Educate • Elevate • Excel

Emergency Care for the Real World.

Equipping frontline healthcare workers in low- and middle-income countries with practical, resource-adapted protocols and open-access education. Because standard textbooks don't work when the CT scanner is down.

About EMergeSL

Empowering emergency medicine professionals through education, innovation, and service.

EMergeSL is a clinician-led collective building practical training, open protocols and frontline tools for every member of the emergency care team — from PAs and nurses to doctors and disaster responders.

Workshops & Field TrainingLive reel

Built for Your Reality

Most emergency medicine guidelines assume unlimited oxygen, advanced imaging, and immediate specialist backup. EMerge is different. We provide evidence-based medicine adapted for:

Frugal Environments

Workarounds and DIY solutions for equipment shortages.

Task-Shifting

Clear guidance designed for clinical officers, nurses, and medical assistants.

Resource Stratification

Protocols that scale from a basic rural clinic to a regional referral center.

Core Pillars

Resource-Stratified Protocols

Step-by-step algorithms for trauma, infectious emergencies, and toxicology, tailored to the supplies you actually have on hand.

Explore Protocols

Triage & Operations

Tools to organize the chaos. Validated low-resource triage scales, mass-casualty plans, and departmental workflows.

Improve Your ED

Medical Education & Training

Bite-sized infographics, low-bandwidth video tutorials, and POCUS guides designed for on-shift quick reference.

Start Learning

High-Yield Quick Reference

The protocols our users open most — straight to the algorithm.

Join a Global Network of Frontline Innovators

You are not practicing in isolation. Join thousands of nurses, clinical officers, and doctors who are defining the future of global emergency medicine. Share your cases, publish your local data, and connect with mentors.

"EMerge gives me protocols I can actually use at 2 AM in my district hospital when I'm the only clinician on duty."
— Dr. Kwame O., District Medical Officer