GTA 5 EMS Mod #1 - First Shift!
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Checking out the EMS Mod by NDev, liking what I see so far! What do you think?
EMS Mod
www.lcpdfr.com/files/file/1627...
Ambulance
www.lcpdfr.com/files/file/1510...
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Hey Jeff, loved the new mod. I'm a Paramedic in Maryland and the AI driving in this is hilariously accurate. Nobody ever does what you think would be the logical solution to get out of the way, the people you want to move just sit still and the people that you want to stop keep going. Where I work we can travel in any lane that's available including on coming traffic lanes, with regards to safety of course, and on roads that have two lanes in the same direction we will do what we call "part the sea" and literally straddle the center line making the cars in the fast lane pull to the left and the cars in the slow lane go right and I go right up the middle. I can see alot of people have commented on the vital signs so I'm not going to rehash that but you did great, always been a fan and have been waiting for a good EMS mod to come along. On the bike wreck call, pull in front of the fire truck, makes patient compartment access easier and is safer when moving around the ambulance, especially when you're going to pull the stretcher out and putting the PT (patient) in the unit. Sadly my computer wont run GTAV so I can't play myself. If you have any questions about EMS practices or Paramedicine, let me know. I've been doing EMS for 15 years now and would gladly help. I do hope they add in some other real life situations like PTs that have minor or no injuries that don't need transported and false alarms. Side note, I follow you on instagram and if you want to see some pics I've taken on the scene of accidents and fires, check out my instagram @Medic_Dave_ thanks for the great vids, keep it up!
I'm glad you mentioned how to react to emergency vehicles Jeff. I'm an EMT myself. Recently we had a pt with a head trauma, altered mental status, and low blood pressure. Going to the hospital emergency traffic, we came to a busy intersection where we had the red light. Came to a stop and waited for traffic to clear, lights and sirens blaring. No one would stop and let us through. One person even flipped us off as they went in front of us. Finally a police officer coming down the road saw what was happening and blocked traffic for us with his cruiser, letting us through. This all happened in the space of about 15 seconds. Pt came out okay but it could have been very different. And also, I know its GTA, but don't ever take an ambulance on the sand in real life. Those things weigh several tons and will sink if the sand is too soft!
@ls20911
7 жыл бұрын
you cant even take an ambulace off-road the weigh round about 3,5 tons
Hey Jeff, EMT from NJ here. Blood pressure is the pressure that your blood is pushing against your vessels (arteries and veins). Top number (systolic) should be 100-120. Bottom number (diastolic) should be anywhere from 60-100. Realistically, your normal resting blood pressure should be 120/70, give or take a few. When the top number is above 130, it's considered hypertension, or high blood pressure. When top number is below 100, it's considered hypotension, or low blood pressure. A dead person has no blood pressure because there's no blood pumping throughout the body. As for pulse, a normal pulse can be measured from the radial artery (wrist), femoral artery (groin/leg area), carotid artery (neck) and a few other places. A normal pulse should be between 60-100. Patients who have less than 60 are experiencing bradycardia (low pulse). A patient who has a pulse higher than 100 is experiencing tachycardia (fast pulse). A person who needs CPR has SUPER low/no pulse. Respiration rate should be from 12-20. Realistically, most people breathe an average of 13-16 times per minute without even realizing it. A fast respiration rate is not good, a low respiration rate could indicate some type of opioid overdose or head trauma. You're getting really far into detail if I continue. Hemoglobin, which is the bowl-shaped part of your red blood cells has a primary function of carrying oxygen and nutrients to your other cells and tissues. SPO2 measures the amount of oxygen-saturated hemoglobin (so the amount of hemoglobin that has oxygen on it) in your blood. A normal value for a normal person is a SpO2 above 95%. There are disorders that may decrease the amount and may be considered normal for that person, such as a person with COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) and emphysema. Their normal can range from 85-95& SpO2. This is all measured by a little gadget we call a pulse-ox. It's a little machine with a red light that you put on your finger and it gives you the pulse and SpO2 within seconds. Temperature is not usually measured, but it's good to know. 36.1-37.4 is generally accepted as a good range of temperature. Not that you're going to read this, but if anyone else wanted to know, this is a quick run-down.
@Monkey-wn3iz
7 жыл бұрын
JoeJoe McKracken Thank you
@joec9899
7 жыл бұрын
JoeJoe McKracken I'm in Jersey too, currently an EMR going for EMT in September.
@MrQuyi
7 жыл бұрын
Interesting to see how numbers differ from where I live (Sweden/Europe). Here hypertension is above 140/90 (above 140 systolic but not above 90 diastolic is called isolated hypertension). Below 90 systolic is hypotension here. Best blood pressure (considering risk for heart diseases) is 120/80 and not above 140 systolic or below 110 systolic. Same with SpO2, here everything above 90% is okay, although 94% or above is preferred.
@walterskies9415
7 жыл бұрын
JoeJoe McKracken a
Jeff I'm an EMT here in California I hope I can help you here with vital signs. Pulse you want between 80-100 beats per minute. Blood pressure is like this you want a systolic bp (top #) of usually between 110-130 and diastolic bp (bottom #) between 70-90. Respiration you want about 12 breaths per minute. SPO2 determines how much oxygen is in the blood, you want anything over 95%. Those are the main 4 vital signs you need to know. Only other thing is ok it makes for better video but we rarely take someone to the hospital Code 3 almost always it's code 2 (or 1 in your case) it's actually the most dangerous part of our job. I hope this helps you, and hope you continue this series.
@badb33f34
7 жыл бұрын
Stephen Grant can you tell me what to do if someone ever has lower or higher than normal of any of those?
@jscottsimms9
7 жыл бұрын
Stephen Grant man I bet you understood the video completely. I was so lost reading the vital signs
@stephengrant2900
7 жыл бұрын
Depends on a few things a) your level of training b) your local protocols c) the equipment you have. For me here in my area of California I'm not aloud to do a lot, but there are medications that paramedics can give both by mouth and iv to help.
@stephengrant2900
7 жыл бұрын
I did but most the vitals I saw, I was like "eh he's fine," the only one i saw that was an oh shit was the cardiac arrest and went "we're breaking some ribs today"
@badb33f34
7 жыл бұрын
Stephen Grant Mk, well, thanks. I'll have to figure out how they do it in Idaho, I do a roleplaying group based on Idaho.
Hey Jeff, so I'm a firefighter/emt over here in philly. Here's some insight on the vitals. So on your first call, the vitals were HR: 64. HR is Heart Rate. You normally want to see heart rates around 60-80 bpm (beats per minute). RR is Respiratory Rate (How many times you breath in a minute) the normal range on that is 15-20. The Sp02 level was at 94%, what that means is how much oxygen is in your blood. The BP (Blood Pressure), that was 123/94, that is perfect! You want to see a blood pressure around 120/80.
@redwhitentrue
7 жыл бұрын
Andrew Tucker Good tips and Thank you for all you do for your community.
@Brandon4pointo
7 жыл бұрын
Andrew Tucker Lol all I really remember is the blood pressure which you want at 120/80. I used to play a role play game involving medical knowledge.
@sebby324
3 жыл бұрын
Is it true that the most common medical emergency in Philadelphia is gsw
@sebby324
3 жыл бұрын
@@Brandon4pointo new haven Roblox I use to play that too
Been in EMS for 9 years. Favorite type of ambulance is the Ford F series, which is what is used in this Mod. Sounds incredibly close to the real diesel engine. Pretty impressive. I could give you a lesson in vitals but it might be much for a simple YT comment.
Hey Jeff, former medic. So as far as vitals go, the info they give you is: "Health" - their own arbitrary number "HR" - is heart rate … Normal for an adult will be in the area of 60 to 90 "RR" - respirations ... normal for an adult will be 12 to 18 "SpO2" - is Pulse Ox or percent of oxygenated blood. Normal is around 95-100. Dangerously low starts below 85 Blood pressure: normal is 120/80 and normal range is around + or - 15 for either number. "T" is temp in Celsius. 37 is normal.. plus or minus 3 or more is abnormal. Some tips: if the person has a heart rate and blood-pressure you don't start CPR or compressions. Just because a patient is unconscious doesn't mean they need CPR. I hope this is useful! It's simple once you learn how to read it and what to look for
Pulse of 64 and good respiration. LETS DO CPR
I'm a firefighter/EMT in Texas and how we have is P3 P2 P1. P3 is your lowest priority which is green which is no lights or siren to the call. P2 is yellow. So we roll code 2 to those calls and P1 is code 3. So I noticed that it pops green yellow or red on the response to the hospital. Great to see a video like this hope to see more of these soon!
HOLY SHIT! That's one of my box trucks. I work for AMR.
Real World paramedic here. For v/s norm: hr:60-100, bp anything over 90/ is decent, spo2
@SolarFantomGaming
7 жыл бұрын
Ryan EMT here :)
@adventuresofpyro9020
7 жыл бұрын
thank you both Ryan and SolarFantom for your service :)
HR is heart rate, RR is reparation rate (breaths per minute), SpO2 is blood oxygen level (amount of O2 in blood), BP is blood pressure, T is temperature (that's in Celsius)
Great video! For the Vital signs: HR= Heart rate = Heartbeats/min. RR = Respiratory rate = Breaths/min. SpO2 = How much Oxygen is in your blood = should be at least over 90% Blood pressure = well that"s obvious= normal is about 120/80 T= Body Temperature Greetings from an EMT from Germany :)
Some Paramedic info for you Jeff: In Canada (where I live), EMS and Hospital staff use a system (CTAS Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale) to identify priority among patents, determine response code etc.. In the US it is much the same, with first response using the ESI (Emergency Severity Index 1-5) 1 Resuscitation Immediate, life-saving intervention required without delay 2 Emergent High risk of deterioration, or signs of a time-critical problem Cardiac-related chest pain Asthma attack 3 Urgent Stable, with multiple types of resources needed to investigate or treat (such as lab tests plus X-ray imaging) Abdominal pain High fever with cough 4 Less Urgent Stable, with only one type of resource anticipated (such as only an X-ray, or only sutures) Simple laceration Pain on urination 5 Nonurgent Stable, with no resources anticipated except oral or topical medications, or prescriptions Rash Prescription refill ESI 1-2 use a CODE 3 response ESI 4 uses a CODE 2 response (Not like a police code 2, still full lights and sirens, just a bit more safe) ESI 5 uses a CODE 1 response Hope this is helpful, and loved the video Jeff, Keep up all the great work!
@clickbait6035
7 жыл бұрын
Arlyn Mcadorey Canada
When you accept a call, in light grey it says "Code: (GREEN, YELLOW, or RED)" and your GPS will navigate in one of the three colors. Green means that the patient is walking or uninjured, Yellow means the patient is "moderate" (losing blood, chest pain, can't breathe), and Red means the patient requires immediate care, and their injury is considered life threatening if not handled ASAP. I don't know if this mod has Code: BLACK but if it does BLACK means the patient is deceased. You can use these codes to decide whether you need to respond with lights and sirens or not. Green usually means you can just respond without lights and sirens (you can clear intersections of course), yellow and red typically should use a rapid-response with both visual and audible equipment (lights and sirens). Yellow might just need clear intersections and traffic depending on severity of situation.
@actionusa6318
6 жыл бұрын
It's just like tagging in triage
Code red response=code 3 (lights and sirens) Code yellow response=code 2 (light up in intersections) Code Green response=code 1 (no lights or sirens) I like how the GPS line changes with the type of response, really cool! Love the vid!! You want a persons respiratory rate (RR) 18-20 breaths per min Blood pressure you want 120/80 Spo2 should be 100% but normal healthy peoples oxygen intake (Spo2) is around 98% anything less than 90% is considered dangerous A healthy heart rate is 60-100 beats per minute A healthy body temperature is 98.6'F Keep up the good work!!
@zzap210
7 жыл бұрын
So in my ems system (Los Angeles) its code 3 lights and siren, or code 2 no lights or siren. We don't have a code 1. I can't really see a point in only lighting up at the lights. Why do you do that?
Normal vitals for adults are as follows, blood pressure 120/80, Respiratory Rate between 12-18 breaths per minute, Pulse Oximetry (SPO2%) of 95% or greater, Pulse between 60-100 beats per minute, Pupils equal and reactive bilaterally, level of consciousness (alert), and clear lung sounds. Any deviations are signs for different types of medical/trauma emergencies
Hr stands heart rate Rr stands for respiratory rate Spo2 is how much oxygen in someone body Bp stands for blood pressure
The first guy's vital signs were perfect. Maybe he was napping.
@AShadowboxsFSX
7 жыл бұрын
Yeah Jeff said "starting CPR" and I was just like... facepalm.
I wish DOJ would adopt some ambulances like these...mix it up a bit like with the LEO livery
Normal Heart rate is 60-100. Respirations are 12-20. Perfect Blood pressure is 120/80. Spo2 (pulse ox) is oxgen concentration in your blood 95%-100%. Temp is 37 Celsius
@theextremeofflight
7 жыл бұрын
Matt Miller good stuff, gets the seal of approval from your friendly neighborhood marsoc corpsman
Starting cpr on a person with a heartbeat? 🤣
@chancehowell5460
3 жыл бұрын
That’s why they made cpr
@CooperGibbs589
3 жыл бұрын
Lol
I like how EVERYONE thats real world EMS tells him about vitals evern though everyone else already has haha. Personally, id like to see the 3am toe pain and all those types of calls we get too. And maybe some that aren't CPR related
AMR saved my life along with care flight. I love the content keep it coming.
usually you wouldn't run lights and sirens back with a stable patient in the rig
@aggee10
4 жыл бұрын
You're too funny
That option to make AI move through red intersections is pretty kickass.
I'm an EMT for your vital signs you have pulse (BPM), Breathing rate or respiratory rate, oxygen levels (spo2%), blood pressure (BP) those are the main ones. Normal vitals would be Pulse: around 60-100, Blood pressure: 120/80 is normal, Respiratory Rate: about 12 is average for an adult and spo2: about 95% and above is normal!
Awesome video Jeff, watching it right now! Keep up the great work
My guess is he had some sort of Hypoglycemic episode or is just drunk based off the circumstances. Average RR (respiratory rate) on a adult is 16-20. Average HR (Heart Rate) of a adult is 60-100 bpm. The "perfect" Average BP "Blood Pressure" of a adult is 120/80. SP02 means a persons Oxygen Saturation. For SP02, the ideal goal is to keep the patient above 94%. If the patient is below 94% that is when you would initiate O2 therapy. Depending how low the SP02 is all depends on what your treatment would be. For like 90%-94% I usually place the patient on a Nasal Cannula at about 2-6 liters per minute. If in the 80s I would just place them on 15 liters per minute with a Non Rebreather Mask. Now if the Patient cannot spontaneously breath on there own like in a cardiac arrest or some sort of pulmonary embolism, you could then place them on a bag valve mask, (the thing you squeeze). All depends on patient condition and presentation. There are also many protocols to follow! Love seeing the mods! Justin Bierschenk, Firefighter-EMT
Here in Norway, the general rule is to pass on the side that makes the most sense, and is safe for emergency vehicles. I've never heard of only passing on one side, but I might be wrong, been some time since I read up on the road code.
As a fireman I gotta tell ya "GET OUT THE F***ing WAY!!!" I'm sick of the selfish people that are unaware that houses or structure go in flames rendering victim homeless and sometime cost their life. I help out on ALS (advanced life support) when motorcycle accident or such happen. Keep up the videos...
Just 5 mins in and already can't wait for the next episode. Edit: the ambulance mod will need fixed but still looks really cool and love your videos keep them up.
I love to see view from all sides of first responders, I think this is a step in a great direction!
Fantastic video Jeff, I would love to see more of these.
Looks amazing, Jeff!
So the vitals they give you are heart rate (HR), respiration rate (RR), pulse ox (SpO2), blood pressure (BP), and temperature (T). The average for adults is HR 60-100, RR 16-20, SpO2 94%-99%, BP 90/60-120/80, and T 98.6°F or 37°C. If anyone wants i can go into more detail or even explain how I would treat these patients.
@GeorgeThoughts
7 жыл бұрын
I'd take some more detail if you have the time. Apart from a real life interest in EMS work i'm always eyeing up the Medical roles on RP servers too.
@tommyland1000
7 жыл бұрын
Cool man. What do you want to know?
Love all your videos Jeff... Always entertaining to watch....
Nice Jeff cool to see something new. Sorry I missed the stream today it took me a while to see your schedule. Have a great weekend!
I remember I was with my mom and we were at a red light. An ambulance was coming behind us and no one ahead of us wanted to stop. The ambulance was sitting at the red light because NO ONE wanted to stop. Like 10-15 cars went through their green light while the ambulance was waiting to get through the intersection.
@sebby324
3 жыл бұрын
That’s so American Here in England people would stop and people crash there cars to let ambulances past
@rey1818
3 жыл бұрын
@@sebby324 My post actually happened the other day. I was on my way to work and an ambulance was coming. People just kept going through the intersection and didn't seem to care.
Nice video Jeff! Remember, transport units always park at the top (in front of) of an MVC- fire unit protects the scene by taking the lane at the bottom. Hope to see more EMS!! Would love to see EMS supervisor and taking medicals on the engine too. Keep up the good work!
Vitals, (HR) heart rate: a normal resting heart rate for adults ranges from 60 to 100 beats a minute. (RR) respiratory rate: The normal respiration rate for an adult at rest is 12 to 20 breaths per minute. A respiration rate under 12 or over 25 breaths per minute while resting is considered abnormal. (SpO2) Blood oxygen saturation: A normal SpO2 is generally 94%-96% and above, anything below that could be considered Hypoxia, the lack of oxygen in the blood. (BP) blood pressure: A normal blood pressure is about 120/80, low blood pressure is lower than 80/60, and high blood pressure is 140/90 and above, Systolic/Diastolic. Systolic pressure is the pressure in blood vessels when the heart is pumping, Diastolic is when the heart is between beats. (T) temperature, the normal human temperature is 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit or 37 degrees centigrade. (Colors) these follow the START Triage protocol. Green: walking wounded. Yellow: Delayed care but require transport. Red: Immediate, requires urgent medical attention. Black: Deceased. (extra tip) when you see some of these lower vitals like a patient with a HR of 40 and droping and Respirations of 10 and low SpO2 that can be a sign that your patient could crash very soon. Those values are very hard to recover from without treatment and show that your patient is not doing so good.
@lambda3701
7 жыл бұрын
official12 Alexis What are you a Doctor or a Scientist?
@RGVWeatherscience
7 жыл бұрын
No, I volunteer with my local fire department and I am studying to become an EMT
@mhfdprobie
7 жыл бұрын
Normal SpO2 is 96-100%. Rather 97-100%. If you have COPD or are a chronic smoker I would expect 94%.
@ewanhansen9823
7 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this, too many kids not giving good explanations, good luck with the test brother.
@poppyEars
7 жыл бұрын
good luck! i know EMT training isn't the easiest thing in the world but you seem to have a good handle on it.
Finally a EMS mod. I'd like to see more of this please Jeff. Also I love the AMR skin. My dad works for AMR in Arlington TX and also I work as a mechanic as at AMR. So yeah, I loved the video and I'd like to see more please sir. Thank you and have a nice day
Blood Pressure is pretty simple. There's your systolic, which is the top number. Then your diastolic which is your bottom. The top number is the force of the blood against your arterial walls when the heart contracts, and the bottom is the force when the heart relaxes.
Amazing video jeff and sweet ambulance model
i've been subscribed for awhile love the channel.
This was a great video by the way. Definitely getting this MOD
Jeff, I know you have to pass on the left. But I think if the right lane is open it'd be much easier and is probably recommend since you will get there faster instead of waiting in the left lane for people to move when there is an open lane next to you. I'm just sayin. I always see ambulances pass on the left but if they have an opening on the right they take it. Don't just ignore that right lane.
loved the new mod, HOPE YOU DO MORE
This is very very neat! Please do more if there is new stuff eventually!
Nice new series I'm into EMS and stuff so I'm looking forward to it
great vid man keep up the good wok on your games!!!
Hi Jeff I love your vids!! Keep up the great work!!!!👍🏼👍🏼
If they have a pulse, PLEASE do not start CPR haha (in the game and real life). Also, not all calls require a code 3 return to the hospital. Now, some services may require it, I have no clue, but where I work, it is at the discretion of the paramedic. Hope to see more of these!!
@medicmike1984
7 жыл бұрын
Haha right! Well put brother
SpO2 stands for peripheral capillary oxygen saturation, an estimate of the amount of oxygen in the blood. More specifically, it is the percentage of oxygenated haemoglobin (haemoglobin containing oxygen) compared to the total amount of haemoglobin in the blood (oxygenated and non-oxygenated haemoglobin
@ems324
7 жыл бұрын
Really?! I can't believe you actually googled SpO2, copied it and passed it off as your own. You're not smart, because you don't know what the meaning is. It's room air saturation.
I love ur video jeff keep it up buddy
Bring this series back
SpO2 is a measure of the percentage of a person's red blood cells that are saturated with oxygen. 90% or lower is indicative of hypoxia. It is measured via capillary blood flow, usually in the nail bed using a device known as a pulse oximeter. To measure SpO2 a patient needs to have a pulse. So it wold be impossible to measure SpO2 in a patient in cardiac arrest.
Great video Jeff!
Basic vital signs in the normal range are a respiratory rate (RR) of 12-20, Systolic Blood Pressure (BP)(Top Number) of 100-140, Diastolic Blood Pressure (Bottom Number) I think is 60-90, Heart Rate (HR) of 60-100, Oxygen Saturation (SpO2) is above 90% for the average person, Temperature (T), this mod measures it in Celsius which should be at 37.
@dallinwoolf3108
7 жыл бұрын
Also, those ambulances are supposed to be super fast. Even though they are huge, I was told they have twin turbos
@ramsfan839
7 жыл бұрын
Dallin Woolf But as an EMT as well, I'm sure you know you can't take the numbers your given, for instance high BP runs in my family and it's not uncommon to go above 150 systolic. I don't think the mod will be updated to go that in depth with the patient but, who knows. One more thing is that I'd say any oxygen saturation above 95% on room air is good, if lower we usually put them on a nasal cannula. Below 90 we go nonrebreather. It's really about local training and preferences when calling thoes
@dallinwoolf3108
7 жыл бұрын
Oh absolutely. As they always say, treat the patient, not the numbers. And that is one funny thing with EMS is that everyone is taught different and practices different. I say, as long as we get the patient to the hospital alive and as well as we can get, then to each their own. Stay safe out there
@owendrake709
7 жыл бұрын
Dallin Woolf you for got pupils pupils should equal and reactive to light changes
@owendrake709
7 жыл бұрын
Also my dad is emt1 my mom is MA and I am training for mfr
I love it. Please do more and make this a series please. Great video. 😀😋👍
Awesome to have EMS on here now! But you don't have to roll code to the hospital Jeff, at least for stable patients 😉
Cool EMS! Lovely jeff
EMS Mod you say? Well then you have actually done it yet again Mr Favignano!
Cool video Jeff
Its fucking AMR... god damn it this mod was starting to look good...
Love your videos been watching since LCPDFR lol
Hey Jeff!! this video was great! will be looking for many more. The vitals that it shows looks like it tells you the (HR) Heart Rate (RR) Respiratory Rate (BP) Blood Pressure (SpO2) Oxygen level and (T) Temperature. Video is great will be looking forward to many more.
Love your videos you make my day when you upload
great ems video jeff
been waiting for jeff to use the ems mod again!! Yayyyyyyyy!!
Hey Jeff, Just as a rule of thumb a normal blood pressure is 120/80. And normal SPO2 range is 94% and above. HR (heart rate) for adults should be anywhere from 60-100 bpm and RR (respiratory rate) should be 10-20 breaths per minutes. Those are considered normal vital signs.
@themortarman4722
7 жыл бұрын
Michael Notaro I was always taught 95< was a a little low, and 12-20 was normal. Not big number differences though 😂
@mickityyymike
7 жыл бұрын
Scooter Harrington where I went to school for my EMT I was taught 94 and above is normal but oxygen administration should be done via nasal cannula if oxygen sats are at or below 94
@zzap210
7 жыл бұрын
Lol I do CCT and we have pt's on a vent that sat at like 90 baseline. I was taught 94 is starting to get low, but I look at my whole picture. Is the pt distressed? Things like that
@themortarman4722
7 жыл бұрын
Yeah you can't work off a straight number in the real world obviously, I've seen a pt with an O2 sat of 88 who was ticked we tried to give him O2
At the company i work for we pass on the left or right, depending on the situation presented and safety involved, also pulling up on scene try to initiate on scene quickest, you do not need to place the ambulance in the same flow direction. Bp a normal is 120 over 80, nornal heart rate is 60-100, RR is respiration 12-20 is normal, Sp02 should he 94 and above, that is the amount of oxygen in the blood, any less can cause hypoxia or cause the patient (pt) to be cyanotic which is turning blue. When it tells you worry about biological, it means use standard PPE, gloves, face mask, safety glasses. And you are right, drivers in real life are just as bad. We had one time on coming drivers pull 100% off the roadway to let us pass because the person we were behind wouldnt move or check her mirrors.
GREAT VID DUDE RLLY LUV THE CONTENT 👍
@legomastermind03
7 жыл бұрын
I live your video
SpO2 is blood oxygenation level, basically if there breathing and how well, HR would be heart rate, and RR is I believe Respiration Rate most likely breaths per minute, Blood Pressure is Blood Pressure and you should google a chart of average blood pressures for certain conditions and trauma and, T is temperature in Celsius, and 36.6 = 98.6 F.
Do another one like this one I really loved it 👌
Would really love to see more Friday the 13th with you and your buddies. That was very entertaining to watch.
A normal blood pressure (BP) should be around 120/80. Anything over 150 is high. RR may be respirations (breathing rate pretty much) and just a fun fact around me we can't run sirens on the highway
hey Jeff loved the video looking forward to some more
@comedy.driven
7 жыл бұрын
Sean Timon same
I know this is from 2017, but in case you haven't learned it yet :P *Heart rate* should stay between 60-80 at rest, anything over 100 is considered tachycardia which means fast heart beat and anything under 60 is considered bradicardia which means slow heart beat. *RR (respiratory rate/ breaths per minute)* should normally stay anywhere inbetween 12-18 for adults and for babies it can vary from 30-60 *SpO2* means blood oxygen level. You want to aim for 100 but anything over 95 is good. Lower than that means the lungs doesn't transfer sufficient levels of oxygen to the blood. *Blood pressure* for a healthy adult should be 110-140 systolic. For elderly people blood pressure can be naturally higher because their blood vessels arent as elastic. Hypotenstion means low BP and hypertension means high BP.
@christopher7952
3 жыл бұрын
All i know is,I AM EXTREMELY THANKFUL FOR MEDICS LIKE YOU.🙏🙏🙏
@thomasdecker8365
3 жыл бұрын
Baseline bp is 120/80 but his is set up for non imperial which is why his temp is only 36.6 cause if it was really 36.6°f you would be dead dead.
Love your livds keep up the good job
Do more I love the vids keep up the good work
😮KEEP GOING GOOD SERIES
Yessss!!! Love LSFR
Jeff awesome EMS shift keep up. peace
- HR: Heart Rate -> ~110bpm for younger kids, 60-80bpm for adults - RR: Respiratory Rate -> ~15/min normal - SpO2: Oxygen saturation -> ~95-98% normal - Blood Pressure -> ~120/80 normal - T: Temperature -> 36,5-38°C normal (Could be wrong with what T is meaning here)
ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS
@emmaemma5034
4 жыл бұрын
Ikr
Normal vitals would be a blood pressure between 100 and 200 A pulse between 60-100 SPO2 (blood oxygen level) above 95 I don't remember what was all on that menu but I have been in EMS for almost ten years now so if you have a question about it I'll do my best Also in PA I pass on the right all the time if the situation demands. Aren't suppose to but you gotta do what you gotta do
@Scylla94941
7 жыл бұрын
In addition to what you said the menu also displayed T (body temperature in degrees celsius) and RR (respiratory rate, 12-15 is normal for an adult)
Although this series will be awesome, please continue doj
Jeff when buggs,you and Polecat did the DOJ fire episodes a while back I enjoyed them as they were something different.This what is needed sometimes is new material so I have to say great job with this mod
A stretcher mod would be dope as well as a death timer to get to the station before someone is deceased
love the ems mods
I like the series!
*GASP?!?!* Where's your backing spotter!!! Lol
When having a patient in the ambulance and they're conscious you run code 2 and if the subject is unconscious or having major problems you run code 3
in some counties you can drive in the opposite lanes of traffic when coming to an intersection while running code if the traffic is heavy at the intersection.
@clickbait6035
7 жыл бұрын
Ethan McMurrer Isn't it legal is Middlesex?(Massachusetts)
@treyquoinsmith7449
7 жыл бұрын
Click Bait no it's not Illegal
Yo where the fuck is your spotter? Bull
Love the vid's keep it up
Awesome video
i love this series make more plz
Super excited to get my 1st pc build under way to do lspdfr. (You contributed to the wanting a pc alot) Hopefully the mods are not too intimidating to install haha.