guardian528
Forum Lieutenant
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finished up the class 2 days ago, got my nremt practical on saturday
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Does anyone have advice on how to choose a "good" partner for the practical exams for the state's certification?
Nope, unfortunately! I would LOVE to do an OR and OB rotation.
I almost got another live intubation yesterday but the RT student took precedence, as it should be!
RT's can intubate?!?!
We had a medic student take an intubation over our MD resident. Guess we do things backwards here!! lol
RT's can intubate?!?!
We had a medic student take an intubation over our MD resident. Guess we do things backwards here!! lol
Why would a respiratory therapist not be able to intubate???
Medic students are not longer allowed to intubate in our facilities with the exception of one college program and each student must have prior approval from the medical director in the ED.
RTs do the intubation here unless a physician or an RN who is a transport team member needs the intubation.
That depends on the facility. Some RRTs would rather not intubate especially if they are scrambling to get high tech equipment set up. It is a skill that they have extensive knowledge of but it doesn't make them a lesser RRT if they don't do the actual intubation. They have plenty "skills" and education to feel secure in their scrubs and profession.
That wasn't my point at all. I was responding to the "RTs can intubate????" question.
Yeah, so don't realize an RRT is an airway specialist with anywhere from a minimum of a 2 year to a Master's degree in the subject.
If intubation is skill of the RRT at a hospital, they must do at least the minimum required per year. That will often be set by their specialty with Pedi, Neo and Flight teams requiring the most and get priority.
Our RRTs and RNs on the ambulances are not allowed to, and a paramedic must accompany a non-intubated patient who are at risk of airway deterioration (facial burns, etc). This is just my ambulance company, however, and they are hardly a shining example of an ambulance company.
Good god I hate Los Angeles.
Alright guess this is the best place to introduce myself, I'll just try to breath new life into this thread since it seems dead lol, instead of taking up space starting a whole new thread to say hi. Im starting my EMS program next monday and im very excited for that, hope to be able to come on here and have some great discussions with everyone here.
Why would a respiratory therapist not be able to intubate???