EMSE 151C Advanced Emergency Medical Technician Clinic*

This course is a clinical study of the National EMS Education Standards for the Advanced Emergency Medical Technician including: Preparatory, Pharmacology, Assessment, Airway, shock and Resuscitation, Medical Emergencies, Trauma, Special Patient Population and EMS Operations. Upon completion of the program, students with a final score of 75% or higher in EMSE 151, 151L and 151C will be approved to take the National Registry of EMT’s Certification Examination (students who wish to take the exam must pay NREMT’s testing fees).

Credits

3 credits

Semester Contact Hours Lecture

0

Semester Contact Hours Lab

0

Semester Contact Hours Clinical

135

EMSE 151CAdvanced Emergency Medical Technician Clinic*

Please note: This is not a course syllabus. A course syllabus is unique to a particular section of a course by instructor. This curriculum guide provides general information about a course.

I. General Information

Department

Health Science and Human Services Technical

II. Course Specification

Course Type

{D7A8FC71-978F-4003-9933-512C476323B2}

Credit Hours Narrative

3 credits

Semester Contact Hours Lecture

0

Semester Contact Hours Lab

0

Semester Contact Hours Clinical

135

Corequisite Narrative

EMSE 151, EMSE 151L, SAFE 110, SAFE 120, SAFE 130

Repeatable

No

III. Catalog Course Description

This course is a clinical study of the National EMS Education Standards for the Advanced Emergency Medical Technician including: Preparatory, Pharmacology, Assessment, Airway, shock and Resuscitation, Medical Emergencies, Trauma, Special Patient Population and EMS Operations. Upon completion of the program, students with a final score of 75% or higher in EMSE 151, 151L and 151C will be approved to take the National Registry of EMT’s Certification Examination (students who wish to take the exam must pay NREMT’s testing fees).

IV. Student Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, a student will be able to:

  • Applies fundamental knowledge of the EMS system, safety/well-being of the AEMT, medical/legal and ethical issues to the provision of emergency care in the clinical setting.
  • Integrates complex knowledge of the anatomy and physiology of the airway, respiratory and circulatory systems to the practice of EMS in the clinical setting.
  • Uses foundational anatomical and medical terms and abbreviations in written and oral communication with colleagues and other health care professionals in the clinical setting.
  • Applies comprehensive knowledge of the pathophysiology of respiration and perfusion to patient assessment and management in the clinical setting.
  • Applies fundamental knowledge of life span development to patient assessment and management in the clinical setting.
  • Uses simple knowledge of the principles of the role of EMS during public health emergencies in the clinical setting.
  • Applies to patient assessment and management fundamental knowledge of the medications carried by AEMTs that may be administered to a patient during an emergency in the clinical setting.
  • Applies knowledge (fundamental depth, foundational breadth) of additional upper airway anatomy and physiology to patient assessment and management in order to assure a patent airway, adequate mechanical ventilation, and respiration for patients of all ages in the clinical setting.
  • Applies scene information and patient assessment findings (scene size up, primary and secondary assessment, patient history, and reassessment) to guide emergency management in the clinical setting.
  • Applies fundamental knowledge to provide basic and selected advanced emergency care and transportation based on assessment findings for an acutely ill patient in the clinical setting.
  • Applies fundamental knowledge to provide basic and selected advanced emergency care and transportation based on assessment findings for a patient in shock, respiratory failure or arrest, cardiac failure or arrest, and post resuscitation management in the clinical setting.
  • Applies fundamental knowledge to provide basic and selected advanced emergency care and transportation based on assessment findings for an acutely injured patient in the clinical setting.
  • Applies a fundamental knowledge of growth, development, and aging and assessment findings to provide basic and selected advanced emergency care and transportation for a patient with special needs in the clinical setting.
  • Applies knowledge of operational roles and responsibilities to ensure safe patient, public, and personnel safety in the clinical setting.

V. Topical Outline (Course Content)

Unit 1-1 EMS Systems

Unit 1-2 Research

Unit 1-3 Workforce Safety and Wellness

Unit 1-3 Documentation

Unit 1-4 EMS System Communication

Unit 1-6 Therapeutic Communication

Unit 1-7 Medical/Legal and Ethics

Unit 2-1 Anatomy and Physiology

Unit 3-1 Medical Terminology

Unit 4-1 Pathophysiology

Unit 5-1 Life Span Development

Unit 6-1 Public Health

Unit 7-1 Principles of Pharmacology

Unit 7-2 Medication Administration

Unit 7-3 Emergency Medications

Unit 8-1 Airway Management

Unit 8-2 Respiration

Unit 8-3 Artificial Ventilation

Unit 9-1 Scene Size-Up

Unit 9-2 Primary Assessment

Unit 9-3 History Taking

Unit 9-4 Secondary Assessment

Unit 9-5 Monitoring Devices

Unit 9-6 Reassessment

Unit 10-1 Medical Overview

Unit 10-2 Neurology

Unit 10-3 Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Disorders

Unit 10-4 Immunology

Unit 10-5 Infectious Disease

Unit 10-6 Endocrine Disorders

Unit 10-7 Psychiatric

Unit 10-8 Cardiovascular

Unit 10-9 Toxicology

Unit 10-10 Respiratory

Unit 10-11 Hematology

Unit 10-12 Genitourinary/Renal

Unit 10-13 Gynecology

Unit 10-14 Non-Traumatic Musculoskeletal Disorders

Unit 10-15 Diseases of the Eyes, Ears, Nose, and Throat

Unit 11-1 Shock and Resuscitation

Unit 12-1 Trauma Overview

Unit 12-2 Bleeding

Unit 12-3 Chest Trauma

Unit 12-4 Abdominal and Genitourinary Trauma

Unit 12-5 Orthopedic Trauma

Unit 12-6 Soft Tissue Trauma

Unit 12-7 Head, Facial, Neck, and Spine Trauma

Unit 12-8 Nervous System Trauma

Unit 12-9 Special Considerations in Trauma

Unit 12-10 Environmental Emergencies

Unit 12-1 Multiple-System Trauma

Unit 13-1 Obstetrics

Unit 13-2 Neonatal care

Unit 13-3 Pediatrics

Unit 13-4 Geriatrics

Unit 13-5 Patients with Special Challenges

Unit 14-1 Incident Management

Unit 14-2 Air Medical

Unit 14-3 Vehicle Extrication

VI. Delivery Methodologies

Assessment Strategy Narrative

Clincal Assessment Evaluations