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    Any Red Cross vollys?

    I'm a volunteer FA/CPR/AED instructor, teach about one or two classes a month, it's a good gig. What else do you want to know?
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    Screenwriter Keeping it real part 2

    After being extricated from the car, they might quickly check him over once again and make sure he's still breathing/circulating okay, but would want to move him to the ambulance quickly because of his potentially unstable condition - this is known as "load and go." The c-collar would be put on...
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    65 y.o. left in an amblance, emt forgot about him

    Everybody, read the full article before you pose questions that were already answered. It wasn't a true ambulance, it was a non-emergency patient transport vehicle, like a van service to take patients to/from nursing homes, doctor's appointments, dialysis, etc. It was only manned by one...
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    Screenwriter wants to keep it real

    1) Yes, police, fire, and EMS would all be dispatched. Police would probably show up first and start performing basic care. Fire and EMS would show up later, since this is in a rural area they could be from a VFD and take a while longer to respond. Fire would be needed to extricate the man...
  5. Z

    Are You A "Heritage EMT"?

    My uncle is a medic, and my grandmother was a nurse. Dad's a banker and mom's a writer.
  6. Z

    First Responder certification

    The NREMT does offer a First Responder certification, as do the great majority of states. Minnesota does, I have one.
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    Ever recommended for someone not to visit ER

    My uncle who's a medic and my EMT instructor who is also a street medic both have told me that they have encouraged hypoglycemic diabetics to refuse transport after they've raised their blood sugar via oral or IM glucose and then had solid food to eat.
  8. Z

    Intubations dissapearing?

    I'm going to come off as terribly arrogant for this, and I really do apologize, but we're learning ETT and dual lumens as a supplemental skill in our EMT-B class.
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    Non recognition of English Paramedics

    There aren't many EMS providers currently hiring, at least not in the Twin Cities. If you can get your license from the Minnesota EMSRB, you might just be able to explain your situation to a potential employer as to why you don't have NREMT certification. I've had mixed experiences with the...
  10. Z

    Pt access on frozen lake

    It happened this winter (before I had any EMS experience/interest) to my sister at my dad's house. They called for police and fire backup. One of the medics took some equipment with him and rode on the back of my dad's ATV back to my sister. His assessment found possibility of spinal injury...
  11. Z

    Pt access on frozen lake

    It's the middle of winter in Minnesota, and all the lakes are frozen. You are dispatched at 2pm on a Sunday afternoon to a report of a 12yo female who rolled an ATV on the lake and is "awake but won't move". Patient is in the middle of the lake, so instead of dispatching you to the family's...
  12. Z

    How EMT"S dress on calls

    This is posted in the wrong section, an admin will move/delete it soon. Anyways, if this is a job where they're staffing the ambulance ready to run to 911 calls, the company should require them to wear a uniform, that goes without saying, and they should be wearing it, that also goes without...
  13. Z

    Your Families "Confidence" in Your Training and Abilities...

    My elderly grandfather with dementia took a fall at my dad's house a couple weeks back. He had a deep laceration above his eye, across his right thumb, and couldn't move his right hand at all. My dad calls me (I'm half an hour away out with friends) asking where I am and how fast I can make it...
  14. Z

    have i gone crazy?

    I'm an ARC FA/CPR instructor, and although I'm only trained to instruct lay responders, I hold a professional rescuer cert too and have since I started lifeguarding in 2007. CPR for Lay Responders is 30:2, for everyone, all the time. They're not trained in two-person response. CPR for...
  15. Z

    Is this an appropiate reason for Code 3 Transport?

    Off topic question, how does transporting prisoners work? Did guard(s)/LEO ride with/behind you?
  16. Z

    Uncooperative c-spine patients?

    I was waiting for that post. My manager is an EMT-I, we checked the kid over together, he had CMS in all four, PERL, etc ... I trust my boss, he's the one whose *** would be on the line. And although he might not have been legally competent to refuse care, he was physically competent to run...
  17. Z

    Uncooperative c-spine patients?

    How do you guys deal with patients who possibly have a c-spine injury but don't want to be collared and boarded? Patients who are drunk/high or have a more distracting injury and don't believe they need to be immobilized? The reason I ask is I had a 6yo boy dive into about two feet of water...
  18. Z

    CPR and First Aid training...ON YOUR IPOD???

    As a Red Cross First Aid/CPR/AED Instructor myself (just got home from teaching a basic Adult CPR class), I think this is a great idea. As has been said above, bystander CPR/AED are the victim's only help until the ambulance arrives. If the app tells them how to do basic CPR, to go find and...
  19. Z

    Lifeguards and C-spining

    I should clarify. At the waterpark where I've been lifeguarding for a year and a half, we require American Red Cross certification, and that doesn't include use of a collar. For suspected spinal injury in the water, we board the patient using straps and head blocks. We have one EMT-I manager...
  20. Z

    Lifeguards and C-spining

    American Red Cross Lifeguarding doesn't include use of a collar. It does teach long backboarding in the water, but it only makes use of the board with three or four straps and a pair of head blocks ... no collar.
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