I did a few practice tests on that website and found way too many errors and outdated information in the "correct" answers. I sincerely hope that's not what they teach in EMT classes (and what they ask in actual tests). :rolleyes:
Out of curiosity: is that the way how EMT's and paramedics...
Here's how EMS is organized in my country. Typically it consists of five different levels.
1. FIRST RESPONDER (minimum of 32 hours of training)
- Usually voluntary fire departments
- Equipment: AED, oxygen, OPA, SGA (typically iGel), BVM, diagnostic tools (SpO2, BP, b-Gluk, b-Keto, temp, alco...
Yes. Though it’s quite rare with 5-7,5 cmH2O pressures.
We tend to use NIV (PEEP 5-7, Psupp 5-8, FiO2 21-100% depending on SpO2 and overall situation) instead, but CPAP is a great backup when NIV is not available.
Having worked in the TV-industry for over 18 years (including filming propably over 1000 interviews) I can assure you that there are always other options than sunglasses. The film crew could have changed the interview location or camera angle. One could also always turn their back towards the...
AF with STE in I and aVL (and V5) with reciprocal inferior depression = high lateral STEMI. The culprit is propably first diagonal branch of LAD, with possible LCX involvement.
V1 and V2 looks like a pseudo brugada pattern to me. Those leads might have been placed too high.
This is not LBBB...
100 mcg would require a 1000 kg patient with 0.1 mcg/kg dosing. You propably meant 1 mcg/kg?
Our protocol is 1,5 mcg/kg with fentanyl (second dose half of that). For cardiac chest pain we start with morphine 4 mg and repeat it until pain is tolerable or NRS < 4. No upper limit. (One vial is 20...
Yes. Sorry. Should have mentioned that. We also have basically free tax-funded health care system. EMS services (including ambulance rides) only cost around 24 EUR for the patient. Rest of the treatment is paid by the government.
Yes, I was thinking about something like that. It's a sad world where actions are guided by the fear of complaints or getting sued and not logical sense. Ambulances are not available for real emergencies when doing "taxi service". Yes, sometimes (less than 1 in 100 000 ambulance calls)...
Someone please explain me this: why on earth would you give a ride to someone who doesn't require pre-hospital care and / or transportation with an ambulance? In my system (and pretty much in the whole country) we tell people that they are still free to take a taxi / bus / car / whatever to the...
Isn't it quite obvious that you assess and interview the patient? I thought that's what we are paid to do. As well as assist, secure, transport, report and get signatures. Maybe it isn't necessary to state the obvious?
And this. It's a medical report, not a novel. There most likely is a field...
Certainly not the only cause. (Could also be mitral stenosis,Tetralogy of Fallot etc.) But together with presumably sudden onset of SOB and palpitations (propably due to those unifocal VES's, which again might be due to PE) and an SpO2 barely in the normal limits it would be my guess.
And if...
Or... you could have taken full set of vitals, collect history / anamnesis, do a 12-Lead ECG and start the iv line while waiting for ALS to arrive? And if the patient was hypertensive and ECG didn't show malign changes in the inferior leads, you could have given a few puffs of NTG spray while...
Why would you transport if no ROSC was achieved on scene? Was he hypothermic or did he go into cardiac arrest during transport?
One possibility for bleeding from trachea during resuscitation is that the distal airways and vessels collapse and a good quality CPR generates quite a strong thoraic...