
RCEM’s Quality Improvement Topic Competition Opens
An annual competition giving all the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s (RCEM) members the opportunity to submit ideas for the next Quality Improvement Programme (QIP) topic has begun.
An annual competition giving all the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s (RCEM) members the opportunity to submit ideas for the next Quality Improvement Programme (QIP) topic has begun.
Last month, a team from RCEM made a visit Ghana as part of the DHSC/THET funded Global Health Workforce Programme in partnership with the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons and the West African College of Physicians, Nigeria.
Are you a member with a passion to make a difference and want to share your ideas with us?
Are you a parent working in the NHS that would be interested in career development and support to help balance the demands work and home life?
The Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) has described data which reveals that some elderly patients waited more than five days in A&E before being admitted as a ‘national shame’.
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RCEM Wales – new statistics show patients are continuing to experience extremely long waits.
The current state of the health service is compounded with retention problems. This is evidenced in the third in a series of research reports commissioned by
Organisational culture in Emergency Medicine (EM) has emerged as a significant contributory factor to workplace behaviour and performance, including patient outcomes, and patient and staff experience.
Overcrowding and ambulance delays continue to pose “extreme challenges” for A&E staff and patients, says RCEM
A year after the conclusion of our Exams Internal Reviews, we would like to share an update of the work…
It is difficult to celebrate slight improvements as patients and staff bear the brunt of long waits says RCEM.