Users of battery-powered portable suction devices often comment that it “sucks”. This can be interpreted in two ways: either negatively or positively. When the negative sentiment applies, there’s no need to despair or throw the unit across the room.
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Posted by Scott Eamer
Sep 20, 2025 8:00:00 AM
Users of battery-powered portable suction devices often comment that it “sucks”. This can be interpreted in two ways: either negatively or positively. When the negative sentiment applies, there’s no need to despair or throw the unit across the room.
Topics: Battery-powered suction, Airway management, Medical Suction
As an EMS provider, you know traumatic injury plays a central role in many emergencies. Trauma calls make up a large percentage of responses and take a tremendous toll on lives throughout our country. Here are a few stark statistics from the National Trauma Institute:
Topics: Airway management
Posted by Sam D. Say
Aug 9, 2025 8:00:00 AM
The most critical treatment you provide is airway management. Whether intubating the patient in cardiac arrest, dislodging an obstruction, or simply assisting respirations, the speed and effectiveness of your treatment as a paramedic can mean the difference between life and death for your patients. So, let’s review three critical airway management steps you can’t afford to miss: assessment, equipment, and intervention.
Topics: Airway management
Respiratory emergencies come in many forms. It could be an asthmatic who has suffered since childhood, a COPD patient who still smokes a pack a day, or a near-drowning who was pulled from the deep end of the pool. Whatever the crisis, as an emergency responder, you are called on to treat it.
Topics: Airway management
As a paramedic or EMT, your first responsibility in patient care is to secure a patent airway. Whether you are placing an EOA to elevate the tongue of an overdosed patient, suctioning the oropharynx of a trauma code, or inserting an endotracheal tube for a patient who has stopped breathing, a thorough understanding of the structures that make up the respiratory tract is a must.
Topics: Airway management
Posted by Sam D. Say
May 22, 2025 8:00:00 AM
Advanced airway management goes beyond simple techniques you might learn in a single class. Advanced airway techniques fall into three broad categories, each with various techniques and skills a practitioner must master.
Topics: Airway management
Posted by Sam D. Say
May 8, 2025 8:00:00 AM
Pregnant patients exhibit various unique characteristics that first responders must account for during treatment.
A significant challenge responders encounter when treating pregnant women is navigating difficult airway anatomy and possible risks during airway management. The rate of failed intubation in pregnant patients is four to eight times higher than in nonpregnant patients, and this is largely due to anatomical changes, hormone production, and aspiration risks that occur during pregnancy.
Topics: Airway management
Posted by Sam D. Say
Apr 5, 2025 8:00:00 AM
The ABCs of patient care begin with the airway. Does your patient have airway patency? Can your patient maintain their airway? Are there any obstructions or contaminants obstructing the airway? Questions like these are likely second nature to you, and you probably don’t even realize you are asking them when caring for your patients.
Topics: Airway management
Posted by Sam D. Say
Mar 15, 2025 8:00:00 AM
While it may seem like a minor consideration to some, EMS providers know that patient positioning plays a crucial role in the quality, safety and effectiveness of medical treatment. An article from the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation states that patient positioning is 90% of the airway management battle.
Topics: Emergency medical suction, Airway management, Emergency Preparedness
Spinal cord injuries are devastating events. In the U.S., most are the result of automobile collisions, but falls, penetrating injuries, and blunt trauma can also cause injury to the spinal cord, leading to a respiratory emergency. It is estimated that there are more than 18,000 spinal cord injuries each year in the U.S. When the injuries involve the cervical vertebrae, specifically the midsection (C3 through C5), they can disrupt the phrenic nerve, which controls the movement of the diaphragm, rendering the patient unable to breathe on their own.
Topics: Airway management
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