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base station
Any radio hardware containing a transmitter and receiver that is located in a fixed place
cellular telephone
A low-power portable radio that communicates through an interconnect series of repeatere stations called cells
channel
An assigned frequency or frequencies that are used to carry voice and/or data communications
chief complaint
The reason a patient called for help; also, the patient’s response to questions such as “What’s wrong?” or “What happened?”
chief concern
The condition requiring the most urgent intervention as determined by the provider’s assessment of the patient; it is not always the same as the chief complaint
closed-ended questions
Questions that can be answered in short or single-word responses
communication
The transmission of information to another person—verbally or through body language
cultural imposition
When one person imposes his or her beliefs, values, and practices on another because he or she believes his or her ideals are superior
dedicated line
A special telephone line that is used for specfic point-to-point communications; also known as a hotline
documentation
The recorded portion of the EMT’s patient interaction, either written or electronic. This becomes part of the patient’s permanent medical record
duplex
The ability to transmit and receive simultaneously
emotional intelligence
The ability to understand and manage one’s own emotions and properly respond to the emotions of others
ethnocentrism
When a person considers his or her own cultural values as more important when interacting with people of a different culture
Federal Communications Commision (FCC)
The federal agency that has jurisdiction over interstate and international telephone and telegraph services and satellite communications, all of which may involve EMS activity
handover
The transfer of pertinent patient information and the responsibility for the patient’s care; often involves the physical movement of the patient and associated equipment; also known as handoff
health information exchange (HIE)
A system that allows EMS providers to access relevant health data (eg, past medical problems, medications, allergies, end-of-life decisions), avoid unnecessary duplication of effort in data entry, and view patient outcomes related to hospital care
interoperable communications system
A communication system that uses voice-over-Internet protocol (VoIP) technology to allow multiple agencies to communicate and transmit data
MED channels
VHF and UHF channels that the Federal Communications Commission has designated exclusively for EMS use
mental model
The picture an individual has in his or her head of “what’s going on” in any given situation
mission-critical communications
Any communications where disruption will result in the failure of the mission at hand
mobile data terminal (MDT)
A small computer terminal inside the ambulance that directly receives data from the dispatch center
multiplex
The ability to transmit audio and data signals through the use of more than one communications channel
noise
Anything that dampens or obscures the true meaning of a message
Open-ended questions
Questions for which the patient must provide detail to give an answer
paging
The use of a radio signal and a voice or digital message that is transmitted to pages (“beepers”) or desktop monitor radios
patient care report (PCR)
The legal document used to record all patient care activites. This report has direct patient care functions but also administrative and quality control functions. PCRs are also known as prehospital care reports
rapport
A trusting relationship that you build with your patient
repeater
A special base station radio that receives messages and signals on one frequency and then automatically retransmits them on a second frequency
scanner
A radio receiver that searches or scans across several frequencies until the message is completed; the process is then repeated
simplex
Single-frequency radio; transmissions can occur in either direction but not simultaneously; when one party transmits, the other can only receive, and the party that is transmitting is unable to receieve
telemetry
A process in which electronic signals are converted into coded, audible signals; these signals can then be transmitted by radio or telephone to a receiver with a decoder at the hospital
therapeutic communication
Verbal and nonverbal communication techniques that encourage patients to express their feelings and to achieve a positive relationship
trunking
Telecommunication systems that allow a computer to maximize utilization of a group of frequencies
UHF (ultra-high-frequency)
Radio frequencies between 300 and 3,000 MHz
VHF (very high frequency)
Radio frequences between 30 and 300 MHz; the VHF spectrum is further divided into high and low bands