Where is it?
Routes
Drugs
Indications/ Contraindications
Rights
100

Oxygen Wrench

What is attached to each O2 cylinder.

100

PO

What is Per Oral?

100

Drug given most often by MFR's

What is Oxygen?

100

SPO2 of 85%

What is an indication to give Oxygen?

100

The name on a prescription drug.

What is the patient?

200

Oral Glucose

What is the front pouch?

200

Two ways to administer Naloxone.

What is intramuscular and intranasal?
200

Dose for ASA

What is chewing 2- 81 mg tablets

200

Patient with GI Bleed, active bleeding or Allergy to the drug.

What are the contraindications of ASA?

200

When you ensure to keep track of what medications were administered and at what time.

What is the right documentation?

300

Acetylsalicylic Acid come in this form, dose and is located here.

What is tablet form, 81 mg, front pocket?

300

 This is the route of administration for salbutamol in pre-hospital care.

What is inhalation?

300

When someone has low blood sugar, they need this drug, at this dose.

What is Oral Glucose and 25 mg.

300

You should not give this medication to a patient who cannot protect their airway.

What is Oral Glucose?

300

This “right” means checking how much medication to give based on protocols or doctor orders

What is the Dose?

400

This is where the O2 (in use and extra cylinder) is stored on R101.

What is in the Med bag compartment bottom shelf.

400

For this route, EMS on scene has a patient with chest pain spray "Nitro" under their tongue.  

What is sublingual?

400

Relaxes smooth muscles of the bronchioles which relieves bronchospasms and reduces airway resistance

What is Salbutamol (Ventolin- blue inhaler)

400

A Drug that has no contraindications in an emergency situation

What is Epinephrine?

400

You give glucose because the patient’s blood sugar is low. Which “right” does this show?

What is the right reason?

500

Narcan- location, amount

What is the front pocket, 2- 4 mg sprays

500

Medication given via this route passes through the nasal mucosa and enters the bloodstream rapidly.




What is the intranasal route?

500

Indications that a patient requires Narcan

Pinpoint Pupils, Ineffective Breathing, Altered LOC, Low Pulse Rate, Low Blood Pressure

500

A condition where patient is drowsy, confused, has slurred speech and breath could smell like alcohol or fruit. 

What medication can we give?

What are indications of a blood sugar high or Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)?

MFR's do not have a medication to administer for this condition.

500

When patient refuses medication, even during an emergency, this is the correct action for an MFR to take. 

Document and respect the patients wishes.

600

Items included in the BGL Monitor Kit

What is the monitor/device, test strips, Band-Aids, 2x2" gauze, alcohol wipes and lancets.

600

This route bypasses the digestive system, delivering medication directly into the muscle.




What is the intramuscular (IM) route?

600

What is the purpose of giving ASA during a suspected heart attack?

What is to help prevent a heart attack from getting worse by slowing down clot formation.  (Makes platelets "more slippery")

600

Contraindications and complications for administering a medication per oral?

Contraindications- What is actively vomiting, unable to follow commands/unconscious or unresponsive, NPO.

Complications- What is delayed action via this route.

600

You’re about to administer epinephrine for anaphylaxis and double-check the label to avoid giving the wrong medication. Which “right” are you ensuring?






What is the right drug?

700

This is where the Oxygen is stored on E101

What is the center compartment in the back seat of cab as well an extra cylinder underneath (by snacks).

700

These are the routes of the drugs that we can administer as MFR's

What is Intranasal (Narcan), Per Oral (ASA, Oral Glucose, Inhalation (O2, inhalers), Intramuscular (epi-pen)

700

These are the steps to give an Epi-pen

What is confirm 7 rights, remove cap, press firmly to patients thigh (orange to the thigh, blue to the sky), hold for 3 seconds.

700

Inhalers given to help with bronchospasm.

What are Salbutamol (Ventalin) and Ipratropium Bromide (Atrovent)?

700

These are the 7 rights to administer a medication.

What is the right person, dose, time, reason, documentation, medication and route?

M
e
n
u