That’s awesome!! Thank you so much for the comment, we are so happy our videos reached you in Cali and helped you out! Let us know if there’s anything else you’d like to see!
Ultimately, if the patient wants to go to the hospital, we have to take them regardless of how mild their chief complaint is and if our treatment improves their symptoms. This is also a 16 year old patient so they’re underage and nothing was said about a parent being around, and their initial AxO wasn’t a 4. The EMT also used a medication on them that although is the same as the medication they’re on, it wasn’t the actual medication they were prescribed with their name on it.
Thanks for the comment! We get where you're coming from, but this is a NREMT scenario with the assumption that every patient will be going to the hospital. Refusals are something that providers will work through once they're in the field.
I’ve been Using all your videos for this Channel to study and I pass my Patient assessment test thank you for the all the info I’m from Cali btw.
That’s awesome!! Thank you so much for the comment, we are so happy our videos reached you in Cali and helped you out! Let us know if there’s anything else you’d like to see!
Thanks for posting another video. I recommended your site to all my classmates here in R.I.
That's so cool to hear! Thank you- we appreciate that so much! Let us know if there is anything else you guys are wanting to see!
So you're going to have the pt spend $1300 for an ambulance ride when you could have stayed on scene and treated with the bronco-dialator?
Ultimately, if the patient wants to go to the hospital, we have to take them regardless of how mild their chief complaint is and if our treatment improves their symptoms. This is also a 16 year old patient so they’re underage and nothing was said about a parent being around, and their initial AxO wasn’t a 4. The EMT also used a medication on them that although is the same as the medication they’re on, it wasn’t the actual medication they were prescribed with their name on it.
Thanks for the comment! We get where you're coming from, but this is a NREMT scenario with the assumption that every patient will be going to the hospital. Refusals are something that providers will work through once they're in the field.
Thanks you from NC