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Webinar: With or without capnography? How your assessment tools could change everything

The assessment sequence that could save lives — Are you using it?

Sponsored by
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Register to attend this webinar on Thursday, September 11, at 2 p.m. ET / 1 p.m. CT / 11 a.m. PT by completing the “Register for this EMS1 Webinar” box on this page!

Can’t make the date? Register anyway and we’ll send you a recording after the event.

Capnography is often treated as a tool reserved for respiratory-specific cases, while pulse oximetry and non-invasive blood pressure take the lead during initial assessments. But what if that order is steering you in the wrong direction?

This interactive, case-based webinar will challenge traditional approaches by presenting real-world medical and trauma scenarios — first without capnography, and then with it. You’ll see how access to EtCO₂ data can shift your clinical impression, change your treatment decisions and ultimately lead to better patient outcomes.

You will learn:

  • Why starting with capnography — not saving it for later — can uncover critical patient changes earlier.
  • How EtCO₂ trends can reveal what other vitals might miss during both trauma and medical calls.
  • Practical ways to integrate capnography into your default assessment workflow for all patient types.

MEET THE SPEAKERS:

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L - R: Chris Kroboth, Jeffrey Goodloe

Chris Kroboth, MS, FP-C has been a paramedic and firefighter for more than 18 years and in EMS for 24 years. He is the owner and lead instructor of Lifeline EMS Training and Consulting LLC. He is also affiliate faculty with the Virginia Commonwealth University Paramedic Program.

Jeffrey Goodloe, MD, FACEP, serves as Chief Medical Officer for the EMS system for Metropolitan Oklahoma City and Tulsa. He is also medical director and a tactical emergency physician for the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. Dr. Goodloe is Professor of Emergency Medicine, EMS Section Chief and Director of the Oklahoma Center for Prehospital and Disaster Medicine in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine. He works clinically at Hillcrest Medical Center Emergency Center in Tulsa, OK.