Not all sepsis starts with disease. Some of it starts with us. Iatrogenic sepsis, caused by healthcare interventions, accounts for a significant portion of sepsis cases. In emergency medicine, the...
Not all sepsis starts with disease. Some of it starts with us. Iatrogenic sepsis, caused by healthcare interventions, accounts for a significant portion of sepsis cases. In emergency medicine, the...
Few debates in EMS are as persistent, or as misunderstood, as “scoop and run” versus “stay and play.” Many providers feel pressure to pick a side early in their careers,...
Eight seconds can feel like thirty minutes. Every experienced EMS provider knows that feeling. The rollover begins. The windshield tilts sideways. Somebody screams. The radio keeps playing. Your brain suddenly...
The hardest part is not always the call. Sometimes it is returning home afterward. The silence. The moment somebody finally asks, “Are you okay?” and your brain suddenly realizes the...
Emergency responders manage behavioral and psychiatric symptoms on nearly every shift: anxiety before transport, agitation caused by hypoxia, or combativeness related to intoxication or altered mental status. These behavioral cues...
Emergency responders excel at recognizing subtle behavioral changes in patients. EMS professionals routinely identify altered mental status, mood shifts, and stress responses within minutes of arrival. Yet many providers struggle...
Every EMS provider enters the field focused on doing the right thing. You learn the steps, memorize protocols, and work hard to perform every intervention correctly. That structure build safety,...
Sepsis is a progressive chain reaction that turns a localized problem into a system-wide failure. Understanding this cascade helps EMS providers recognize severity early and act quickly. Step 1: Local...
The oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve can feel abstract until you connect it to real patients. For EMS providers, the curve matters because it explains a simple but critical question: how easily...
EMS documentation does more than record what happened on a call. A well-written patient care report supports continuity of care, legally protects providers, and helps agencies improve clinical performance through...
Burn injuries can range from minor to life-threatening. For EMS clinicians, the ability to quickly assess burn severity in the field directly influences airway management, fluid resuscitation, destination decisions, and...
End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) gives EMS providers more than a respiratory number. It provides a real-time window into ventilation, perfusion, and metabolism, making capnography one of the most valuable monitoring tools...
Effective ventilation saves lives. Poor ventilation harms patients. EMS clinicians manage airways in uncontrolled environments. Providers perform cardiac arrest resuscitations in tight spaces, ventilate trauma patients in moving ambulances, and...
Most EMS calls follow a familiar pattern: assess, stabilize, transport. Even high-acuity calls usually fall within well-practiced routines. Occasionally, however, providers encounter situations where the only path to patient survival...
Studying for the NREMT has a reputation. Stressful. Overwhelming. Slightly unhinged energy right before test day.The problem usually isn’t motivation. It’s the lack of a real plan. A good NREMT...