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Wow, I love that idea! Your absolutely right-if I know most of what's in the field guide, why carry it? I think I will use your idea of laminating the stuff I can't remember-thanks!It probably wont benefit you as a BLS provider. Of course, if you continue on to paramedic, you might want one. But seriously, why pay $20-25 for a flip guide that probably doesn't have but 10 pages of information you may ever reference and omits information you'd really like to have? There is a myriad of information you can carry on your person, but most of it just can't be found inside one of those guides.
I stopped carrying them altogether. I complied my own information, drugs, odd protocols, algorithms, reference pages, phone numbers, etc. I scaled them down to a small size on my printer (you can often print four pages on one page to get the correct size). Take those babies to the Kinkos and laminate them. After you laminate them, cut them to size, punch one or two holes on the tops and get some metal rings to hold them together. This condenses and makes ready the information YOU need without having to flip through dozens of useless pages. You can also change, add, and take away as needed because the book isn't actually bound. This would be the type of guide that can grow and change with you from basic to paramedic as the information you need changes.
I have the critical care version of the InforMED pocketguides. I like it because we get lab values in the paperwork for a lot of our transfers and I like to read them and figure out what's going on, and also figure out what all the different drips are for, most of that information can be found in the critical care version.
It was less than 30 bucks and well worth it.