fm_emt
Useless without caffeine
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Ok, I took a NR prep class the other day. There were 10 people in the class. 9 of them have taken it & failed it. Some have failed it multiple times. I was the only one there that has not taken it. NOW I am farkin' nervous. :-|
One of the things the teacher said was that they often throw in questions with a patient, respiratory distress, etc and then they give you a cannula & an NRM as your o2 choices. He said that since O2 is a medication, to start off with a little bit and see if it helps them. if not, then go to the NRM.
So, in my Kaplan NR-EMT prep book, a similar question came up. I remembered what I heard in the NR prep class and picked "cannula @ 6lpm" over my gut feeling of "NRM @ 15lpm." (75yr old female, short of breath, able to speak short sentences, emphysema, Rhonci audible..) - and the book said that I was wrong! I should have picked the NRM @ 15lpm!
ARGH! That's what I thought, but in this class, I heard the exact opposite.
Now I'm really confused and worried. My gut feeling was right, but I have heard many folks say "don't think about 'in the field' when taking the NR!"
What do YOU guys think? Anyone taken it recently? Any unexpected types of questions pop out at you?
/stressed
One of the things the teacher said was that they often throw in questions with a patient, respiratory distress, etc and then they give you a cannula & an NRM as your o2 choices. He said that since O2 is a medication, to start off with a little bit and see if it helps them. if not, then go to the NRM.
So, in my Kaplan NR-EMT prep book, a similar question came up. I remembered what I heard in the NR prep class and picked "cannula @ 6lpm" over my gut feeling of "NRM @ 15lpm." (75yr old female, short of breath, able to speak short sentences, emphysema, Rhonci audible..) - and the book said that I was wrong! I should have picked the NRM @ 15lpm!
ARGH! That's what I thought, but in this class, I heard the exact opposite.
Now I'm really confused and worried. My gut feeling was right, but I have heard many folks say "don't think about 'in the field' when taking the NR!"
What do YOU guys think? Anyone taken it recently? Any unexpected types of questions pop out at you?
/stressed