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What if the evidence hierarchy you learned in school is incomplete? Dr. Eddie Lang, who helped develop the GRADE system now used by WHO and major resuscitation councils, explains why clinical practice guidelines—not RCTs or meta-analyses—should guide your practice decisions.
Join us at FASTCAN 25 as Dr. Lang, who's helped shap guidelines for the World Health Oganization (WHO) and the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR), dismantles common misconceptions about evidence-based medicine and explains how it has evolved over the years. It's no longer "whatever the study says"—it's now carefully evaluating research limitations, considering patient values, and assessing feasibility, acceptability, and equity. Clinical practice guidelines sometimes get a bad rap but Dr. Lang explains why they ultimately should sit atop the evidence hierarchy.
We also discuss game-changing AI applications in EMS: consolidated electronic health records enabling precision prehospital care, automated documentation, predictive analytics for patient destination, and an AI tool providing evidence synthesis with references in seconds.
Whether you're a paramedic, nurse, or physician, this episode has the power to change how you evaluate and apply clinical evidence.
Subscribe for more evidence-based EMS content that cuts through the noise so that you never lose sight of the forest through the trees.
Guest/Cast/Crew information-
Guest- Eddy Lang, MD
Hosts- Ross Orpet, Will Berry
Catch up with us after the show
Instagram- @emsloudandclear
YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@EMSLoudandClear
Website- www.emspodcast.com
By Ross Orpet, Paramedic turned EMS Physician4.9
4242 ratings
What if the evidence hierarchy you learned in school is incomplete? Dr. Eddie Lang, who helped develop the GRADE system now used by WHO and major resuscitation councils, explains why clinical practice guidelines—not RCTs or meta-analyses—should guide your practice decisions.
Join us at FASTCAN 25 as Dr. Lang, who's helped shap guidelines for the World Health Oganization (WHO) and the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR), dismantles common misconceptions about evidence-based medicine and explains how it has evolved over the years. It's no longer "whatever the study says"—it's now carefully evaluating research limitations, considering patient values, and assessing feasibility, acceptability, and equity. Clinical practice guidelines sometimes get a bad rap but Dr. Lang explains why they ultimately should sit atop the evidence hierarchy.
We also discuss game-changing AI applications in EMS: consolidated electronic health records enabling precision prehospital care, automated documentation, predictive analytics for patient destination, and an AI tool providing evidence synthesis with references in seconds.
Whether you're a paramedic, nurse, or physician, this episode has the power to change how you evaluate and apply clinical evidence.
Subscribe for more evidence-based EMS content that cuts through the noise so that you never lose sight of the forest through the trees.
Guest/Cast/Crew information-
Guest- Eddy Lang, MD
Hosts- Ross Orpet, Will Berry
Catch up with us after the show
Instagram- @emsloudandclear
YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@EMSLoudandClear
Website- www.emspodcast.com

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