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Miscellaneous
Medical phrases and terminology in different languages

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Medical phrases and terminology translations
Spanish (video)
Spanish (written)
ASL (video)
ASL (illustrated)
Cantonese (video)
Mandarin (video playlist)
Chinese (written)
Arabic (video)
Arabic (written)
Tagalog (written)
French (written)
German (written)
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Traction splinting
Indications for the use of a traction splint are suspected or obvious mid-shaft femur fractures.
Contraindications include knee involvement, fractures to the hips or pelvis, fractures to the foot or ankle, and partial amputation or avulsion with bone separation.
The application process is as follows:









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Skills
Traction splint
Sling and swathe
12 lead EKG electrode placement

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Games
BLS medications Kahoot
BLS medical Kahoot
BLS trauma Kahoot

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Assessments explained - DCAP-BTLS
To help us further understand what we are looking for during a trauma assessment, I have called an old friend to show you what DCAP-BTLS is.













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Heart sounds
When auscultating the heart, you will heart two distinct sounds, commonly referred to as lub and dub. The first sound, lub, is also referred to as S1. This sound is a result of the atrioventricular (mitral and tricuspid) valves closing. This marks the start of ventricular systole. The second sound, the dub, is also referred to as S2. This sound is a result of the semilunar (aortic and pulmonary) valves closing. The marks the beginning of ventricular diastole.

Hear normal heart sounds here
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Cardiovascular system
Anatomy:
Diagram of the heart
Layers of the heart
Great vessels
Physiology:
Pulmonary circulation
Electrical conduction
Heart sounds
Disorders:
AMI
Angina
Hypo/hypertension
CHF
Dysrhythmias/conduction abnormalities
Structural abnormalities
Blood disorders
EKG:
Electrode placement
Waveforms
Lead views
Systemic approach to reading an EKG
Most common abnormal heart rhythms

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Body systems
Cardiovascular
Respiratory
Gastrointestinal
Genitourinary
Endocrine
Integumentary
Neurological
Musculoskeletal

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Pulmonary circulation
The pulmonary circulation is a division of the circulatory system in all vertebrates. The circuit begins with deoxygenated blood returned from the body to the right atrium of the heart where it is pumped out from the right ventricle to the lungs.
Here are 7 illustrations detailing pulmonary circulation.







Illustrations by me
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Assessments explained
Scene size up
Primary survey
ABCs
History taking
Secondary assessments
Treatments and radio report
Putting it all together

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Assessments explained - treatments and radio report
Treatments: Document any treatments or therapies used during your patient care. Examples include medications, repositioning, temperature therapy, supplemental oxygenation, manual ventilations, or anything else you did to improve your patient’s condition and what effect your therapies had.
Radio report: Prior to your arrival, you will need to perform a radio report to the receiving hospital. This report should contain the only following information and be limited to approximately 30-45 seconds.
· Your unit number and level of care (ALS or BLS)
· Your patient’s age and gender
· Chief complaint / mechanism of injury
· Pertinent findings
· Mental status and vital signs
· Treatments performed and patient responses
· Your ETA
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