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I suggest writing down vitals first, so as to not forget them. All the technical stuff (service, truck number, date, EMT name & No.) can wait to be done at the end.
Alternatively, all of that can be written on the way to the call.
That's odd to me. Our instructors pound the CHARTE method into our heads over and over. We have to fill out paper versions for every call on every clinical ride, and they become part of our grade.
Ok i just got my emt certificate.....In class my teacher pretty much showed us what a pcr looked like.....thats it.....didnt really touch on how to write one. Anyone have a routine they do for writing... pleaase share
A lot of services still use paper pcr's... So it is still important to learn that.
Not part of any EMT curriculum that I know of. It should be the responsibility of the Ambulance/Fire Service you work for to teach a newbie how they want it done so as to protect your but and there. I had an FTO that was so sue-scared that he taught me to CYA more than most. And it helped. I know teach the newbies at the Snow Park the same way since no one I have ever seen come out of an EMT course even knows what a PCR is.
Are you kidding? YES report writing should be part of a curriculum. Not any specific format like SOAP or CHART or what have you, but how to write a decent narrative should be part of an EMT curriculum. As one of the news threads pointed out in a blaringly obvious way, documentation is so important!
Becaue any good EMT class will teach you report writing. You should be required to fill out a PCR on every clinical pt you see. That is how you learn. Does not matter how different agencies write their PCR's. They are all basicly the same. You learn how to write them well, then you adapt to other ways.
One positive thing i can say about my class, we all left knowing how to write reports.