1
2
3
4
5
100

This term describes the specific way in which individuals interact with their environment.

behavior

100

Any situation where a person's behavior poses a threat to themselves or others, or prevents themfrom functioning effectively or caring for basic needs

behavioral health emergency 

100

A chronic health condition involving changes in behavior, thinking, and/or emotion that significantly interferes with daily functioning, with symptoms persisting for several weeks or longer.

mental illness

100

Unlike organic brain disorders, this type of mental condition (such as schizophrenia or major depression) cannot be linked to any physical dysfunction or structural failure of an organ.

functional disorder

100

This national 3-digit phone number serves as the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, acting as a core element of modern mental health crisis care systems.

9-8-8

200

An EMT should immediately check blood glucose levels to rule out this condition when a patient presents with pale, diaphoretic skin, tremors, and bizarre or confused behavior.

hypoglycemia

200

This acute state of confusion occurs suddenly, fluctuates over short periods, may present with hallucinations or agitation, and must be treated as a true medical emergency.

delirium 

200

This specific physiological diagnosis is a common cause of sudden altered mental status and bizarre behavior in geriatric patients, often presenting without classic systemic symptoms.

urinary tract infection 

200

This term refers to a temporary or permanent impairment of brain tissue caused by a physical or physiologic disturbance, such as a tumor, stroke, or traumatic brain injury.

organic brain syndrome

200

This critical concept reminds EMTs that a definitive psychiatric diagnosis can never be finalized in the

prehospital field, and instead requires evaluation by this specific professional.

physician

300

To meet the formal clinical criteria for major depressive disorder, a patient must exhibit at least five diagnostic symptoms over this minimum duration of time.

two-week period

300

This complex mental illness is characterized by alternating periods of deep depression and manic episodes that last for a week or more.

bipolar disorder

300

A complex disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of psychotic behavior, typical onset in early adulthood, and symptoms like hallucinations, delusions, paranoia, and flat affect.

schizophrenia

300

This specific psychiatric term describes an emotionless appearance or a complete lack of visible emotional expression, frequently observed in patients with schizophrenia.

flat affect 

300

This acute symptom involves a profound disruption to thoughts and perceptions where a patient experiences false sensory perceptions (hallucinations) and firmly held false beliefs (delusions).

acute psychosis

400

According to the CDC, suicide represents this specific ranking among the leading causes of death for individuals aged 10 to 24 years old.

second leading cause of death 

400

This demographic group has a high risk of completing suicide, rarely makes insincere suicidal gestures, and often turns to suicide when facing terminal or debilitating health conditions.

older adults/ geriatric patients

400

An assessment scenario presenting a 33-year-old male with a history of depression who recently engaged in these two specific actions represents the highest imminent risk for suicide.

consuming alcohol and purchasing a gun 

400

This personality trait represents the single most important and beneficial duty an EMT can provide for a severely suicidal patient.

compassion

400

This interviewing technique involves repeating what a patient tells you in a question format, allowing them to expand on their thoughts and giving the EMT critical insight.

reflective listening

500

This type of restraint is constructed from flexible materials like nylon or neoprene and is designed to be easily removed by cutting with trauma shears during an emergency.

soft restraints

500

This is the minimum number of rescuers that should ideally be present when physically restraining a combative patient, with each designated to an extremity or the head.

5 responders

500

This represents the minimum frequency at which an EMT must thoroughly reassess a restrained patient's respiratory, cardiovascular, and distal neurovascular status.

every 15 minutes

500

This specific clinical position is the preferred configuration for a restrained patient on an ambulance stretcher to optimize breathing and prevent aspiration.

fowler's or high fowler's position

500

When treating a combat veteran experiencing a PTSD flashback, EMTs should proactively eliminate this specific environmental stimulus, which serves as a frequent severe trigger.

diesel fumes OR excessive noise

M
e
n
u