Tuxkitteh94
Forum Ride Along
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I'm just having a really difficult time memorizing all the steps for my emt b practice skill. Any help would appreciated.
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Repetition. Have somebody watch you perform it. If you miss a step, have them immediately stop and correct you and make you start from the beginning (instead of telling you what you missed once you're finished).
I've done that as a student. As I'm going through it manually, and verbally to the instructor, I would stop and ask a question. The instructors always seemed more prone to give me an excellent answer…or maybe the hands-on made me ask an excellent question?I always tell students....
Teach me.. perform it as you are teaching the examiner on how to perform. Detailed discussion and hands on assessment.
If you script it out as it should be performed with emphasis on critical areas, you should do fine.
Best of luck,
R/r 911
I'm just having a really difficult time memorizing all the steps for my emt b practice skill. Any help would appreciated.
I think if you really understand why you are assessing each point, and think of the assessment as less of a checklist and more of a systematic, head-to-toe rapid assessment, it may be a little easier.
Memorizing a checklist is hard. Learning a systematic, orderly way to do something that already makes sense to you is probably a better way to go.
I always tell students....
Teach me.. perform it as you are teaching the examiner on how to perform. Detailed discussion and hands on assessment.
If you script it out as it should be performed with emphasis on critical areas, you should do fine.
Best of luck,
R/r 911
...to use different words to say the say thing...
Literally go head to toe:
Look at the head, what could be wrong? Lacerations? Blood/csf in the ears? Pupils? Lateral gaze? Bloody/deformed nose? Oral trauma?
Look at the neck, what could be wrong? Trachial deviation? Jvd?
Look at the chest, what could be wrong? Obvious trauma? Pain? Flail chest? Equal chest rise? Blah blah blah.
Systematic inspection, not checklist memorization. But if you use the same system on every patient, you won't miss anything.
Classic medical training... see one, do one, teach one.