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Swoop411 wrote:Forgot I posted in this thread. Here is the website I used to practice with. It was nice for that immediate feedback type result, as well as working your brain.
http://www.emtb.com/9e/assessment_in_action.cfm
ayshwariyamalss wrote:The big difference is that I was only able to take the NY State EMT exam, I would have loved to take the NREMT exam and continue on to Paramedic. I passed, and averaged higher than most in the state, but have had difficulty landing a job here in the field. I have my name in the hat for some overseas gigs, we'll see how it goes. Anyways, good luck!
okiebill wrote:First test down![]()
It went Ok I scored an 88% (85% is passing). The fault was mine completely, One question I just did not know but the rest were all due to reading the question to quickly or not reading / missing a detail on the answers.
It is just as important to know how to testIt has been a few years since I have been in a testing environment, the lessons are coming back to me...LOL
I passed so I guess it is OK in the long run but I'm a perfectionist.
After the test we started Pharmacology (Chapter 7) and started going through the Meds an EMT can dispense (The list is pretty small)
-O2
-Glucose
-Nitro
-Albuterol
-Asprin
-Epi
-I may be forgetting one...
Concerning Epinephrin: Our instructor started explaining dosages 1:10000 / milligrams per mL ect and had us scratching our heads so my hope is that it gets clarified next week.
IANMCDEVITT wrote:Guys, just taking and passing the EMT is not a reason to continue to paramedic.
IANMCDEVITT wrote:I agree it can be tough in some States to break into the field. Try to start by volunteering somewhere.
Swoop411 wrote:I originally wanted to go to school for paramedic, but a medic friend informed me that wasn't possible.
IANMCDEVITT wrote:Some harsh truth

okiebill wrote:First test down![]()
It went Ok I scored an 88% (85% is passing). The fault was mine completely, One question I just did not know but the rest were all due to reading the question to quickly or not reading / missing a detail on the answers.
It is just as important to know how to testIt has been a few years since I have been in a testing environment, the lessons are coming back to me...LOL
I passed so I guess it is OK in the long run but I'm a perfectionist.
After the test we started Pharmacology (Chapter 7) and started going through the Meds an EMT can dispense (The list is pretty small)
-O2
-Glucose
-Nitro
-Albuterol
-Asprin
-Epi
-I may be forgetting one...
Concerning Epinephrin: Our instructor started explaining dosages 1:10000 / milligrams per mL ect and had us scratching our heads so my hope is that it gets clarified next week.
Nalukai wrote:and i can tell you personally medical was easier than the trauma module. just a heads up for those ppl that took it before this year and said that trauma is patch and pack... its not that simple anymore- it is very detailed; there were very few ppl that passed trauma and they actually gave our module exam to the medic students before they started their block and 90 percent of them failed it- and they are mostly all currently working as basics somewhere.
Nalukai wrote:okiebill wrote:First test down![]()
It went Ok I scored an 88% (85% is passing). The fault was mine completely, One question I just did not know but the rest were all due to reading the question to quickly or not reading / missing a detail on the answers.
It is just as important to know how to testIt has been a few years since I have been in a testing environment, the lessons are coming back to me...LOL
I passed so I guess it is OK in the long run but I'm a perfectionist.
After the test we started Pharmacology (Chapter 7) and started going through the Meds an EMT can dispense (The list is pretty small)
-O2
-Glucose
-Nitro
-Albuterol
-Asprin
-Epi
-I may be forgetting one...
Concerning Epinephrin: Our instructor started explaining dosages 1:10000 / milligrams per mL ect and had us scratching our heads so my hope is that it gets clarified next week.
this is my first post i just registered because i have been lurking for a long time on this site and i think its awesome. the reason I did finally register is that now im a NREMT-B i wanted to chime in on the new curriculum and try to help you out in a few ways since i passed my registry a few weeks ago. first off- that 7th drug you were thinking about is activated charcoal- it is per area protocol and the dosage is 1gram per kg body weight ( that is a registry test question) Epi is either .3 or .15 mg ( peds). yes you are right that this year it is an entirely new curriculum; but they really didnt merge AEMT with basic; its just some states now took away the EMT-I or AEMT now and made it either or basic or medic. this year curriculum is mostly focused on trauma ( previous ones were based off strokes etc. with medical) and assists with IVS and intubations /combitubes.... and i can tell you personally medical was easier than the trauma module. just a heads up for those ppl that took it before this year and said that trauma is patch and pack... its not that simple anymore- it is very detailed; there were very few ppl that passed trauma and they actually gave our module exam to the medic students before they started their block and 90 percent of them failed it- and they are mostly all currently working as basics somewhere. we worked out of the brady 12th edition book so im not sure what you are studying but on registry half my questions i got wasnt even in the book- i knew it from my instructors telling us in class and had stuff written down as side notes.the bulk of your registry exam this year is going to come from trauma, airway, and operations with focus on peds/signs and symptoms. you can PM me anytime and i will help you the best i can- so far out of day and night classes i was the top of them and the only one that has passed reg so far hehe.
GP11 wrote:Nalukai wrote:and i can tell you personally medical was easier than the trauma module. just a heads up for those ppl that took it before this year and said that trauma is patch and pack... its not that simple anymore- it is very detailed; there were very few ppl that passed trauma and they actually gave our module exam to the medic students before they started their block and 90 percent of them failed it- and they are mostly all currently working as basics somewhere.
So my perspective is likely quite different from your, but I have to disagree with you on this. Trauma may seem complicated initially, but once you've been doing it for a while it's pretty straightforward--ABCDE, secondary survey, fluids, and transport to definitive care. Even in the emergency department it's not much different, just with more procedures and call the trauma surgeons.
On the other hand, you can spend a lifetime learning management of medical emergencies and you'll still regularly run across things you've never seen before.
okiebill wrote:Nalukai wrote:okiebill wrote:First test down![]()
It went Ok I scored an 88% (85% is passing). The fault was mine completely, One question I just did not know but the rest were all due to reading the question to quickly or not reading / missing a detail on the answers.
It is just as important to know how to testIt has been a few years since I have been in a testing environment, the lessons are coming back to me...LOL
I passed so I guess it is OK in the long run but I'm a perfectionist.
After the test we started Pharmacology (Chapter 7) and started going through the Meds an EMT can dispense (The list is pretty small)
-O2
-Glucose
-Nitro
-Albuterol
-Asprin
-Epi
-I may be forgetting one...
Concerning Epinephrin: Our instructor started explaining dosages 1:10000 / milligrams per mL ect and had us scratching our heads so my hope is that it gets clarified next week.
this is my first post i just registered because i have been lurking for a long time on this site and i think its awesome. the reason I did finally register is that now im a NREMT-B i wanted to chime in on the new curriculum and try to help you out in a few ways since i passed my registry a few weeks ago. first off- that 7th drug you were thinking about is activated charcoal- it is per area protocol and the dosage is 1gram per kg body weight ( that is a registry test question) Epi is either .3 or .15 mg ( peds). yes you are right that this year it is an entirely new curriculum; but they really didnt merge AEMT with basic; its just some states now took away the EMT-I or AEMT now and made it either or basic or medic. this year curriculum is mostly focused on trauma ( previous ones were based off strokes etc. with medical) and assists with IVS and intubations /combitubes.... and i can tell you personally medical was easier than the trauma module. just a heads up for those ppl that took it before this year and said that trauma is patch and pack... its not that simple anymore- it is very detailed; there were very few ppl that passed trauma and they actually gave our module exam to the medic students before they started their block and 90 percent of them failed it- and they are mostly all currently working as basics somewhere. we worked out of the brady 12th edition book so im not sure what you are studying but on registry half my questions i got wasnt even in the book- i knew it from my instructors telling us in class and had stuff written down as side notes.the bulk of your registry exam this year is going to come from trauma, airway, and operations with focus on peds/signs and symptoms. you can PM me anytime and i will help you the best i can- so far out of day and night classes i was the top of them and the only one that has passed reg so far hehe.
Thanks for the heads up Nalukai![]()
Yes Activated Charcoal was the last one though our instructor warned us it would probably get brick hard before you dispense any...lol
Tonight s class was over Chapter 8 (Assessment). We will spend about 6 hours of study on it from the book and lord knows how many hours from here on running scenarios.
,A question I had tonight:
"If Albuterol and Epi have the same action can I use one if I don't have the other in an emergency?"
rwiklund8 wrote:okiebill wrote:Nalukai wrote:okiebill wrote:First test down![]()
It went Ok I scored an 88% (85% is passing). The fault was mine completely, One question I just did not know but the rest were all due to reading the question to quickly or not reading / missing a detail on the answers.
It is just as important to know how to testIt has been a few years since I have been in a testing environment, the lessons are coming back to me...LOL
I passed so I guess it is OK in the long run but I'm a perfectionist.
After the test we started Pharmacology (Chapter 7) and started going through the Meds an EMT can dispense (The list is pretty small)
-O2
-Glucose
-Nitro
-Albuterol
-Asprin
-Epi
-I may be forgetting one...
Concerning Epinephrin: Our instructor started explaining dosages 1:10000 / milligrams per mL ect and had us scratching our heads so my hope is that it gets clarified next week.
this is my first post i just registered because i have been lurking for a long time on this site and i think its awesome. the reason I did finally register is that now im a NREMT-B i wanted to chime in on the new curriculum and try to help you out in a few ways since i passed my registry a few weeks ago. first off- that 7th drug you were thinking about is activated charcoal- it is per area protocol and the dosage is 1gram per kg body weight ( that is a registry test question) Epi is either .3 or .15 mg ( peds). yes you are right that this year it is an entirely new curriculum; but they really didnt merge AEMT with basic; its just some states now took away the EMT-I or AEMT now and made it either or basic or medic. this year curriculum is mostly focused on trauma ( previous ones were based off strokes etc. with medical) and assists with IVS and intubations /combitubes.... and i can tell you personally medical was easier than the trauma module. just a heads up for those ppl that took it before this year and said that trauma is patch and pack... its not that simple anymore- it is very detailed; there were very few ppl that passed trauma and they actually gave our module exam to the medic students before they started their block and 90 percent of them failed it- and they are mostly all currently working as basics somewhere. we worked out of the brady 12th edition book so im not sure what you are studying but on registry half my questions i got wasnt even in the book- i knew it from my instructors telling us in class and had stuff written down as side notes.the bulk of your registry exam this year is going to come from trauma, airway, and operations with focus on peds/signs and symptoms. you can PM me anytime and i will help you the best i can- so far out of day and night classes i was the top of them and the only one that has passed reg so far hehe.
Thanks for the heads up Nalukai![]()
Yes Activated Charcoal was the last one though our instructor warned us it would probably get brick hard before you dispense any...lol
Tonight s class was over Chapter 8 (Assessment). We will spend about 6 hours of study on it from the book and lord knows how many hours from here on running scenarios.
,A question I had tonight:
"If Albuterol and Epi have the same action can I use one if I don't have the other in an emergency?"
How do a bronchodilator and a vasoconstrictor have the same action? You could use albuteral for certain signs in anaphylaxis but albuteral won't reverse anaphylaxis like epi.

They are both bronchodilators. Albuterol is primarily a beta-2 agent with small amount of alpha. Epinephrine is both alpha and beta.
quick pharm fact; alphas constrict and also speed up the the heart and beta's dilate. Beta-2 receptors are in the smooth muscles surrounding the bronchioles in the lungs. Epi would work but you get nasty side effects so we use as pure a beta agent as we can, in this case albuterol (an even better choice would be Xopenex (Leva-albuterol)
and yeah, we do use albuterol in bronchospasm caused by anaphalaxis along with steroids and two different kinds of antihistamines (H1&H2 blockers).
Strictly speaking, epinephrine is a an endogenous catacholamine sympathomimetic/vasoconstricter/bronchodilator
BSR
Nalukai wrote:
They are both bronchodilators. Albuterol is primarily a beta-2 agent with small amount of alpha. Epinephrine is both alpha and beta.
quick pharm fact; alphas constrict and also speed up the the heart and beta's dilate. Beta-2 receptors are in the smooth muscles surrounding the bronchioles in the lungs. Epi would work but you get nasty side effects so we use as pure a beta agent as we can, in this case albuterol (an even better choice would be Xopenex (Leva-albuterol)
and yeah, we do use albuterol in bronchospasm caused by anaphalaxis along with steroids and two different kinds of antihistamines (H1&H2 blockers).
Strictly speaking, epinephrine is a an endogenous catacholamine sympathomimetic/vasoconstricter/bronchodilator
BSR
yeah but you would need medical direction for that kind of intervention during anaphylaxis.... am i right? they are both bronchodilators but only EPI is a vasoconstrictor to increase cardiac output- which dilatation of the blood vessels is mostly the cause of anaphylaxis due to the histamines in the body. Albuterol would have little effect in that situation since it is absorbed through the lungs and not the bloodstream initially. It's obvious that you are medic level while im still a basic so i dont have the scope of practice nor the knowledge of beta 1-2 antogonists other than indications of use, but i love me some knowledge so please continue.....

BlueSilkRibbon wrote:The vasoconstriction property of epi is only a small piece of the increased cardiac output puzzle, The inotropic and chronotropic properties are equally if not more important. To much vasoconstriction is bad which is why we rarely use epi as an antihypotensive, we use nor-epinephrine (Levophed), phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine) or dopamine (Intropine) and in certain cases dobutamine (Dobutrex)
BlueSilkRibbon wrote:I have seen people have massive myocardial infarctions after epi use because it vasoconstricts the coronary arteries as well.
IANMCDEVITT wrote:Good info guys but slightly beyond Bill's needs. Bill keep us updated on how class is going.
Nalukai wrote: yeah but you would need medical direction for that kind of intervention during anaphylaxis.... am i right? they are both bronchodilators but only EPI is a vasoconstrictor to increase cardiac output- which dilatation of the blood vessels is mostly the cause of anaphylaxis due to the histamines in the body. Albuterol would have little effect in that situation since it is absorbed through the lungs and not the bloodstream initially. It's obvious that you are medic level while im still a basic so i dont have the scope of practice nor the knowledge of beta 1-2 antogonists other than indications of use, but i love me some knowledge so please continue.....
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