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Wednesday, October 7, 2015

EMS World

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  • Lawrence Kreger
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    • David Basnak Healthcare in general really needs to start steering away from the term "Ebola Preparedness" and really look at it as highly contagious infectious disease preparedness. Ebola was nothing more than a wake up call as to how unprepared we are as an industry for an outbreak. 

      We should take away the lessons learned and promote best practices among the industry.
      LikeReply9 hrs
    • Tyler Mace Only two people died from Ebola in the US, out of the 11 total cases treated here. Can we address the 30,000 annual firearms deaths? That's the equivalent of have a 9/11 every 36 days.
      LikeReply114 hrs
An eyewitness told Times of Malta: "The car was speeding down the taxiway when a back wheel went on the grass. The car spun out of control, went through the barriers where a large crowd was watching, and into the area of the static car exhibition. "Many people were hit, there was chaos and screams."
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Great article in the mainstream media by EMS World contributor and paramedic Michael Gerber on how when it comes to sudden cardiac arrest, it's often the quick actions of strangers that make a difference between life and death.
BETHESDAMAGAZINE.COM
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  • Lawrence Kreger
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The most challenging of all interviewing skills is absorbing verbal and nonverbal cues while formulating new questions—open-ended, whenever possible—based on previous answers. It’s easy to let experience or fatigue make us resort to a mental script of practiced questions, but it’s the ability to vector toward unanticipated, possibly valuable information that earns an interviewer exceptional results.
Communicating successfully with patients requires strategy, flexibility and practice.
EMSWORLD.COM
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