleep system that respects your biology, your schedule, and your life at home.That system starts with valuing sleep, then prioritizing it, personalizing it, trusting the process when it’s imperfect, and actively protecting both your routine and your mindset. 🚨 Clinical Bottom Line Sleep is medicine. Shift work is biologically unnatural. Struggling does not mean you’re weak; it means you’re human fighting physiology. Use your tools deliberately. Caffeine, naps, light, food, movement, melatonin, and environment can be leveraged—or can quietly sabotage you. Build and defend a personalized sleep routine. Communicate it, normalize it, and protect it from casual encroachment. You can’t control every trauma, code, or admission—but you can control how seriously you take your own recovery. Your patients, your team, and your future self all benefit when you do. Further Reading Espie CA. The ‘5 principles’ of good sleep health. J Sleep Res. 2022 Jun; PMID: 34676592Solodar, J“Sleep hygiene: Simple practices for better rest.” Harvard Health, 31 January 2025 Link is HereSuni, E.“Mastering Sleep Hygiene: Your Path to Quality Sleep.” Sleep Foundation, 7 July 2025, Link is Here Meet the Authors Mark Ramzy, DO Co-Editor-in-Chief Cardiothoracic Intensivist and EM Attending RWJBH / Rutgers Health, Newark, NJ Maureen Aiad, DO Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine NYU Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, New York Amil Badoolah, DO Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine NYU Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, New York REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene Click here for Direct Download of ... Read More The post REBEL MIND – How to Sleep When the World Says You Can’t appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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Feb 18, 2026 • 34min

REBEL MIND: Applying Performance Science In and Out of the Emergency Department

Allyn Abadie, principal scientist at Arena Labs and former athletic trainer turned biomarker researcher. He discusses using wearable data and coaching to quantify stress and recovery. Topics include breath acetone as a metabolic marker, key recovery metrics like HRV and sleep, quick science-backed micro-recovery tools, and translating athletic performance principles to clinician well-being.
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Feb 12, 2026 • 0sec

REBEL Core Cast 150.0: Emergency Medicine Consults: How to Call a Consult + Handle Pushback (With Scripts)

🧭 REBEL Rundown 📌 Key Points The 4 Steps of an ED Consult:👋 Introduce yourself and your role🎯 Lead with the outcome (the ask)🧾 Give a focused case summary (why it’s theirs + what you’ve done)🔁 Close the loop (timeline, next steps, contingencies) Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 📝 Introduction Today we’re tackling one of the most important (and most under-taught) skills in emergency medicine: how to call a consult in the ED and what to do when a consultant pushes back.To call a consult in the ED, start with a brief introduction, lead with the outcome you need (“the ask”), give a focused decision-relevant summary, and close the loop with timeline and next steps. If the consultant resists, clarify the “why,” restate the ask, offer alternatives, and escalate when patient safety or disposition is at risk.After two decades in emergency medicine and countless consult calls, here’s a simple framework—plus copy/paste scripts—to make your consults faster, clearer, and easier to say “yes” to. 🤔 Why Consult Skills Matter in Emergency Medicine Consults aren’t a formality—they’re a patient-care intervention. Strong consult communication:Reduces delays in time-sensitive careImproves ED throughput and dispositionDecreases conflict and miscommunicationClarifies ownership and next stepsProtects the patient (and the team) when plans are unclear 🪜 The 4-Step ED Consult Framework (Introduction → Ask → Summary → Close the Loop) Most consult friction comes from one of two problems: unclear expectations or excessive noise. This four-step structure solves both.1) Introduce yourself and your roleA simple intro sets a professional tone and removes ambiguity.Script: “Hey, this is Swami, one of the ED attendings. I’m calling for an ortho consult.” 2) Lead with the outcome (the ask)Don’t bury the lede. The consultant wants to know what you need—immediately.Script: “I’m calling about a patient with a suspected septic knee. I need you to evaluate for operative management.” 3) Give a focused, decision-relevant summaryYour summary should answer:Why this is your service’s problemWhat’s already been doneWhat I’m worried about / what decision is needed nowScript: “43-year-old man with no major PMH, 3 days of knee pain and swelling. XR negative. Febrile. Aspiration yielded purulent fluid—cultures sent. We started antibiotics after the tap. He’s hemodynamically stable.” High-yield pearl: Add quick “stability anchors” when relevant:“Airway stable, pain controlled.”“Neurovascularly intact.”“No signs of compartment syndrome.”“No hypotension or escalating oxygen requirement.” 4) Close the loop (timeline + next steps)This prevents the consult from floating in limbo and protects patient flow.Script: “When do you expect to see the patient, and do you want anything done before you arrive—NPO, repeat labs, additional imaging?” 📝 ED Consult Script General ED Consult Script “Hi, this is Dr. ___ in the ED. I’m calling for a ___ consult. The reason is ___. Briefly: ___ year-old with ___. We’ve done ___ and started ___. I’m concerned about ___. Can you see them today, and what’s your preferred next step?” Septic joint / Ortho Example “Hi, this is Swami in the ED. I need an ortho consult for suspected septic arthritis. 43-year-old with 3 days of atraumatic knee swelling and fever. XR negative. Tap produced purulent fluid—cultures sent. Antibiotics started after aspiration. Can you evaluate for operative management, and when can you see the patient?” Neurology example (time-sensitive) “Hi, this is Dr. ___ in the ED. I need neurology for suspected acute stroke. Last known well ___. NIHSS ___. CT/CTA completed (or pending). I’m calling to discuss candidacy for thrombolysis/thrombectomy and next steps. When can you evaluate and what additional workup do you want now?” ⛓️‍💥 Common ED Consult Mistakes (and Fixes) Mistake: Long story before the askFix: Lead with the outcome in the first sentenceMistake: Unfiltered data dumpFix: Provide only decision-relevant detailsMistake: No timelineFix: Ask explicitly when they’ll see the patient and what they need firstMistake: Implicit “ownership”Fix: Clarify who is admitting, who is following, and what happens if the patient worsens ✋ What to Do When a Consultant Pushes Back Even a perfect consult can meet resistance. Your job is to stay calm, keep it professional, and protect the patient.1) Ask “why?”Don’t argue first—diagnose the refusal.Script: “Help me understand your concern about seeing this patient.” Many refusals are based on misunderstanding: wrong service, missing key detail, or incorrect assumption about stability.2) Restate the consult in one sentence, then offer optionsIf the conversation starts spiraling, reset it.Script: “To be clear, I’m concerned this is septic arthritis and needs ortho evaluation. If you don’t feel you’re the right service, who should be—rheum, medicine, or another surgical team?” This keeps you collaborative while preventing dead ends.3) Humanize the decision (use sparingly)This is a “high-voltage” tool. Use it when stakes are high and you’ve already clarified the medical facts.Script: “I’m worried we’re missing something time-sensitive. If this were your family member, what would you want us to do next?” Use it to re-anchor to patient risk—not as a guilt tactic. ⚡️When and How to Escalate a Consult Escalation isn’t personal—it’s a safety mechanism when there’s an impasse that threatens timely care.When to escalateTime-sensitive condition is delayed (e.g., septic joint, cord compression, testicular torsion, GI bleed with instability)No clear disposition plan despite reasonable ED evaluationConsultant refusal blocks needed specialty decision-makingPatient safety or deterioration risk is increasing in the ED How to escalate (lowest to highest intensity)Ask for the consultant’s attending (if speaking to a resident)Call the on-call attending directlyInvolve ED leadership/medical directorEscalate to service chief/department chair (rare, but real)Hospital supervisor/admin escalation for immediate operational impasseScript: “We’re at an impasse and the patient needs a decision. I’m escalating to clarify ownership and ensure timely care.” ️ Documentation Tips for Consult Refusals Documentation should be factual and patient-centered, not punitive.Include:Your clinical concern and why the consult is neededWho you spoke with (name/role)Their stated reason for refusal or delayAlternatives discussedEscalation steps taken and final plan 👉 FAQ: Emergency Medicine Consults What is the best way to call a consult in the ED?Introduce yourself, lead with the specific ask, summarize only decision-relevant details, and close the loop with a clear plan and timeline.What should I say when a consultant refuses to see a patient?Ask why, clarify misunderstandings, restate your concern and the ask, and request an alternative plan or appropriate service.When should I escalate a consult?Escalate when an impasse delays time-sensitive care, threatens patient safety, or prevents appropriate disposition.How do I document a refused consult?Document the clinical concern, who you spoke with, their stated reason, alternatives discussed, and escalation steps taken. 🏁 Conclusion Mastering emergency medicine consults makes you faster, safer, and easier to work with. The goal isn’t to “win” a consult call—it’s to get the patient the right care, with clear ownership and a shared plan. Post Peer Reviewed By: Marco Propersi, DO (Twitter/X: @Marco_propersi), and Mark Ramzy, DO (X: @MRamzyDO) 👤 Associate Editor Anand Swaminathan MD, MPH All Things REBEL EM Meet The Team 🔎 Your Deep-Dive Starts Here REBEL Core Cast – Pediatric Respiratory Emergencies: Beyond Viral Season Welcome to the Rebel Core Content Blog, where we delve ... Pediatrics Read More REBEL Core Cast 143.0–Ventilators Part 3: Oxygenation & Ventilation — Mastering the Balance on the Ventilator When you take the airway, you take the wheel and ... Thoracic and Respiratory Read More REBEL Core Cast 142.0–Ventilators Part 2: Simplifying Mechanical Ventilation – Most Common Ventilator Modes Mechanical ventilation can feel overwhelming, especially when faced with a ... Thoracic and Respiratory Read More REBEL Core Cast 141.0–Ventilators Part 1: Simplifying Mechanical Ventilation — Types of Breathes For many medical residents, the ICU can feel like stepping ... Thoracic and Respiratory Read More REBEL Core Cast 140.0: The Power and Limitations of Intraosseous Lines in Emergency Medicine The sicker the patient, the more likely an IO line ... Procedures and Skills Read More REBEL Core Cast 139.0: Pneumothorax Decompression On this episode of the Rebel Core Cast, Swami takes ... Procedures and Skills Read More The post REBEL Core Cast 150.0: Emergency Medicine Consults: How to Call a Consult + Handle Pushback (With Scripts) appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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Feb 5, 2026 • 19min

REBEL CAST – RENOVATE Trial: HFNC vs BPAP in Acute Respiratory Failure

🧭 REBEL Rundown 📌 Key Points 💨 HFNC met criteria for non-inferiority to BPAP for preventing intubation or death within 7 days in four of the five ARF subgroups.🧪 Bayesian dynamic borrowing increased power across subgroups but created variable certainty, especially in smaller groups such as COPD.🫁 The immunocompromised hypoxemia subgroup did not meet non-inferiority, leading to early trial stopping for futility.️ Rescue BPAP use, subgroup-specific exclusion criteria, and non-standardized BPAP delivery are important contextual factors that influence how subgroup results should be interpreted. Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 📝 Introduction Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure (BPAP) has long been a foundational modality in the management of acute respiratory failure (ARF), particularly in COPD exacerbations and cardiogenic pulmonary edema, where it can rapidly reduce work of breathing and improve gas exchange. It remains a core tool in our respiratory support arsenal.High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC), however, has expanded what we can offer patients by delivering many of the same physiologic benefits through a far more comfortable interface. With high flows, modest PEEP, and effective dead-space washout, HFNC can improve oxygenation and decrease work of breathing while preserving the ability to talk, cough, eat, and interact with staff and family. This combination of physiologic support and tolerability makes HFNC especially attractive in patients where comfort, anxiety, or cardiovascular stability are key considerations, and in settings where prolonged noninvasive support may be needed. Rather than competing with BPAP, HFNC broadens our options in ARF and allows us to better match the modality to the patient and their underlying disease process.The RENOVATE trial set out to answer a high-impact question across five distinct etiologic groups: Is HFNC non-inferior to BPAP (NIV) for preventing intubation or death in acute respiratory failure? 🧾 Paper Azoulay É, et al. High-Flow Nasal Oxygen vs Noninvasive Ventilation in Patients With Acute Respiratory Failure: The RENOVATE Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2025 PMID: 39657981 🔙Previously Covered On REBEL: HFNC: Part 1 – How It WorksHFNC: Part 2 – Adult and Pediatric IndicationsFLORALI and AVOID TrialFLORALI-2: NIV vs HFNC as Pre-Oxygenation Prior to IntubationThe Pre-AeRATE Trial – HFNC vs NC for RSI ️ What They Did CLINICAL QUESTION Is HFNC non-inferior to BPAP for rate of endotracheal intubation or death at 7 days in patients with acute respiratory failure due to a variety of causes? STUDY DESIGN Multicenter, randomized non-inferiority trial33 Brazilian hospitalsNov 2019 – Nov 2023Adaptive Bayesian hierarchical modeling with dynamic borrowingOpen label, outcome adjudicators blindedPatients were classified into 5 subgroups SUBGROUPS 1. Non-immunocompromised hypoxemiaSpO₂ < 90% on room air orPaO₂ < 60 mm Hg on room air plusIncreased respiratory effort (accessory muscle use, paradoxical breathing, thoracoabdominal asynchrony) orRespiratory rate > 25 breaths/min2. Immunocompromised hypoxemiaDefined as:Use of immunosuppressive drugs for >3 monthsOR high-dose steroids >0.5 mg/kg/dayOR solid organ transplantOR solid tumors or hematologic malignancies (past 5 years)OR HIV with AIDS / primary immunodeficiency3. COPD exacerbation with acidosisHigh clinical suspicion of COPD as primary diagnosisRR >25 with accessory muscle use, paradoxical breathing, and/or thoracoabdominal asynchronyABG: pH <7.35 AND PaCO₂ >454. Acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema (ACPE)Sudden onset dyspnea and rales± S3 heart soundNo evidence of aspiration, infection, or pulmonary fibrosisCXR consistent with pulmonary edema5. Hypoxemic COVID-19 (added June 2023)Added due to deviations between expected and observed outcome proportionsAny patient across the other 4 groups with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection in any of the above groups POPULATION Inclusion Criteria:≥18 yrs with ARF* in one of 5 pre-defined subgroups excluding COPD was defined by the following:Hypoxemia with SpO₂ <90 or PaO₂ <60Accessory muscle use, paradoxical breathing, and/or thoracoabdominal asynchronyRR >25 BPMExclusion Criteria:Need for emergency intubationProlonged apneic episodesCardiorespiratory arrestGCS <12HR <50 with decreased consciousnessABG pH <7.15Severe agitation requiring heavy sedationHemodynamic instability (MAP <65, SBP <90 despite fluids or requiring high-dose pressors)Contraindications to BPAP (facial trauma, recent esophageal surgery, copious secretions, vomiting, aspiration risk)Pneumothorax or large pleural effusionSevere arrhythmiaThoracic trauma as primary ARF causeAsthma attackCardiogenic shockACS requiring urgent cathARF within 72h post-extubationPost-surgical ARF within 72hHypercapnic ARF due to neuromuscular/chest wall diseasePalliative care or DNIChronic pulmonary disease other than COPD6 hours BPAP prior to randomization (hypoxemic non-immunocompromised, immunocompromised, and COPD groups)Prior BPAP use in ACPE INTERVENTION & COMPARATOR Intervention (HFNC Group):Flow:COPD: Start 30 L/minAll others: Start 45 L/minTitrated up to 60 L/min or highest toleratedFiO₂:Start at 50% and titrate to maintain target SpO₂SpO₂ Targets:COPD: 88–92%Others: 92–98%Rescue Therapy (COPD & ACPE only):If failing maximal HFNC → 1 hour of rescue BPAPIf failing BPAP → immediate intubationWeaningBegin ≥24 hrs once RR <25 and no distressGradual reductions in FiO₂/flowConsidered weaned at:FiO₂ <30% and Flow <25–30 L/minComparator (BPAP Group):Via ICU ventilator or BiLevel deviceInitial Settings:COPD: IPAP 12–16 / EPAP 4Others: IPAP 12–14 / EPAP 8Max settings: IPAP 20 / EPAP 12SpO₂ Targets:COPD: 88–92%Others: 92–98%Titration: Not standardizedSedation: Not standardizedWeaning:After 24 hrsAt clinician discretionConsidered weaned at FiO₂ 30% and EPAP/PS <6 OUTCOMES Primary Outcome:Endotracheal intubation or death within 7 days.Secondary Outcomes:28-day mortality90-day mortality Mechanical ventilation free days at 28 daysICU-free days at 28 daysTertiary Outcomes:Hospital and ICU length of stay within 90 daysVasopressor-free days within 28 daysNew DNI orders within 7 daysPatient comfort  📈 Results: 💥 Critical Results MOR: Median Odds RatioMHR: Median Hazard Ratio 💪 Strengths Broad, multicenter design: Large multicenter randomized trial comparing HFNC vs BPAP across several etiologies of acute respiratory failure in ED and ICU settings.Etiology-based and COVID-specific subgroups: Patients were stratified into prespecified clinical subgroups (COPD with acidosis, ACPE, immunocompromised hypoxemia, non-immunocompromised hypoxemia), and COVID-19 was later added and analyzed as a separate subgroup rather than being combined with the original ARF categories.Bayesian hierarchical model with dynamic borrowing: The primary analysis used a Bayesian hierarchical framework that allowed information to be borrowed across subgroups when treatment effects were similar and reduced borrowing when subgroups differed.Prespecified non-inferiority and futility rules: Each subgroup had predefined non-inferiority and futility boundaries, and enrollment in the immunocompromised subgroup was stopped early after crossing a futility threshold.Standardized BPAP delivery system: BPAP was delivered using a single BPAP system/interface across participating centers.Single healthcare system and population: All sites were within one national healthcare system, with broadly similar clinician training, practice patterns, and patient populations for that country.Current practice relevance: The trial addresses a post-COVID era question in which HFNC is widely used, providing comparative HFNC vs BPAP data across multiple ARF etiologies in a pragmatic ED/ICU population. ⚠️ Limitations Small subgroup sizes: The COPD (35 vs 42) and immunocompromised (28 vs 22) subgroups included relatively few patients compared with the other etiologic groups.Dependence on borrowing for COPD estimates: COPD treatment-effect estimates in the primary model were heavily influenced by borrowing from other subgroups, and no-borrowing sensitivity analyses showed wider intervals.Pre-randomization BPAP and exclusion criteria: COPD patients could receive up to 6 hours of BPAP before randomization, and ACPE patients judged to require immediate BPAP were excluded from enrollment.Rescue BPAP in the HFNC arm: Patients assigned to HFNC could receive rescue BPAP; BPAP settings were not standardized, and detailed reporting of rescue BPAP management and outcomes (including number of episodes) was limited.Non-standardized weaning strategies: Weaning protocols for HFNC and BPAP were not tightly protocolized or aligned, and HFNC weaning permitted flows down to 25–30 L/min.Single-country setting: All participating centers were located in one country. 🛣️Side Tangent on Bayesian Adaptive Model Prior to our deep dive into the discussion, lets first explain the importance of the statistical method used in the RENOVATE trial, the Bayesian Adaptive Model.A Bayesian Adaptive Model is a trial design that keeps updating its understanding of which treatment works better as new data are collected, and it allows the trial to change course in real time based on those results.Now imagine you’re comparing two pairs of running shoes. Your goal is to see which one helps runners finish faster, so you measure their race times. Runners try Shoe A or Shoe B, and as the results come in, you analyze the times.If runners wearing Shoe A and Shoe B are finishing within a few seconds of each other, you would conclude the shoes perform similarly,  meaning they are non-inferior.If runners wearing one shoe are consistently finishing much faster, you can say that shoe is superior, and the trial may stop early because you’ve clearly found the better option.If one shoe repeatedly produces slower times compared to the standard, you may stop the trial for inferiority, because continuing would not benefit runners.This approach allows the study to learn as it goes and make decisions based on accumulating evidence rather than waiting until the very end.The Bayesian adaptive model also utilizes a statistical tool known as dynamic borrowing. Dynamic borrowing is a statistical method that allows data from related groups to be shared or pooled when their outcomes appear similar, but automatically reduces or stops that sharing when the groups differ, ensuring accuracy and preventing misleading conclusions.For example, if Shoes A and B are producing similar race times (non-inferior), the coach can combine or “borrow” data from both groups and average their times, which increases statistical precision.However, if one shoe becomes clearly superior or clearly inferior, dynamic borrowing stops, because the race times are no longer comparable and averaging them would distort the results.In this running-shoe analogy, the RENOVATE trial was essentially comparing Shoe A (BPAP) and Shoe B (HFNC) to see which helped patients “run faster,” or achieve better clinical outcomes in 5 different pathologies. In this running-shoe analogy, the RENOVATE trial was essentially comparing Shoe A (BPAP) and Shoe B (HFNC) to see which helped patients “run faster,” or achieve better clinical outcomes across five different respiratory pathologies. As results accumulated, the Bayesian adaptive model used dynamic borrowing and could combine results when both devices performed similarly, but stopped pooling data if one clearly helped patients more or less. 🗣️ Discussion What RENOVATE asked and what it found: The RENOVATE trial is the first multicenter randomized study to directly evaluate whether HFNC is non-inferior to BPAP for preventing intubation or death across multiple etiologies of acute respiratory failure. Overall, HFNC met non-inferiority criteria in four of the five predefined subgroups, with much of the statistical strength coming from the Bayesian borrowing structure. However, several design and analytic choices limit how confident we can be in these findings across all groups.Bayesian model, borrowing, and small numbers: The Bayesian hierarchical model improves precision by “sharing” information between subgroups when outcomes look similar, but this does not fully fix the problem of small sample sizes. In subgroups with low numbers, the model still has less power and more uncertainty, and the apparent stability of the estimates is heavily influenced by the borrowing framework rather than large, subgroup-specific datasets.COPD and ACPE – who actually got randomized: In both COPD and ACPE, enrollment decisions likely removed many of the sickest patients from randomization. COPD patients could be stabilized for up to six hours on BPAP before being randomized, and ACPE patients who clearly required immediate BPAP were excluded altogether. Because the trial never reported how many patients were treated or excluded in the ACPE group, we do not have a clear picture of how sick the randomized patients really were.Rescue BPAP in the HFNC arm: Rescue therapy adds another layer of ambiguity. Nearly a quarter of COPD patients in the HFNC arm required rescue BPAP, yet the study did not describe the BPAP pressure settings used, how many times rescue could be repeated, or whether these patients ultimately improved, failed, or required intubation. This is particularly important because the primary endpoint is intubation within seven days, and we do not know how much non-standardized BPAP rescue influenced that outcome in patients initially assigned to HFNC.Different weaning strategies between HFNC and BPAP: Weaning practices also differed meaningfully between HFNC and BPAP. HFNC patients could be considered “weaned” while still receiving flows that are well above physiologic baseline (25–30 L/min), whereas BPAP weaning was left largely to clinician judgment without tightly aligned criteria. This lack of standardized weaning makes it difficult to directly compare the two modalities in terms of duration of support and when a treatment should be considered to have “failed.”Value of multiple etiologic subgroups: Rather than asking a single global question of whether HFNC works for all causes of acute respiratory failure, the trial was designed with multiple etiologic subgroups. This allows us to compare HFNC and BPAP within distinct pathologies commonly seen in the ED and ICU. In practice, this design helps us look across each subgroup and think about which modality—HFNC or BPAP—may be most appropriate for a given underlying diagnosis.Immunocompromised subgroup had early futility and inadequate support: In immunocompromised patients, HFNC clearly underperformed BPAP on early outcomes. Intubation rates were higher with HFNC (50.0% vs 31.8%), and early deaths were also higher (17.9% vs 13.6%), leading this subgroup to cross a prespecified futility boundary and stopping further enrollment. By 28 and 90 days, mortality was similar between HFNC and BPAP in this cohort, suggesting that HFNC alone did not provide enough up-front respiratory support for this high-risk group rather than causing a lasting difference in long-term outcomes.Why COVID was separated from the original ARF subgroups: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, clinicians were making treatment decisions in real time without established guidelines or a solid understanding of disease trajectory. Many COVID patients behaved clinically like an immunocompromised or atypical ARF cohort. If COVID patients had been left inside the original ARF subgroups, they could have distorted those results and biased the trial toward an apparent signal of HFNC futility. By separating COVID into its own subgroup, the investigators preserved the integrity of the non-COVID etiologic groups while still including COVID patients in the overall study population. This approach allowed for cleaner estimates within each subgroup and more appropriate borrowing across groups without letting a large, atypical population dominate the model.Standardized BPAP delivery as a control: Using one BPAP delivery method for all patients created a built-in control on the BPAP side of the trial. The interface and mode were standardized, so the main difference between patients was their underlying disease and assignment to HFNC vs BPAP. This consistency across BPAP subgroups reduces “noise” in how BPAP was delivered and makes it easier to attribute differences in outcomes to the disease process and modality choice rather than variation in the BPAP setup itself.Single-country setting and external validity: Running the entire study in one country means clinicians share similar training, practice patterns, and system-level resources, which helps keep management more consistent across subgroups and centers. The trade-off is external validity: what is considered “standard” care in this health system may look very different in other countries, particularly in resource-limited settings, so these findings may not translate perfectly to other practice environments. 📘 Author's Conclusion “HFNC met criteria for noninferiority to NIV for the primary outcome in 4 of the 5 patient groups. Small sample sizes and sensitivity to the analysis model suggest further study is needed in COPD, immunocompromised patients, and ACPE.” 💬 Our Conclusion HFNC appears to perform comparably to BPAP in non-immunocompromised hypoxemic and COVID-positive patients. However, the data in COPD, ACPE, and immunocompromised patients are limited and statistically fragile—heavily influenced by small numbers and modeling assumptions—so BPAP  should remain the preferred modality when ventilatory support is clearly required and may offer more reliable benefit in these groups. 🚨 Clinical Bottom Line HFNC is a great option for many patients with acute respiratory failure, but some patients clearly need BPAP up front. In patients with obvious BPAP-responsive physiology—such as COPD with acidosis, ACPE with increased work of breathing, or frank hypercapnia—or in those who are crashing at the door, BPAP remains the first-line choice. In more stable patients, especially those without a strong indication for BPAP, with limited hypercapnia, or where comfort and longer-term tolerance matter, HFNC is a reasonable first-line option for extra respiratory support while you closely watch their trajectory and stay ready to escalate. 📚 References RENOVATE Investigators and BRICNet Authors. High-flow nasal oxygen vs noninvasive ventilation in patients with acute respiratory failure: The RENOVATE randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2025;333(10):875–890. PMID: 39657981 Tempo G, Grieco DL. Article review: The RENOVATE randomised clinical trial. European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM) Article Review. 2025. Available hereRoca O, Messika J, Caralt B, et al. Predicting success of high-flow nasal cannula in pneumonia patients with hypoxemic respiratory failure: The utility of the ROX index. J Crit Care. 2016;35:200–205. PMID: 27481760Rochwerg B, Brochard L, Elliott MW, et al. Official ERS/ATS clinical practice guidelines: Noninvasive ventilation for acute respiratory failure. Eur Respir J. 2017;50(2):1602426. PMID: 28860265 Post Peer Reviewed By: Post Peer Reviewed By: Mark Ramzy, DO (X: @MRamzyDO), Frank Lodeserto, MD and Anand Swaminathan, MD (X: @EMSwami) 👤 Guest Contributor Jonathan Bradshaw, DOEmergency Medicine Resident (PGY-3)Cape Fear Valley Medical CenterFayetteville, NC 🔎 Your Deep-Dive Starts Here REBEL Core Cast 135.0: A Simple Approach to Hypoxemia (vs. Hypoxia) In this episode, we break down a practical bedside approach to hypoxemia. We ... Resuscitation Read More REBEL Crit Cast Episode 2.0: Overview of High Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) – Part 1 The use of heated and humidified high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) has become ... Thoracic and Respiratory Read More REBEL Cast Episode 13: The AVOID Trial & The FLORALI Trial Welcome to the July 2015 REBELCast, where Swami, Matt, and I are going ... Cardiovascular Read More The post REBEL CAST – RENOVATE Trial: HFNC vs BPAP in Acute Respiratory Failure appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 20min

REBEL MIND – Rest Is Not Sleep: The Seven Dimensions of True Recovery

🧭 REBEL Rundown 🔑Key Points 🛌 Rest isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity and differs significantly from sleep in terms of mental and physical recovery needs.🧠 Uncovering the seven types of rest can highlight diverse needs: physical, mental, sensory, creative, emotional, social, and spiritual.🏃‍️ Rest from high-stress environments such as the ED is crucial for reducing exhaustion, enhancing decision-making, and maintaining empathy.🔄 The necessity for intentional rest: tailor your rest strategies to meet personal recharge needs effectively.🧐 Rest should be deserved, not earned—it’s a vital component of overall health and wellness, on par with nutrition and hydration. Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 👀Previously Covered and Related Content: REBEL Core Cast: Sleep HygieneRebellion in EM: Care For Yourself – Sleep HygieneFirst10EM: Some Evidence For Working Night ShiftsREBEL MIND: Dunning Kruger Effect 📝 Introduction Welcome to this episode of REBEL MIND, where MIND stands for Mastering Internal Negativity during Difficulty. Here we sharpen the person behind the practitioner by focusing on things that improve our performance, optimizing team dynamics and the human behavior that embodies the hidden curriculum of medicine. Today we are exploring the imperative topic of rest and why it’s not just about sleeping. The first of a two part series, hosted by Dr. Mark Ramzy with guests Dr. Maureen Aiad and Dr. Amil Badoolah, our discussion sheds light on the multifaceted nature of rest, especially in the demanding field of emergency medicine. If you’re a clinician striving to perform at your best under pressure, this episode offers valuable insights into achieving the rest you deserve. Cognitive Question How do healthcare professionals in high-stress environments distinguish between rest and sleep, and how can they effectively incorporate various types of rest into their routines to manage stress and improve performance? 💤How is Rest Different From Sleep? Sleep is biological. It’s essential—but it’s only one form of recovery.Rest, on the other hand, is intentional, multifaceted, and active. You can sleep for 8 hours and still feel depleted—because what you needed wasn’t sleep, it was rest—in a different dimension. 🏥How This Applies to the Emergency Department or ICU? In the fast-paced, high-pressure world of the ED or ICU, medical professionals often overlook the importance of rest, perceiving it as unproductive. Yet, rest is crucial for maintaining cognitive function and emotional resilience. The unique concept of rest outlined in the ‘seven types of rest’ can be particularly beneficial. Understanding and implementing these can help practitioners handle the rigors of patient care and decision-making more effectively. 7️⃣The Seven Types of Rest 1️⃣Physical Rest: Passive (like sleep) and active (like stretching, massage, gentle movement).2️⃣Mental Rest: Reducing decision fatigue. Tools like brain dumping, meditation, or taking real breaks during work.3️⃣Sensory Rest: This involves reducing the input from your senses, such as limiting screen time, turning off the lights, or enjoying quiet time.4️⃣Creative Rest: Reconnecting with awe. Nature, art, music—things that refill your inspiration tank5️⃣Emotional Rest: Being around people you don’t have to perform for. Saying “I’m not okay.” spaces and people where you can be your authentic self and be at peace6️⃣Social Rest: Taking space from draining interactions; spending time with life-giving people. 7️⃣Spiritual Rest: Connection to a greater purpose—faith, community, reflection, meditation ⏩Immediate Action Steps for Your Next Shift **Identify Your Rest Needs**: Reflect on what kind of fatigue you’re experiencing and tailor rest activities accordingly, whether it’s sensory detox or emotional unwinding.**Practice Sensory Rest**: Take brief moments to close your eyes, or step outside for fresh air to manage overstimulation during shifts.**Plan Intentional Breaks**: Schedule specific times for rest that focus on particular dimensions you identify as lacking.**Engage in Active Rest**: Incorporate activities like stretching or meditation during your breaks to enhance mental clarity and reduce physical exhaustion.**Connect with Supportive Colleagues**: Seek interactions with peers who offer emotional and social support, promoting a healthy work-life balance. 🛌🏽The Many Aspects of What Makes Up Rest Rest is multifaceted – it comes in more than one formRest is productive – it improves performance, decision-making, empathyRest is intentional – it requires thoughtful engagement, not autopilot. Make a real planRest is layered – especially sensory, which uses all 5 sensesRest is about input and detox – what you consume, and what you remove. Social rest is a good exampleRest is personal – one person’s recharge is another’s stressorRest is deserved, not earned – full stop. Conclusion Rest is a pivotal, multi-dimensional tool that extends beyond mere sleep. For healthcare professionals navigating the strenuous environment of an emergency setting, recognizing and implementing varied forms of rest can enhance overall well-being, decision-making, and patient care. Make rest a deliberate part of your routine, understand its different forms, and remember that it’s a necessity you deserve. 🚨 Clinical Bottom Line Incorporating rest into your lifestyle aligns with the demands of your professional roles and personal health needs. By understanding and employing various types of rest, you not only support your individual wellness but also enhance your ability to care for patients effectively. Rest is vital; it is not a privilege earned but an essential right you deserve every day. Further Reading Dalton-Smith, S. Sacred Rest: Recover Your Life, Renew Your Energy, Restore Your Sanity. Hachette Nashville, 2017.Dalton-Smith, S.The 7 Types of Rest: Seven Ways to Live a More Energized Life. Hachette Book Group, 2022Abramson, A“Seven types of rest to help restore your body’s energy.” American Psychological Association, 6 May 2025, Link is Here Meet the Authors Mark Ramzy, DO Co-Editor-in-Chief Cardiothoracic Intensivist and EM Attending RWJBH / Rutgers Health, Newark, NJ Maureen Aiad, DO Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine NYU Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, New York Amil Badoolah, DO Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine NYU Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, New York REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene Click here for Direct Download of ... Read More The post REBEL MIND – Rest Is Not Sleep: The Seven Dimensions of True Recovery appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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Feb 2, 2026 • 14min

REBEL Core Cast 149: Review of Corticosteroids in Community-Acquired Pneumonia

A deep dive into recent trials showing hydrocortisone reduces death and intubation in severe community-acquired pneumonia. Discussion of how guidelines are evolving and which patients meet new severity criteria. Practical timing and biomarkers for when to start steroids are highlighted. Risks like hyperglycemia and monitoring considerations are covered.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 37min

REBEL CAST – IncrEMentuM26 Speaker Spotlight : Drs. Sara Crager and Ryan Ernst

🧭 REBEL Rundown 📝Introduction Welcome to this special edition of the REBEL Cast, where we unravel key highlights and educational insights from the IncrEMentuM Conference in Spain. This event is a cornerstone for advancing emergency medicine education, drawing esteemed speakers and participants from around the globe. As emergency medicine gains traction in Spain, this conference has become an essential platform for knowledge exchange and professional growth. Today, host Dr. Mark Ramzy shines a spotlight on two phenomenal educators: Drs. Sara Crager and Ryan Ernst who shared their expertise and experiences at this transformative gathering last spring. Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 🤔What's IncrEMentuM? A new conference and a pivotal gathering for emergency medicine professionals worldwide, has become an essential platform for education, collaboration, and advocacy, especially in light of emergency medicine’s recent recognition as a specialty in Spain. The conference is praised for its outstanding production quality, engaging speakers, and its capacity to foster a global community of emergency care professionals. ️What's an Essential Question? Essential questions are open-ended, thought-provoking, and intellectually engaging inquiries that inspire deeper exploration into topics. In the context of medical education, they challenge practitioners to think critically and reflect on their practice deeply. By focusing on essential questions, medical educators aim to inculcate a culture of continuous learning and curiosity, ensuring that medical professionals stay adaptable and insightful in their approach to patient care. 🎮Rapid Sequence (no not the intubating style...)  The Rapid Sequence game is an innovative tool that Sara and Ryan designed to enhance the learning experience for emergency medicine clinicians. It mimics real-life scenarios requiring rapid decision-making in high-pressure situations, such as those faced in emergency medical settings. This clinical case-based game aims to improve cognitive and procedural skills, allowing participants to hone their ability to respond effectively under pressure, thereby enhancing their real-world clinical performance.You can try it out for free on their website here!Their work was featured in the September 2025 edition of Annals of Emergency Medicine as a 2025 ACEP Abstract 🌳The Arboretum Teaching Collective An arboretum is a space that cultivates a wide variety of diverse, unique, and symbiotic growth. Arboretum provides a creative space to decrease barriers, open opportunities, and support the development of extraordinary teachers. The Arboretum Teaching Collective is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting emergency medicine education in countries where it is a new or evolving specialty.  Their aim to facilitate the development of expert teachers by reducing barriers, providing opportunities, and curating talent.  Their goal is to create a community of educators around the globe who share a vision of bringing excellent, innovative emergency medicine teaching to where it is most needed.  Their approach is driven by curiosity, humility, and sustainability.If you want to learn more and get involved, check out the Arboretum Teaching Collective Website Here ️ See you in Spain! The upcoming conference aims to gather world-class educators once more and promises an enriching experience for all attendees. Drs. Sara Crager and Ryan Ernst, along with many others, will be there at the event. For more information on the IncrEMentuM Conference and to register, visit their website! See you there! Sara Crager, MD Associate Professor, Critical Care and Emergency Medicine UCLA, Los Angeles, CA Ryan Ernst, MD Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, Section Chief of Global EM University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT Mark Ramzy, DO Co-Editor-in-Chief Rutgers Health / RWJBH, Newark, NJ 🔎 Your Deep-Dive Starts Here REBEL CAST – IncrEMentuM26 Speaker Spotlight : Drs. Sara Crager and Ryan Ernst Host Dr. Mark Ramzy shines a spotlight on two phenomenal ... Resuscitation Read More REBEL CAST – IncrEMentuM26 Speaker Spotlight : Drs. Tarlan Hedayati, Jess Mason and Simon Carley Host Dr. Mark Ramzy shines a spotlight on three distinguished ... Resuscitation Read More REBEL CAST – IncrEMentuM26 Speaker Spotlight : George Willis and Mark Ramzy 🧭 REBEL Rundown 📝Introduction In this exciting episode of REBEL ... Endocrine, Metabolic, Fluid, and Electrolytes Read More Incrementum Conference 2026: Revolutionizing Emergency Medicine in Spain In this special episode of Rebel Cast, we spotlight the ... Read More The post REBEL CAST – IncrEMentuM26 Speaker Spotlight : Drs. Sara Crager and Ryan Ernst appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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10 snips
Jan 28, 2026 • 31min

REBEL MIND: The Power of Performance Coaching in Medicine

Jackie Penn, Head of Performance Coaching at Arena Labs with a background in exercise science and digital coaching. She discusses adapting elite-performance strategies for clinicians. Short tactical tools for between-shift recovery. Using wearables to track HRV and sleep. Practical routines for night-shift clinicians and simple habit tweaks to reduce burnout risk.
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Jan 21, 2026 • 39min

REBEL MIND: Performance Under Pressure – What Medicine Can Learn from Elite Teams

🧭 REBEL Rundown 📌 Key Points 🎯Partnership Focus: New collaboration with Arena Labs aimed at enhancing healthcare worker wellness.🏃🏽‍️‍➡️Personalized Coaching: Tools and coaching programs designed for stress management and performance improvement.📊Data-Driven Insights: Utilizing wearable sensor data to tackle burnout effectively.🌄Broad Impact: Offers a unique opportunity to contribute to large-scale healthcare improvements. Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast. 📝 Introduction Welcome back to REBEL MIND, where MIND stands for Mastering Internal Negativity during Difficulty. Here we sharpen the person behind the practitioner by focusing on things that improve our performance, optimizing team dynamics and the human behavior that embodies the hidden curriculum of medicine. In this episode, hosted by Drs. Mark Ramzy and Marco Propersi, we’re excited to introduce a collaboration with Arena Labs. Arena Labs is helping us measure healthcare performance through innovative programs designed to combat burnout and enhance personal wellness using data-driven strategies.  Cognitive Question What would it look like in emergency medicine and critical care to be set up with the same tools as elite teams and professional athletes when it comes to measuring performance and recovery? How would our patients benefit? 💭 Why This is Important Burnout among healthcare workers is a growing concern, especially in such high-pressure environments as emergency and intensive care units. The collaboration with Arena Labs brings forth a vital focus on using data and coaching to build resilience among medical professionals. 🌟Be Brilliant at the Basics Ask yourself — “What is it on your time off that gives you a deep sense of fulfillment?”On your time off are you doing things that fill your bucket and add to your recovery? What is Allostasis and Allostatic Load Allostasis: Our body’s ability to adapt over time to stress. It’s relevant to the phase you are in during this particular season in your life. Ex. You are a first year medical student freaking out about your very first exam. Over time as you do more exams, they are still stressful, but by now you have developed modified study habits to succeed and get used to the frequent examsIn the context of emergency medicine, you may be nervous or stressed about your first shift at a new hospital but overtime you learn the staff, the location of equipment, the acuity of that particular site, the patient population so over time you get used to the stress of a shift at that new hospitalAllostatic Load: The wear and tear on the body from chronic stress due to maladaptation or poor recovery methods.This refers to the cumulative burden of chronic stress and life events. It involves the interaction of different physiological systems at varying degrees of activity.Ex. You are an emergency medicine physician at a very busy, high acuity center and have never prioritized taking care of yourself on/during a shift. As a result, external factors add to not being able to fully recover when you get home or are off shift (ie. Admin work, teaching obligations, family/friends) and so you never fully recover before you have to go back on shift to the same stressors you just exposed yourself to. So the cycle continuesFigure 1: Long term effects of Chronic Stress (Source: Andrew Hogue from NeuroFit) 🏥How This Applies to the Emergency Department or ICU? Healthcare workers in emergency departments (ED) and intensive care units (ICU) are often under enormous stress due to the nature of their work. Arena Labs’ program offers tailored solutions, helping ED and ICU staff manage their unique challenges through effective recovery techniques and performance tools. This approach caters specifically to the demanding schedules and the unpredictability inherent in these environments. 👀 Where to Learn More Intrigued by the possibilities this partnership offers? You can explore more by visiting Arena Labs’ website here. Also, check out the comprehensive coaching program available, designed specifically for healthcare providers looking to enhance their well-being and performance. 🚨 Clinical Bottom Line In an era where burnout is pervasive, our collaboration with Arena Labs offers a beacon of hope for healthcare workers. By leveraging cutting-edge data insights and practical coaching, this partnership aims to redefine healthcare wellness, fostering a sustainable, resilient workforce that’s equipped to navigate the pressures of modern medicine. Join us in this journey towards enhanced well-being and workforce empowerment, ensuring that those who care for us are also cared for. 📚References Guidi J, et al.Allostatic Load and Its Impact on Health: A Systematic Review. Psychother Psychosom. 2021; Epub 2020 Aug 14. PMID: 32799204Frueh BC, et al.“Operator syndrome”: A unique constellation of medical and behavioral health-care needs of military special operation forces. Int J Psychiatry Med. Epub 2020 Feb 13. PMID: 32052666 Meet the Authors Mark Ramzy, DO Co-Editor-in-Chief Cardiothoracic Intensivist and EM Attending RWJBH / Rutgers Health, Newark, NJ Marco Propersi Co-Editor-in-Chief Chair of Emergency Medicine at Vassar Brothers Medical Center, Poughkeepsie, NY Brain Ferguson Founder and CEO Arena Labs The post REBEL MIND: Performance Under Pressure – What Medicine Can Learn from Elite Teams appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
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8 snips
Jan 12, 2026 • 23min

REBEL Core Cast 148.0–Demystifying Non-Invasive Ventilation & HiFlow

Eric Acker, DO, a resident physician specializing in emergency medicine, joins the discussion on non-invasive ventilation techniques. They break down the differences between CPAP and BiPAP, highlighting their uses for conditions like pulmonary edema and COPD. The conversation dives into practical aspects, such as mask discomfort and sedation risks, while demystifying high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) mechanics. Acker emphasizes how these supportive modalities stabilize patients and improve oxygenation, all without needing invasive measures.

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