I speak a pretty decent amount of Spanish. We do get Spanish-only patients here and there. I'm usually surprised to find that I'm often the only responder who speaks any Spanish, but it tends to come in handy at least a little bit.
I'm not sure how many people I could find without a sternum, but the whole point of compressions is to push the blood out of the heart. Not compressing as deep in this situation would be the same as not compressing as deep in someone with a sternum, there wouldn't be as much blood flow.
I...
Just to clarify... I don't tape the chin itself; I tape the chin part of the c-collar. You also have very little chance of torquing the neck if you unroll the piece of tape first and bring it down to stick it.
Alright, I think I'm done defending this.
It went wrong for everyone in my EMT class at some point. Gloves and tape stick together really well, and my method doesn't involve touching the sticky side with a gloved hand.
We could keep doing this I guess. Let's just agree to disagree.
That one piece of tape very easily becomes two pieces of tape with one quick cut from your trauma shears. You can grab another piece of tape after that if you have to make your adjustments.
Okay, I'll throw in a trick I've learned that probably everyone is aware of just so the topic can shift.
When you're working for one of the cheaper departments that likes towels instead of those fancy commercial headblocks, and you want to secure your patient's head to the board with tape...
One part of the vital signs I would have liked to see is whether the respirations were irregular. That way you could monitor the player for signs of increased intracranial pressure (always a possibility with a hard hit to the head). A major part of SAMPLE in this case would be events leading...
Don't wait on a patch... it ain't comin'. You can get one on your own, though. My friend gave me two after I finished all of the tests.
Good luck. Maybe I'll see you in one of the hospitals, but you're a little bit too far east for that to be likely.
You're in between passing the NREMT and state certification right now. NREMT actually does send the information out like they say they do. I just kept checking the state licensing page to see if my name came up, and it did about a week after I heard my NREMT test results. The letter that says...
I had this problem, but I wasn't allowed to take the test before I solved it. That took a lot of phone calls to my instructor, the state OEMS, and NREMT.
The first time I did the online application, I checked off "NREMT-B Exam" (or something similar) as the test that I wanted to take. I...
Our volunteer service has a volunteer crew on duty (when one signs up) with a contracted paramedic in a fly car (or with the EMT if only one EMT signs up). Area responses are an option for volunteers not on duty, but the crew will be there shortly anyway.