Resilient Performance Podcast   /     Resilient Performance Podcast with Michael Lauria

Description

Michael Lauria is currently completing his final semester at the Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine. Outside of school, he works as a critical care flight paramedic and provides training to multiple emergency service organizations. Prior to medical school, Michael served in the U.S. Air Force as a Pararescueman at the 321st Special Tactics Squadron, RAF Mildenhall, UK, Air Force Special Operations Command. During this assignment he deployed to OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM as part of a Combat Search and Rescue Team and in support of the C Company, 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne). In 2009, Michael was named Air Force Special Operations Command Outstanding Airman of the Year and Pararescue Airman of the Year. Topics Covered: How can civilian medicine and military medicine learn from one another The extent to which combat and medicine present similar systemic challenges in terms of interpersonal dynamics, leadership, and stress management How mental models to facilitate communication without oversimplifying complex phenomena What is cognitive bias and how can we better refine our models without falling prey to it Intuitive vs. analytical thinking- truly dichotomous or more of a spectrum?   How to identify if a failed outcome in medicine is the result of poor individual skill or something more systemic  Part/whole training The low hanging fruit in medical education Conflating selection with training Teaching practices that maximize retention of information

Summary

Michael Lauria is currently completing his final semester at the Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine. Outside of school, he works as a critical care flight paramedic and provides training to multiple emergency service organizations. Prior to medical school, Michael served in the U.S. Air Force as a Pararescueman at the 321st Special Tactics Squadron, RAF Mildenhall, UK, Air Force Special Operations Command.

Subtitle
Pararescueman, Dartmouth Medical Student, Special Operations Veteran
Duration
01:03:40
Publishing date
2018-03-01 08:00
Link
http://www.resilientperformancept.com/blog/resilient-performance-podcast-with-michael-lauria
Contributors
  Resilient Performance Systems
author  
Enclosures
http://traffic.libsyn.com/resilientperformance/026_-_Michael_Lauria.mp3?dest-id=488067
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Michael Lauria is currently completing his final semester at the Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine. Outside of school, he works as a critical care flight paramedic and provides training to multiple emergency service organizations. Prior to medical school, Michael served in the U.S. Air Force as a Pararescueman at the 321st Special Tactics Squadron, RAF Mildenhall, UK, Air Force Special Operations Command. During this assignment he deployed to OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM as part of a Combat Search and Rescue Team and in support of the C Company, 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne). In 2009, Michael was named Air Force Special Operations Command Outstanding Airman of the Year and Pararescue Airman of the Year. Topics Covered:

  1. How can civilian medicine and military medicine learn from one another
  2. The extent to which combat and medicine present similar systemic challenges in terms of interpersonal dynamics, leadership, and stress management
  3. How mental models to facilitate communication without oversimplifying complex phenomena
  4. What is cognitive bias and how can we better refine our models without falling prey to it
  5. Intuitive vs. analytical thinking- truly dichotomous or more of a spectrum?  
  6. How to identify if a failed outcome in medicine is the result of poor individual skill or something more systemic 
  7. Part/whole training
  8. The low hanging fruit in medical education
  9. Conflating selection with training
  10. Teaching practices that maximize retention of information