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Class notes

NREMT-B ALL Class Notes

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ALL class notes for EMT-B. Bear in mind that these notes are from a Georgia EMT course, and protocols may vary slightly between states.

Institution
NREMT - Nationally Registered Emergency Medical Technician
Course
NREMT - Nationally Registered Emergency Medical Technician











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Written for

Institution
NREMT - Nationally Registered Emergency Medical Technician
Course
NREMT - Nationally Registered Emergency Medical Technician

Document information

Uploaded on
April 13, 2025
Number of pages
115
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Rc health
Contains
All classes

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EMT Notes

Chapter 1 Notes
EMS systems
 All EMTs can drive ambulance
 Check all equipment before shift
 Medical director authorizes EMTs to provide care
o Tells you what to do
o Cannot do things without their permission
o Quality control to ensure appropriate standards are met
 Medical control by radio or phone or indirectly
o Authorized by medical director
 Errors
o Rules-based, breaking legal rights
o Knowledge-based, not knowing enough
o Skills-based, equipment is not operating
 CoAEMSP establishes national standards
 Primary prevention is before it has happened
o Proactive
 Secondary prevention is reducing effects
 45% of EMTs by fire dept
 PSA (primary service area) is where you operate
 Public health looks at entire populations to prevent health problems
 Public safety access point is call center

History of EMS
 Corpsmen in military to care in field
 First aid by police, fewer ambulances in 70s
 90s, NHTSA national EMS exam
o EMS Agenda for the Future
 National EMS Scope of Practice Model outlines skills performed
 White Paper revealed inadequacy of prehospital emergency care/transport
 EMS administered through Department of Transportation
 EMT is foundation, basic emergency care
o Can assist in complicated delivery
 AEMT can administer inhaled beta-agonist (for dyspnea and wheezing)
 Paramedic can perform needle chest decompression
 EMR < EMT < AEMT < Paramedic

Roles/responsibilities/professionalism of EMS personnel
 Respect is most important
 Patient advocacy is centered around needs of patient
 Attention to detail and safety

,  Only disclose info to receiving nurse/physician
 Advanced life support = cardiac monitoring, IV, airway adjuncts
 Community paramedicine = training to provide additional services
 Continuous quality improvement is reviews and audits
 Emergency medical dispatch = helps select the appropriate units
 EMR is first trained professional to help
 Licensure is when state allows a regulated act to be performed
 Mobile integrated healthcare is within community rather than at hospital

Chapter 2 Notes
Stress Management
 Stress is anything perceived as a threat
 Personal safety > scene safety > patient care
 Limit sugar, fats, sodium, alcohol
o Rely on complex carbohydrates
 At least 30 mins exercise weekly
 Vitamins B (water-soluble) and C subject to depletion
 Delayed stress reaction occurs after the stimulus is gone
 Acute stress reactions are in-the-moment
 Cumulative stress reactions are from everything piling on at once
 General adaptation syndrome: alarm, reaction and resistance, recovery/exhaustion
 Quid pro quo is requesting sex in exchange for something else
 Critical incident stress management directs emergency services to equilibrium
 OSHA develops, publishes, enforces workplace safety guidelines

Caring for Critically Ill and Injured Patients
 Reduce patient anxiety
 Encourage patients to express pain/fear

Illness
 Vector-borne transmission is by animals or insects
 Report exposure to infection control officer
 Communicable disease means can be spread
 CDC in United States
o Standard precautions to avoid risk
 Hepatitis from viral infection = inflamed liver, causes fever, loss of appetite, jaundice,
fatigue
 Infection control to prevent spread of illness
 If patient has Tb, put surgical mask on them and N95 on you

Prevention of Injury
 Gloves and eye protection are minimum
 Block traffic with heavy vehicle
 If unsure about safety, wait for further personnel to arrive before approaching

,  Keep distance if there are hazardous materials
o Until instructed by trained hazardous materials responders
 Lightning can be direct strike and ground strike
 With electric hazards, wear a helmet with chin strap and face shield
 With falling hazards, have a hat with top and side protection and chin strap
 Fire hazards
o Smoke
o Oxygen deficiency
o High ambient temperatures
o Toxic gases
o Building collapse
o Equipment
o Explosions
o Breathing [CO2] above 10-12% = death in a few minutes
o CO is responsible for most fire deaths
 Cover and concealment uses an impenetrable barrier

Chapter 3 Notes
Consent
 From every conscious adult
o Implied consent if unconscious (durable power of attorney for health care)
o Advance directive: written document that specifies what care to provide if
patient cannot make decisions
 Aka living will
 Expressed consent is like reaching out arm to allow you to take blood pressure
 Patient autonomy: patient can make health decisions about self
 If cannot contact a minor’s parents, keep treating them
o Implied consent
o Employment is not emancipation of minor, but army, marriage, and parenthood
are
 Need a release form if someone denies care
o And get a witness to see them sign it
 If someone denies care, keep asking them questions to try and get them to consent
 Wait for law enforcement if patient is combative and poses a risk to others
 Standard of care: how reasonably a person with similar training acts under similar
circumstances
 Credentialing: determine qualifications necessary to practice a profession
 DNR, still treat just do not resuscitate
o If has an expiration date, must be dated within preceding year to be valid
o If written orders are not present, resuscitate
o Must detail specific case
 MedicAlert bracelet has patient info on a foundation

,  Res ispa loquitor: EMT held liable even when unable to demonstrate how injury
occurred

Death
 Definitive signs of death (at least 2 of the following)
o Obvious mortal damage (decapitation)
o Dependent lividity (discoloration from blood pooling at lower body) and Rigor
mortis
o Putrefaction (decomposition)
 Presumptive signs of death
o No systolic blood pressure
o No response to pain
o Lack of carotid pulse or heartbeat
o Absence of chest rise/fall
o No deep tendon or corneal reflexes
o Absence of pupillary reactivity
o Profound cyanosis
o Lowered or decreased body temperature

Moral Obligations
 Bioethics: ethics of healthcare
 Immunity laws do not provide immunity when injury is from negligence or willful
misconduct
 Spoken defamation is called slander
o Written is libel
 Contributory negligence: when defendant feels that the conduct of patient contributed
to their injuries
 Scope of practice is what you can legally provide
 Standard of care is how you must behave
 EMT not judged for level of training
o Not same standard of care as physician
 If you volunteer off duty, you must continue to provide care until an equal or higher
authority assumes care
 Negligence determined by
o Duty
o Breach of duty
o Damages
o Causation
 False imprisonment is keeping someone for a long amount of time
o In the ambulance
 Good Samaritan law requires
o Acted in good faith
o Rendered care without expecting compensation
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