206 Avsnitt

  1. Administration of Epinephrine During Cardiac Arrest

    Publicerades: 2024-05-17
  2. Identification & Treatment of Common Conditions That Can Mimic a Stroke

    Publicerades: 2024-05-16
  3. Medication Administration Via Intraosseous or Endotracheal Tube Route

    Publicerades: 2024-05-15
  4. Prehospital Capabilities and EMS Destination Protocols for STEMI & Stroke

    Publicerades: 2024-05-14
  5. Review of Automated External Defibrillator (AED)

    Publicerades: 2024-05-13
  6. Asystole & Pulseless Electrical Activity (PEA)

    Publicerades: 2024-05-10
  7. Songs To Help Us Deliver Good CPR

    Publicerades: 2024-05-09
  8. Obtaining a Medical History

    Publicerades: 2024-05-08
  9. Magnesium and Procainamide Review

    Publicerades: 2024-05-07
  10. Hypovolemia as an H&T Cause of Cardiac Arrest

    Publicerades: 2024-05-06
  11. Morphine Review

    Publicerades: 2024-05-03
  12. Maintaining a Chest Compression Fraction (CCF) Above 80%

    Publicerades: 2024-04-30
  13. Medication Review: Epinephrine and Dopamine

    Publicerades: 2024-04-29
  14. Rescue Breathing & CPR Ventilation Ratios

    Publicerades: 2024-04-17
  15. H&T Reversible Causes of Cardiac Arrest: Hypothermia

    Publicerades: 2024-04-16
  16. Medication Review: Calcium Channel Blockers

    Publicerades: 2024-04-15
  17. Post-Arrest Care & Targeted Temperature Management (TTM)

    Publicerades: 2024-03-19
  18. Nitroglycerine Use in ACLS

    Publicerades: 2024-03-18
  19. Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter with RVR

    Publicerades: 2024-03-15
  20. Tablets & Toxins: An H&T Reversible Cause of Cardiac Arrest

    Publicerades: 2024-03-14

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I'm Paul from PassACLS.com and I'm here to help you pass ACLS. Like an audio flash card, this podcast is intended to aid any medical professional preparing for an Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS) class. Each three-to-nine minute episode covers one of the skills needed to recognize a stroke or cardiac emergency and work as a high performing team to deliver safe, quality patient care. Listening to a tip a day for a few weeks prior to your ACLS class will help cement the core concepts that have been shown to improve outcomes in patients suffering a heart attack, cardiac arrest, or stroke. In addition to the Chain of Survival, core concepts, and ACLS algorithms; specific information needed to pass the written exam, BLS checks, and megacode following the 2020 guidelines is presented. Healthcare providers that are already ACLS certified, but rarely participate in codes, may find listening a helpful reminder. Disclaimer: This podcast is a supplement to your course's approved text book and videos - not a replacement. The information presented is for educational purposes only, is intended for medical professionals, and is not medical advice. Medical professionals should follow their local laws, agency protocols, and act only within their scope of practice.

Visit the podcast's native language site