the 100% directionless thread

They forgot step 21 resuscitate medic candidate after he has a heart attack.

Yeah no shirt mate, our fitness test consists of carrying a dummy down two flights of stairs in a stair chair, doing 20 press ups, lifting the dummy into the ambulance and walking a couple hundred meters with the Thomas Pack and a 25kg boxing bag.
 
They forgot step 21 resuscitate medic candidate after he has a heart attack.

Holy hell... You aren't kidding.

That just sounds nuts. I wouldn't be able to do it I don't think.

I have never even seen a scoop stretcher lol
 
Read this to my sister today...

mr-brown-can-moo-can-you-dr-seuss-screenshot-4.jpg
 
They forgot step 21 resuscitate medic candidate after he has a heart attack.
No kidding!! I agree with angel, I am not sure I would be able to do it without being totally wiped out at the end.
That is a lot of steps to remember, or are you told every few steps what needs doing? Jw
 
No kidding!! I agree with angel, I am not sure I would be able to do it without being totally wiped out at the end.
That is a lot of steps to remember, or are you told every few steps what needs doing? Jw

I'm hoping someone will pace you and remind you what to do.. otherwise I'm screwed :p
 
I just took a PAT that was called a "functional job assessment" of what we do. Treadmill and stair stepper with loaded medic gear bags, 2 minutes of CPR, push and pull some weight on a sled to simulate a stretcher, walk with gear bags on a trampoline to simulate the beach. And throughout there were manual dexterity tests to see if you could intubate or start a line after vigorous activity. Not hard, by any stretch, but still kind of nerve wracking with all of the events stacked up and a constant HR check after each event.

It was a strange PAT.

MEDIC in Charlotte has an interesting one too. There is a video of it on the website, www.medic911.com. It's called the MedPAT.
 
I just took a PAT that was called a "functional job assessment" of what we do. Treadmill and stair stepper with loaded medic gear bags, 2 minutes of CPR, push and pull some weight on a sled to simulate a stretcher, walk with gear bags on a trampoline to simulate the beach. And throughout there were manual dexterity tests to see if you could intubate or start a line after vigorous activity. Not hard, by any stretch, but still kind of nerve wracking with all of the events stacked up and a constant HR check after each event.

It was a strange PAT.

MEDIC in Charlotte has an interesting one too. There is a video of it on the website, www.medic911.com. It's called the MedPAT.

That sounds kinda fun too... but the HR check would kill me. I'm in decent shape (or at least I rarely get out of breath under exertion), but my heart rate is usually high to begin with.
 
90?? Yikes man. Guessing it was just nerves? I sit in the low 60s with a bp of 100s/60s, but I also have mandatory physical training every day I am at work and I am young so that might have something to do with it...
 
Is there a top end number you have to be under at the conclusion of the test? I would assume it would be a percentage above your baseline but I haven't ever been through a PAT besides swim/run/paddle tests that had no HR check.
 
90?? Yikes man. Guessing it was just nerves? I sit in the low 60s with a bp of 100s/60s, but I also have mandatory physical training every day I am at work and I am young so that might have something to do with it...

When I was in top running shape I had a resting HR of 40. I'm not nearly in as good of shape anymore but still sit low 50s. Unfortunately I was blessed with the genetics of hypertension, so I have to fight to keep my systolic below 130 (a fight I usually fail...), though diastolic stays in the 60s :)
 
Just cause we are sharing

My resting HR is usually around 80-110. It likes to bounce around a lot.

Highest it ever was when I was laying in bed was 168.

Docs have no idea why. lol

I dont have hypertension, high cholesterol or anything like that. Started when I was 19.
 
It's a gift and a curse. If I stand up too fast I get light headed pretty easily. Haven't hit the floor yet, though. (knock on wood) But did scare the EMT in the one nasty MVA I have been in.
 
Smoker? Not accusing, just a thought. arteriosclerosis can cause elevated BP even with a low resting HR.

I smoke, worst habit I ever started, and hardest ever to get rid of.
 
One of these days she's gonna catch you with that skillet man haha.
 
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