Skip to main content
Back to Top
Apply Giving myAugusta
Resources for:
Students
Students Faculty & Staff Parents & Family Alumni Community
Augusta University Logo
  • Academics
    Graduates pose together in their regalia.
    Augusta University celebrates fall 2025 graduates »

    Academics Home

    Colleges & Schools

    Programs of Study
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Course Catalog
    • Course Schedule
    • Program Pathways
    • Academic Calendar
    • Online Programs
    • Accelerated Degree Programs
    Resources
    • Academic Success Center
    • Advising
    • Counseling Services
    • Honors Program
    • Libraries
    • Testing & Disability Services
    • Writing Center
    Outside the Classroom
    • Army ROTC
    • Study Abroad
    • Experiential Learning
    • First Year Experience
    • Center for Undergraduate Research
    • Career Services
    • Jags Live Well
  • Admissions
    Augusta University's jaguar mascot, Augustus, and two students hold their hands like a paw
    Augusta University awarded $1.3 million grant to expand student support »

    Admissions Home

    Visit Campus

    Request Information

    Apply to AU
    • First-Year Freshmen
    • Transfer Students
    • Dual Enrollment
    • Graduate Students
    • Medical College of Georgia
    • Dental College of Georgia
    Opportunities
    • Degree & Programs
    • Honors Program
    • Program Pathways
    • Military-Affiliated Students
    • New Student & Family Transistions
    • On-Campus Housing
    Financial Aid
    • Student Financial Aid
    • Net Price Calculator
    • Scholarships
    • Cost of Attendance
    • Apply for Federal Aid
  • Campus Life
    President Keen and First Lady stand with students to cut ribbon on outdoor rec center
    Center for Outdoor Recreation and Education celebrates grand opening »

    Campus Life Home

    Athletics

    Community
    • Army ROTC
    • Living-Learning Communities
    • Military & Veteran Services
    • Mentorship
    • New Student & Family Transistions
    • Jags 4 Jags Mentoring Program
    Campus Services
    • Dining Services
    • Roarstore
    • Housing
    • Student Health
    • Parking & Transportation
    • Jagcard
    Get Involved
    • Clubs & Organizations
    • Greek Life
    • Campus Recreation
    • Student Government
    • Jaguar Production Crew
    • Intramural Sports
  • Research
    Three men in suits stand in front of a Augusta University Medical College of Georgia backdrop and smile at the camera. The man in the middle is holding a plaque.
    MCG scientists investigate arthritis drug’s impact on Alzheimer’s disease »

    Research Home

    Opportunities
    • Undergraduate Research
    • Graduate & Postdoctoral Research
    • Clinical Trials
    • Core Laboratories
    • Innovation Commercialization
    Initiatives
    • Cancer
    • Cardiovascular
    • Immunology
    • Neuroscience
    • Aging
    Resources
    • Centers & Institutes
    • Ethics & Compliance
    • Institutional Review Board
    • Sponsored Programs
    • Tools for Researchers
  • About AU
    Five women and two men jump and raise their hands in celebration.
    AU contributed over $1.6 billion to Georgia’s economy in FY 2024 »

    About AU

    Jagwire News

    Leadership
    • President
    • Provost
    • Administration
    • Enrollment Student Affairs
    • Faculty Senate
    We are AU!
    • Our Mission
    • Working at AU
    • Traditions
    • History
    • Augusta, GA
    Resources
    • MyAugusta
    • Calendar of Events
    • Brand Guidelines
    • Portals
    • Faculty Directory
Resources For
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Parents & Family
  • Alumni & Friends
Apply
Giving
MyAugusta
Trending Search Terms
  • D2L LMS
  • Email
  • Pounce
  • Calendar
  • Registrar
  • Housing
  • Academic Calendar
  • Financial Aid
  • Parking
  • Library
  • Human Resources
  • Information Technology
Medical College of GeorgiaClerkships | Emergency Medicine
Clerkships | Emergency Medicine
  • EM Home
  • Clerkship Home
  • MS 3rd & 4th Year
    • MCG 4th year Curriculum
    • Post ERAS
    • SLOES
    • VSAS
  • Goals
  • Presentation Tips
  • Academic Staff
  • Augusta University
  • Colleges & Schools
  • Medical College of Georgia
  • Emergency Medicine
  • Education | Emergency Medicine
  • Clerkships | Emergency Medicine
  • Goals & Objectives

EM Clerkship - Goals & Objectives

The goal of this course is to provide a foundation for future physicians to be able to recognize and initiate first line medical treatment of the acutely ill or injured patient.

In general, students will:

  1. Build their fund of knowledge through reading.
  2. Apply the knowledge they have gained to different situations.
  3. Show how they use information in a realistic setting.
  4. Demonstrate their abilities and perform tasks in real encounters.

Society generally expects that all physicians possess basic knowledge in emergency care and the skills to manage acute problems. It is anticipated that regardless of what specialty a practitioner chooses, and irrespective of the type of setting or location of that practice, emergencies unrelated to that practitioner’s specialty will arise sooner or later. The physician should have the skills to recognize and initiate treatment of that emergency until help arrives. Also, the public expects physicians to give proper advice about when to be concerned about chest pain or a headache, or problems such as a burn or laceration, epistaxis, a sprained or potentially fractured extremity, diarrhea, or unintentional or deliberate ingestions. Once a patient carries a diagnosis, one can look in a textbook for advice. The greater challenge lies in the undifferentiated patient.  Basic skills in recognition and evaluation are critical in the education of physicians.

More specific goals for this course are:

  1. Recognize the presence of a patient with a serious condition that necessitates urgent attention.
  2. Prioritize attention to those patients with more urgent conditions.
  3. Take the first steps necessary to save a life, i.e. 
    a)  Open the airway. 
    b)  Ventilatory support with bag-mask-valve apparatus. 
    c)  Circulation augmentation with intravenous fluid. 
    d)  Hemorrhage control using external pressure.
  4. Recognize potentially treatable neurological insults.
  5. Recognize and initially manage potentially dangerous and treatable poisonings in any age group.

This could be a long list. Some examples are:

  1. Treat superficial burns and recognize when higher level of care is required.
  2. Assess injured extremities for possible fracture or dislocation and identify those requiring x-rays and possibly referral.
  3. Stabilize a patient who has had a seizure and determine the need for further evaluation.
  4. Etc.
  1. Perform a focused (when appropriate) or general history and physical – gather information and assess for emergency.
  2. Initiate emergency treatment as needed based on recognized emergency and on limited information as available.
  3. Formulate an appropriate differential diagnoses list, distinguishing diagnoses, which are emergencies versus urgencies.
  4. Conduct and follow through a work-up for the differential diagnoses.
  5. Reassess the patient for response to treatment and redirect care plan as needed.
  6. Identify which patients require further consultation or admission with or with out a final diagnosis, and who may be safely discharged home with proper follow-up.

It is expected that the student will begin learning to interpret the information gathered from the patient’s history and examination, proposing a scheme by which the patient should have their problem worked up, an assessment of the problem and developing a plan for further treatment, either inpatient or outpatient, including drug regimens.

Regardless of the specialty a physician finally enters, the clinician will have interactions with ambulances, perhaps as first responders at an accident or instead to pick up a patient who has collapsed in their office. Awareness to access to these services as well as of the capabilities is vital. Students will spend time at the 911 Center as well as spend ride-along time on an ambulance.

This includes the physicians in the emergency department, the nursing staff, ancillary support staff, as well as consulting physicians. Effective communication and interaction are valuable skills in any field, but perhaps none more so than in the emergency department.

  1. Emergency Medicine in Undergraduate Education, Burdick, et al., Academic Emergency Medicine, Nov. 1988, 5, p. 1105-1110.
  2. Undergraduate Curriculum, DeBehnke, et al., Academic Emergency Medicine, Nov. 1988; 5, p. 1110-1113.
University Shield

Augusta University

1120 15th Street, Augusta, GA 30912

  •   Campus Maps
  •   Campus Contacts
  • A-Z Directory
  • Degrees & Programs
  • Employment
  • Accessibility
  • Accreditation
  • Campus Safety
  • Compliance Hotline
  • Human Trafficking Notice
  • Privacy Notices
  • Title IX / Sexual Misconduct
Apply Now Give Now

© 2026 Augusta University

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Youtube Instagram
©