In Development

Haematology Education

Structured learning resources for every clinical role — from medical students encountering haematology for the first time, to consultants keeping pace with a fast-moving field.

Content formats across all sections

Cases Journal Club Clinical Pearls Teaching Slides Investigations
Clinical Training Pathway

From Foundation to Consultant Level

Progressive learning through the clinical career — each level pitched to the real questions, decisions, and knowledge gaps at that stage of practice.

Level 1  ·  Clinical Training Pathway

Medical Students

Haematology fundamentals — understanding blood, recognising abnormal results, and knowing what a haematology team actually does.

Foundation

Understanding the Full Blood Count

How to read and interpret a FBC systematically — normal ranges, what each parameter means, and which abnormalities matter most clinically.

Coming Soon
Visual Guide

Blood Film Basics

A systematic approach to reading a peripheral blood film — normal morphology, red cell changes, white cell abnormalities, and platelet clumping.

Coming Soon
Clinical Guide

Common Haematology Presentations

Anaemia, bruising, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly — how to approach each presentation from history and examination through to initial investigations.

Coming Soon
Rotation Guide

Haematology on the Wards

What to expect on a haematology placement — common conditions seen, procedures observed, and how to get the most from a specialist rotation.

Coming Soon
Level 2  ·  Clinical Training Pathway

Foundation & Resident Doctors

Practical clinical decisions — recognising haematological emergencies, knowing when to refer, and managing common haematology problems on the general ward.

Decision Guide

When to Call Haematology

Urgent vs routine referral criteria — what information to have ready, what haematology will ask, and which presentations cannot wait until morning.

Coming Soon
Emergency

Haematological Emergencies

Neutropenic sepsis, hyperviscosity, TTP, and acute haemolysis — immediate recognition, initial management steps, and safe escalation.

Coming Soon
Prescribing

Anticoagulation in Practice

DOAC dosing, LMWH prescribing, reversal agents, bridging decisions, and the common pitfalls that cause harm on general medical wards.

Coming Soon
Interpretation

Abnormal Results — What Needs Action

Which haematology abnormalities are urgent, which can wait, and which are commonly over-investigated — a practical triage guide for busy doctors.

Coming Soon
Level 3  ·  Clinical Training Pathway

Haematology Trainees (ST3–ST7)

Advanced clinical reasoning, FRCPath preparation, and guideline application — content built around the real demands of specialist haematology training.

FRCPath Prep

Structured Examination Preparation

Topic-by-topic coverage for Part 1 and Part 2 FRCPath — structured to reflect the exam syllabus, with worked examples and self-assessment material.

Coming Soon
Cases

Advanced Case-Based Learning

Complex haematology cases with full diagnostic reasoning, investigation interpretation, treatment selection, and discussion of alternative approaches.

Coming Soon
MDT Skills

MDT Reasoning & Presentation

How to present cases clearly in MDT, contribute to complex decisions, and translate guideline recommendations into individual patient management plans.

Coming Soon
Guidelines

Applying BSH & ELN Guidelines

Translating published guidelines into real clinical decisions — understanding where guidelines give flexibility and where they draw firm boundaries.

Coming Soon
Level 4  ·  Clinical Training Pathway

Consultants

Consultant-level clinical complexity, service leadership, teaching methodology, and the judgement calls that guidelines alone cannot resolve.

Complex Cases

Consultant-Level Case Discussion

Diagnostically and therapeutically challenging cases — presented with full reasoning, management nuance, and commentary on decision points where evidence is incomplete.

Coming Soon
Leadership

Service Development & Governance

Practical frameworks for building haematology services, implementing new pathways, and meeting governance requirements without losing clinical focus.

Coming Soon
Teaching

Teaching & Supervision Skills

Effective teaching strategies for haematology — giving feedback, structuring ward rounds educationally, and supporting trainees through difficult stages.

Coming Soon
Clinical Pearls

High-Level Clinical Pearls

Consultant-level insights from real practice — the pattern recognition, clinical instincts, and interpretive subtleties that experience builds but textbooks rarely capture.

Coming Soon
Clinical Partners

Haematology Literacy for the Wider Team

Role-specific content for the clinical professionals who work alongside haematology patients every day — not on a training pathway, but with their own distinct educational needs.

Clinical Partners

Nurses & Clinical Nurse Specialists

Practical, ward-level haematology — safe administration of systemic treatments, transfusion nursing, recognising deterioration, and supporting patients through complex diagnoses.

SACT

Systemic Treatment Administration

Safe SACT administration, monitoring parameters, toxicity recognition, dose modification triggers, and escalation pathways for haematology nursing staff.

Coming Soon
Transfusion

Transfusion Nursing Practice

Blood component administration, pre-transfusion checks, reaction recognition and management, SHOT reporting, and special requirements — irradiated, CMV-negative components.

Coming Soon
Emergency

Recognising Haematological Deterioration

Early warning signs in neutropenic patients, bleeding complications, signs of hyperviscosity, and when and how to escalate safely to the haematology team.

Coming Soon
Patient Support

Patient & Carer Education

Supporting patients through new diagnoses, treatment cycles, and long-term follow-up — practical communication frameworks for haematology nurses and CNS staff.

Coming Soon
Clinical Partners

GPs & Primary Care

Haematology from the primary care lens — red flag recognition, appropriate referral, managing patients on shared care protocols, and interpreting haematology discharge letters.

Red Flags

Haematology Red Flags in Primary Care

Which blood results and clinical features demand urgent haematology attention — and which incidental findings can be safely monitored without immediate referral.

Coming Soon
Referral

When & How to Refer to Haematology

Urgent, 2-week-wait, and routine referral criteria — what information haematology needs in the referral, and how to communicate clinical urgency effectively.

Coming Soon
Shared Care

Managing Haematology Patients in Practice

Shared care protocols for myeloma, CLL, MDS, and anticoagulated patients — monitoring responsibilities, when to contact the haematology team, and safe prescribing boundaries.

Coming Soon
Anticoagulation

Anticoagulation in Primary Care

DOAC prescribing and monitoring in GP settings, warfarin management, reversal in bleeding emergencies, and managing patients on long-term anticoagulation.

Coming Soon
Standalone Section

Continuing Professional Development

Revalidation-supporting content for all registered professionals — journal club appraisals, guideline updates, audit frameworks, and clinical pearls that support annual appraisal and portfolio evidence.

All professional groups
Journal Club

Monthly Trial Appraisals

Critical appraisals of high-impact haematology publications — key findings, statistical interpretation, and what the results mean for practice.

Coming Soon
Guidelines

New Guidelines & Regulatory Updates

Plain-language summaries of major BSH, ELN, NICE, and ISTH updates — what changed, why it changed, and what it means for your patients.

Coming Soon
Audit & QI

Audit & Quality Improvement Resources

Audit templates, QI frameworks, and worked examples relevant to haematology — designed to generate appraisal-ready evidence and support revalidation.

Coming Soon
Clinical Pearls

Practice-Changing Observations

Short, high-signal insights from haematology practice — the findings, interpretations, and approaches that change how experienced clinicians think and act.

Coming Soon