I'm right here next to the guy in the thingy that had cardiac arrest. Check his youtube OstrichCory and look at his face at 0:28 and look at him in his vids the only diffrence is the age. He was 7 in this now hes 13!
This is an AHA video so I assume it's done 100% correctly, but I thought you were not supposed to do a pulse check even after a change in rhythm, unless there was signs of life? It's been awhile a few years since my last ACLS recert...
@JustyneVampire Common sense. It's a massive shock of electricity. You think being electrocuted is going to feel like a pinprick? Defib units aren't meant to be used on conscious people, unless absolutely necessary. Trust me, it hurts, I've seen people shocked before that were wide awake, looks pretty painful.
I think you are confusing when you select adult hands free pads, which is greater than 25kg. The pt is 7 years old and the 2005 AHA guidelines classify a child between 1 and puberty.
Yes, it's copyrighted and no Training Center should be posting it on the Internet. We run an International T.C. and we are very aware of this kind of things...
the trauma team could especially the women nurses could ambu bag me and i could becpred on byt he women nurses too. resuscitation is loved by me and when a omen nurse cprs me and is trying to revive me
this is a good video but this is more on the PALS side ver ACLS in more adult. Peds have always been my hardess in calculation of meds in an emergency but I learned a betta system lol.
Excactly... This is what AHA's courses are all about.
AHA's courses do not intend to teach us emergency medicine; they only want to teach a working SYSTEM. The systematic approach to a coded patient makes it easier, more productive and less stressful to work with. Effective and close circuit communication along with assigning tasks is the best way to work a code, forgetting about all the chaos, shouting and stress that we generally see at the ED.
I agree. You know most healthcare professionals in the United States don't recieve this type of intense training. At Master Train, we make them practice 28 codes in 20 hours of training.
you think this seems dramatic? this is one of the calmest codes ive ever seen im part of an internship at a hospital and ive seen codes and they are so much more stressful and hectic than this!
I love your video! I can't say that I'm anywhere near as polite to my staff during a code, and I don't explain every order I give, but if the purpose of this video is to educate, than a fabulous job you've done.
This is brilliant and would love to know how to acquire these for training. I am part of the resus committee in my area of work and this would be brilliant as a training aid. Great work, please message me via the site as I'd love to know more thank you. :)
Thank you. This video, along with many others, is available through the American Heart Association. This particular clip comes from the Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) Instructor DVD. I tried to load this at a higher resolution but I'm not smart enough yet on how to do this!
I am a medical student and I just completed this course...its called Advanced Life Support and you have to take Basic Life Support before that course. I think all healthcare fields are at least recommended to take it.
Typically kids don't do so well when they suffer cardiac arrest. If they arrest in the field, only ablut 11% survive. In the hospital setting about 27% survive.
Comment removed
ERdept1 2 months ago
hard compressions to deep
steff2001 7 months ago
short version of Pals:
ABC's: airway size = age+16/4 or size of pinky , how deep? 3xsize of tube
ASYSTOLE AND PEA: just give meds q 3min. epi dose= 0.01mg/kg IV/IO (if no IV access put in ETT 0.1mg/kg), dosage of adh/vasopressin=0.8 Units/kg
VF/VTACH: give meds q 3 min, shock q 1 minute
first shock(unsyncr defibrillation)=2 J/kg, after that 4 J/kg CONSIDER:
Narcan=0.1 mg/kg (10 kg=1 mg) amio IV/IO = 5 mg/kg IV/IO
Lidocaine IV/IO= 1 mg/kg
D50 = 2 cc/kg (10 kg=20 cc)
frmertd 1 year ago
I'm right here next to the guy in the thingy that had cardiac arrest. Check his youtube OstrichCory and look at his face at 0:28 and look at him in his vids the only diffrence is the age. He was 7 in this now hes 13!
mushymush2 1 year ago
This is an AHA video so I assume it's done 100% correctly, but I thought you were not supposed to do a pulse check even after a change in rhythm, unless there was signs of life? It's been awhile a few years since my last ACLS recert...
leviathan85 1 year ago
.3 mg iv to 1:1000 solution
MrWonka12 1 year ago
this reminds me of the medical series "new heart" (korean series about 2 interns)
MySweetSeoul 1 year ago
I really wanna try being shocked by a defib machine, cpred on and ambu bagged me...
^_^
JustyneVampire 2 years ago
@JustyneVampire No you don't, it hurts like a bitch...
PhoenixOrion602x 1 year ago
@PhoenixOrion602x How do you know?
JustyneVampire 1 year ago
@JustyneVampire Common sense. It's a massive shock of electricity. You think being electrocuted is going to feel like a pinprick? Defib units aren't meant to be used on conscious people, unless absolutely necessary. Trust me, it hurts, I've seen people shocked before that were wide awake, looks pretty painful.
PhoenixOrion602x 1 year ago
I think you are confusing when you select adult hands free pads, which is greater than 25kg. The pt is 7 years old and the 2005 AHA guidelines classify a child between 1 and puberty.
MasterTrainInc 2 years ago
A pediatric cardiopulmonary arrest is a code white in my hospital
ajb21 2 years ago
This is the PALS Team MegaCode Concept video. Isn't this Registered / Copyrighted material from the American Heart Association??
Cannassos 2 years ago
Yes, it's copyrighted and no Training Center should be posting it on the Internet. We run an International T.C. and we are very aware of this kind of things...
Greetings
DrSkawman 1 year ago
the trauma team could especially the women nurses could ambu bag me and i could becpred on byt he women nurses too. resuscitation is loved by me and when a omen nurse cprs me and is trying to revive me
blueeyez45 2 years ago
This is from the Pediatric Advanced Life Support Training Video. Not Advanced Cardiac Life Support
chadwick41311 2 years ago
this is a good video but this is more on the PALS side ver ACLS in more adult. Peds have always been my hardess in calculation of meds in an emergency but I learned a betta system lol.
icunurse01 2 years ago
great vid!!
jericho144 2 years ago
some med student.. its called ACLS Advanced Cardiac Life Support
futuremddsp 2 years ago
Could you PLEASE do some more simulation videos? Could you do some pulse oximetry videos?
medicaldud 2 years ago
im trained by acls.. they wer great!
080589i 2 years ago
Good video by the way but it still seems rather dramatic. I know it's a dramatization but it doesn't seem to reflect typical ER interactions.
psychocloud 2 years ago
I think what the American Heart Association is trying to do is improve communication.
MasterTrainInc 2 years ago
Excactly... This is what AHA's courses are all about.
AHA's courses do not intend to teach us emergency medicine; they only want to teach a working SYSTEM. The systematic approach to a coded patient makes it easier, more productive and less stressful to work with. Effective and close circuit communication along with assigning tasks is the best way to work a code, forgetting about all the chaos, shouting and stress that we generally see at the ED.
DrSkawman 1 year ago
I agree. You know most healthcare professionals in the United States don't recieve this type of intense training. At Master Train, we make them practice 28 codes in 20 hours of training.
MasterTrainInc 1 year ago
you think this seems dramatic? this is one of the calmest codes ive ever seen im part of an internship at a hospital and ive seen codes and they are so much more stressful and hectic than this!
futuremddsp 2 years ago
I have no prior training in the medical field but... Why did it take them so long to push the Epi through?
psychocloud 2 years ago
You have to get the blood pumping through the body with CPR before you can give drugs.
chadwick41311 2 years ago
can someone post the aha videos? It would be so helpful for school.. I can't find them anywhere.
ania2547 2 years ago
I love your video! I can't say that I'm anywhere near as polite to my staff during a code, and I don't explain every order I give, but if the purpose of this video is to educate, than a fabulous job you've done.
PhoenixOrion602x 2 years ago
Thank you!
MasterTrainInc 2 years ago
it's so sad to know that this happens
shadddey5 2 years ago
This is brilliant and would love to know how to acquire these for training. I am part of the resus committee in my area of work and this would be brilliant as a training aid. Great work, please message me via the site as I'd love to know more thank you. :)
celticcare 3 years ago
Thank you. This video, along with many others, is available through the American Heart Association. This particular clip comes from the Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) Instructor DVD. I tried to load this at a higher resolution but I'm not smart enough yet on how to do this!
MasterTrainInc 3 years ago
I am a medical student and I just completed this course...its called Advanced Life Support and you have to take Basic Life Support before that course. I think all healthcare fields are at least recommended to take it.
zbjordan23 2 years ago
Would you share this video with your friends?
MasterTrainInc 3 years ago
Typically kids don't do so well when they suffer cardiac arrest. If they arrest in the field, only ablut 11% survive. In the hospital setting about 27% survive.
MasterTrainInc 3 years ago
You guys have THE BEST videos I have seen SO FAR.
So, did he live?
1992peter 3 years ago