EMS Operations & Legal
Anatomy, Assessment & Shock
Airway, Cardiac & Medical Emergencies
Trauma & Bleeding
Pediatrics, OB & Special Populations
100

What specialized facilities are included in the EMS network alongside dispatch, EMS providers, and hospitals?

Specialty centers.

100

What is perfusion?

The circulation of blood delivering oxygen and nutrients to tissues is called this.

100

What is CAB and what is it used for?

Circulation, Airway, Breathing is used for resuscitation.

100

What is arterial bleeding?

Bright red spurting blood.

100

What is the Moro reflex?

A startled infant throwing out their arms and legs.

200

What are the two types of medical direction involving protocols and direct physician orders?

Offline and online medical direction.

200

What are early signs of shock?

Cool clammy skin, tachycardia, and narrowing pulse pressure are early signs of this condition.

200

What are signs/symptoms of Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS)?

Chest pressure, diaphoresis, nausea, and radiating pain are common symptoms of this syndrome.

200

What is 2-3 inches proximal to the wound and not over a joint?

A tourniquet.

200

What makes pediatric airways different from adult airways?

Smaller airways and a proportionally larger tongue.

300

What legal issue occurs when care is stopped without transferring to an equal or higher provider?

Abandonment.

300

What does the left side of the heart do?

Pumps oxygenated blood to the body.

300

What are signs/symptoms of an opioid overdose?

Pinpoint pupils, respiratory depression, and altered mental status.

300

What is flail chest?

Paradoxical chest wall motion caused by multiple rib fractures.

300

What is placenta previa?

A pregnancy complication where the placenta partially or completely covers the cervix, causing painless bright-red vaginal bleeding.

400

What must be proven using duty, breach, damages, and causation?

Negligence.

400

What is Cushing’s triad?

This triad of hypertension, bradycardia, and irregular respirations suggests increased intracranial pressure.

400

What is the Cincinnati Stroke Scale?

Balance
Eyes
Facial droop
Arm drift
Slurred speech
Time

400

What is the treatment for an evisceration?

Covering protruding organs with moist sterile dressings and an occlusive layer.

400

What is an LVAD?

A device that mechanically supports circulation in severe heart failure patients who may not have a pulse.

500

What federal system standardizes disaster response so agencies can coordinate effectively nationwide?

NIMS (National Incident Management System).

500

What are signs of neurogenic shock?

Hypotension with relative bradycardia and warm dry skin after spinal injury.

500

What is anaphylaxis?

Life-threatening allergic reaction that can cause airway swelling, bronchospasm, and hypotension.

500

What indicates a tension pneumothorax?

Absent breath sounds on one side, hypotension, JVD, and tracheal deviation.

500

During neonatal resuscitation, what are the first three priorities?

Dry, warm, and stimulate.

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