EMT | All 1-41 Chapters Covered With Questions And Verifies
Solutions With Detailed Rationales And Case Studies.
, TABLE OF CONTENT
SECTION 1: FOUNDATIONS
1. Introduction to Emergency Medical Care
2. Well-Being of the EMT
3. Lifting and Moving Patients
4. Medical, Legal, and Ethical Issues
5. Medical Terminology
6. Anatomy and Physiology
7. Principles of Pathophysiology
8. Life Span Development
SECTION 2: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT, RESPIRATION, AND ARTIFICIAL VENTILATION
9. Airway Management
10. Respiration and Artificial Ventilation
SECTION 3: PATIENT ASSESSMENT
11. Scene Size-Up
12. Primary Assessment
13. Vital Signs and Monitoring Devices
14. Principles of Assessment
15. Secondary Assessment
16. Reassessment
17. Communication and Documentation
SECTION 4: MEDICAL EMERGENCIES
18. General Pharmacology
19. Respiratory Emergencies
20. Cardiac Emergencies
21. Resuscitation
22. Diabetic Emergencies and Altered Mental Status
23. Allergic Reaction
24. Infectious Diseases and Sepsis
, 25. Poisoning and Overdose Emergencies
26. Abdominal Emergencies
27. Behavioral and Psychiatric Emergencies and Suicide
28. Hematologic and Renal Emergencies
SECTION 5: TRAUMA EMERGENCIES
29. Bleeding and Shock
30. Soft-Tissue Trauma
31. Chest and Abdominal Trauma
32. Musculoskeletal Trauma
33. Trauma to the Head, Neck, and Spine
34. Multisystem Trauma
35. Environmental Emergencies
SECTION 6: SPECIAL POPULATIONS
36. Obstetric and Gynecologic Emergencies
37. Emergencies for Patients with Special Challenges
SECTION 7: OPERATIONS
38. EMS Operations
39. Hazardous Materials, Multiple-Casualty Incidents, and Incident Management
40. Highway Safety and Vehicle Extrication
41. EMS Response to Terrorism
Chapter 1: Introduction to Emergency Medical Care
Multiple Choice Questions
1. What is the primary role of an EMT?
• A) To provide definitive medical care in the hospital
• B) To transport patients to the hospital as quickly as possible
• C) To provide emergency care and transportation to patients
, • <span style="color:green">D) To provide basic emergency care and transport patients
safely</span>
Rationale: The EMT's primary role is to provide basic, immediate emergency care and transport
patients to an appropriate medical facility. EMTs do not provide definitive care (that's for physicians)
and safety is prioritized over speed.
2. Which of the following best describes the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA)
role in EMS?
• A) It directly employs all EMTs in the United States
• <span style="color:green">B) It developed the national standard curriculum for EMS
training</span>
• C) It certifies individual EMTs
• D) It provides funding for all ambulance services
Rationale: NHTSA developed the National Standard Curriculum for EMS, helping standardize training
across the country. Certification and employment are managed by states/local agencies.
3. An EMT who provides care while respecting a patient's decisions about their own health is
demonstrating:
• <span style="color:green">A) Patient autonomy</span>
• B) Beneficence
• C) Justice
• D) Non-malfeasance
Rationale: Autonomy means respecting a patient's right to make their own healthcare decisions,
even if the EMT disagrees.
4. Which of the following is an example of an EMT's duty to act?
• A) Stopping to help a crash victim while off duty
• <span style="color:green">B) Responding to a call for an unresponsive patient while on
duty</span>
• C) Refusing to treat a violent patient
• D) Giving advice over the phone without responding
Rationale: A duty to act exists when an EMT is on duty, employed by an agency, and dispatched to a
call.