Preparatory
Patient Assessment
Airway
Hypoperfusion
Pharmacology & Medical Terminology
100
Physician instructions given directly by radio or mobile phone or indirectly by protocols, as authorized by the medical director
What is medical control
100
BE FAST
What are balance, eyes, facial symmetry, arm drift/strength, speech, and time
100
Modified jaw thrust should be used to open an airway on a ...
What is a suspected trauma patient
100
The 3 components of the perfusion triangle...
What are the heart (pump), blood vessels (pipes), and blood (fluid)
100
To motion towards the midline
What is adduction
200
Procedures to reduce infection in patients and healthcare professionals
What is infection control
200
Vital signs every 15 minutes
What is a stable patient
200
Measures the amount of CO2, O2 and PH of blood...
What are chemoreceptors medulla, carotid arteries and the aortic arch
200
How to treat for shock
What is high flow O2, keep the patient warm, and transport to the ED in a supine position
200
The plane that divides the body into superior and inferior portions
What is transvers or axial
300
The type on consent given when the provider explains to the patient treatment being provided, along with benefits and potential risks
What is informed consent
300
General impression, LOC, ABCs, chief complaint, and patient priority
What is the primary assessment
300
You should suction the airway for no more than...
What is 15 seconds for adults and 10 seconds for peds
300
Patients are bradycardic with neurogenic shock because.....
What is the motor nerves that stimulate the adrenal glands to secrete EPI are compromised and unable to send the signal
300
Right patient Right drug Right dose Right route Right time Write it down
What are the 6 patient rights for medication administration
400
Requires...... the duty to act, a breach duty, injury, and proximate cuasation
What is negligence
400
3 types of MI patients that may present atypically
What are females, diabetics, and geriatrics
400
The 3 devices for delivering O2 and the concentration of O2 provided for each....
What are: N/C 24-44% NRB 95% BVM 100%
400
The 2 signs and symptoms of anaphylactic shock that EPI treats and what causes them...
What are hypotension (vasodilation), and dyspnea with wheezing (bronchoconstriction)
400
The contraindications for NTG
What are a systolic blood pressure of <100 mm/Hg, ED meds in the previous 72 hours, head trauma, or max of 3 doses already administered
500
If you drop your patient off in the ED and you fail to give proper patient turnover, then you may be guilty of.....
What is patient abandonment
500
The 6 F's of the gallbladder
What are 40, fat, female, fertile, flatulence, and fair skinned
500
Liquid protein that coats the alveoli and keeps them open
What is surfactant
500
The 4 classifications of shock and examples of each
What are cardiogenic (MI, CHF), obstructive (cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, and PE), distributive (septic, neurogenic, anaphylactic, psychogenic, and hypovolemic (anemia, hemorrhagic, and dehydration)
500
The side effects of EPI administration
What are precipitation of angina, dysrhythmias, tachycardia, HTN, and HA
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