Patient Assessment
Patient assessment is the process an EMT or paramedic follows to evaluate an injured or ill patient. The process includes a scene size-up, which is the identification and mitigation of risks, a primary assessment to find and fix life threats and a secondary assessment to perform a focused history and physical exam of the patient. Each step is an opportunity to collect information that will guide treatment and inform a transport decision. In the EMS1 Patient Assessment topic find the latest news about patient assessment and top resources to improve your patient assessment skills.
Managing high-risk/difficult refusals with the FEARS mnemonic
Four distinct events must occur in order for an anaphylactic reaction to manifest
Skilled actor patients offer a practical, impactful way to teach EMS providers respect for diversity, enhancing critical thinking, interpersonal skills and public trust
The scanners pair with iOS and Android devices for point-of-care assessments to help diagnose critically ill patients
Officials said having the device in an ambulance to diagnose a stroke in the field would allow paramedics to send patients to the best treatment center
Types and frequency of traumatic injury secondary to marijuana intoxication described at EMS World Expo World Trauma Symposium
Crush injury from structure collapse and EMS treatment priorities described at EMS World Expo World Trauma Symposium
Attendees can take part in treatment of an 8-year-old patient with asthma during the 2016 EMS World Expo
Ada County Paramedics, a three-time Mission: Lifeline recipient, describes their collaborations with hospitals and doctors to improve STEMI care
Technology to photograph, video and broadcast from an emergency incident to a dispatcher shortens EMS response, improves bystander care and ensures better patient treatment at hospitals
Trendelenburg is taught to all EMS students, but does it still have a place in prehospital care?
Asking our patients and their families to provide feedback through a formal assessment of patient satisfaction should be a priority of every EMS agency
How do you assess and treat general weakness in a geriatric patient that faints at church or a public event?
Lactate may be used to identify a common killer in the prehospital environment
Review the findings for a critical shock patient and understand the ominous implications of pathological Q waves
Your patient has neurological deficits after a traumatic injury. Should you use a backboard?
Learn the importance of electrolytes for homeostasis and how to recognize when sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, phosphate and magnesium levels are too high or too low
A generator was being run indoors at the event, forcing nearly 300 guests to be evacuated from the venue
EMS Products
Augmented reality, with heads-up display devices and conductive swath devices, has the potential to improve patient assessment and care
How much do you know about some of the relevant and irrelevant medical conditions patients are prone to disclose?
You were asked to assess and treat a 44-year-old woman who has been feeling weak and lethargic; did you make the right call?
You are dispatched to a bank for a woman who is weak and lethargic.
Here’s how EMS recognition and initiation of interventions can lower sepsis mortality
A single prehospital treatment protocol for respiratory distress from asthma or COPD is reasonable
A comic for EMS drawing off the real experiences of EMS
400 instructors, volunteers and patient actors, along with with 26 ambulances and two helicopters, helped paramedic students complete 70 different scenarios
Focus on assessing and treating the patient’s basic life threats before interrogating bystanders or investigating the scene
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- Alcohol-related calls: 7 reminders for EMS providers
- Prehospital cardioversion of cardiac dysrhythmias
- Asymptomatic hypertension: When does an elevated BP matter?
- Not so fast: More evidence needed in head-up CPR
- Article bites: Compassion first: Mortality risk of patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures