Biomed Unit 3 Test
#1. You arrive at the scene, and you and your partner are working quickly to take care of things, what should you do next? B.
#2. You're checking a patient at the scene and it’s time to do the ABCs, what does that mean to an EMT? Airway, Breathing, Circulation
#3. A patient comes into the ER and the paramedics are performing CPR and they rush the patient and you hear the buzz (3.2.4) D. Emergent
#4. The patient complains about a sore neck and a headache (Mechanism Of Injury) Answer: A.
#5. The chart → Positive feedback. https://blog.albert.io/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Blood-Clotting.png
#7. Involuntary changes in the pupil occur in what system? Answer: Nervous system.
#8. Signs of life-threatening bleeding include the following, EXCEPT? A. Pooling of blood, B. Increasing of communication, C. Large value of blood, D. Continous bleeding.
#9. Where can the tourniquet be applied? Answers: ONLY arms and legs
#10. Which has the correct order of steps in a primary assessment? Answer: D
#11. When holding a compression pressure, you should do which of the following? Answer: C.
#12. Your bleeding patient is complaining of pain when applying the tourniquet, should you remove it? Answer: False.
#13. Which Is the correct order of a scene size up? Answer: B
#14. What happens to the pupils when they get dilated? Answer: B.
#15. What are examples of parenteral drugs? (3.2.2) Answer: Suppositories and ointments.
#16. Which route of delivery would be more appropriate to treat a bacterial infection? Answer: Antibiotics in pill form.
#17. The cell is the same as that in the cell. Answer B:
#18. The nurse evaluates decisions around the urgency of a patient’s needs for care. Answer: D. Triage Nurse.
#19. What are the correct steps for emergency care? Answer: D.
#20. What is the basic facility Answer: A.
#21. Hospital systems do not benefit from mobile apps. Answer. False.
#22. [Matching part WORTH 30 POINTs] A-T
Skin turgor: A measure of the elasticity of the skin and is used as an indicator of dehydration
Antigens: Anything that stimulates an immune response.
Antibodies: A protein produced by B cells in the blood; works to impair pathogens. Also called an immunoglobulin.
Enteral drugs: Medications that enter the body through the digestive tract, like oral medications
Parenteral drugs: Drugs are those that enter the body in a manner other than through the digestive tract.
Intramuscular injection: Delivers medicine into muscle tissue where it can be quickly absorbed by the bloodstream.
Subcutaneous injection: Delivers medicine into the tissue layer under the skin and above the muscle.
Solvent: The dissolving agent of a solution. Water is the most versatile solvent.
Solute: The substance that is dissolved in another substance.
Homeostasis: The maintenance of stable internal physiological conditions (like body temperature or the pH of blood), which enables the optimal functioning of an organism.
Hypotonic: When comparing two solutions, the one with a lower solute concentration. Water moves into the cell and it swells.
Hypertonic: When comparing two solutions, the one with a greater solute concentration. Water moves out of the cell and it shrinks.
Triage: The sorting and prioritization of patients based on the urgency of their need for care.
Urgent: Care is needed quickly but can be delayed temporarily
Semi-urgent: Care is needed but can wait if other higher-priority patients exist
Medical surge: Occurs when the number of new patients challenges or exceeds a hospital’s ability to serve all of them.
Surge capacity: This is a measure of how many patients a medical facility can triage, treat, and manage in addition to its normal average number of patients.
End-user: A representative consumer for whom a hardware or software product is designed.
User interface: The visual display of a computer app or operating system, through which an end user interacts with the computing device or software.
Platelets(Thrombocytes): A minute, colorless, anucleate disk-like body of mammalian blood that assists in blood clotting by adhering to other platelets and damaged epithelium.
#23. [OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONs] What are the 3 conditions that would require the use of a tourniquet? Pooling of blood, Causing Injury trauma, If compression does not work.
#24. Where should the tourniquet be placed? Leg and arm
#25. ABCs of stopping the bleed? Alert, Bleeding, Compression.
#26. ABCs of patients assessment? Airway, Breathing, Circulation.
#27. Rank the patients as emergent, non-emergent, semi-urgent, urgent
#28. Physical assessment, vitals, patient history, and appropriate care.
#29. How do you test for skin turgor? Pinching the hand between two fingers so that it is tented up.
#30. Why do we prepare for lockdowns? Safety
#31. Describes the Pros and Cons of mobile apps: Faster communication, faster to take action, etc. A virus could occur at any time, the internet could be slow.
#1. You arrive at the scene, and you and your partner are working quickly to take care of things, what should you do next? B.
#2. You're checking a patient at the scene and it’s time to do the ABCs, what does that mean to an EMT? Airway, Breathing, Circulation
#3. A patient comes into the ER and the paramedics are performing CPR and they rush the patient and you hear the buzz (3.2.4) D. Emergent
#4. The patient complains about a sore neck and a headache (Mechanism Of Injury) Answer: A.
#5. The chart → Positive feedback. https://blog.albert.io/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Blood-Clotting.png
#7. Involuntary changes in the pupil occur in what system? Answer: Nervous system.
#8. Signs of life-threatening bleeding include the following, EXCEPT? A. Pooling of blood, B. Increasing of communication, C. Large value of blood, D. Continous bleeding.
#9. Where can the tourniquet be applied? Answers: ONLY arms and legs
#10. Which has the correct order of steps in a primary assessment? Answer: D
#11. When holding a compression pressure, you should do which of the following? Answer: C.
#12. Your bleeding patient is complaining of pain when applying the tourniquet, should you remove it? Answer: False.
#13. Which Is the correct order of a scene size up? Answer: B
#14. What happens to the pupils when they get dilated? Answer: B.
#15. What are examples of parenteral drugs? (3.2.2) Answer: Suppositories and ointments.
#16. Which route of delivery would be more appropriate to treat a bacterial infection? Answer: Antibiotics in pill form.
#17. The cell is the same as that in the cell. Answer B:
#18. The nurse evaluates decisions around the urgency of a patient’s needs for care. Answer: D. Triage Nurse.
#19. What are the correct steps for emergency care? Answer: D.
#20. What is the basic facility Answer: A.
#21. Hospital systems do not benefit from mobile apps. Answer. False.
#22. [Matching part WORTH 30 POINTs] A-T
Skin turgor: A measure of the elasticity of the skin and is used as an indicator of dehydration
Antigens: Anything that stimulates an immune response.
Antibodies: A protein produced by B cells in the blood; works to impair pathogens. Also called an immunoglobulin.
Enteral drugs: Medications that enter the body through the digestive tract, like oral medications
Parenteral drugs: Drugs are those that enter the body in a manner other than through the digestive tract.
Intramuscular injection: Delivers medicine into muscle tissue where it can be quickly absorbed by the bloodstream.
Subcutaneous injection: Delivers medicine into the tissue layer under the skin and above the muscle.
Solvent: The dissolving agent of a solution. Water is the most versatile solvent.
Solute: The substance that is dissolved in another substance.
Homeostasis: The maintenance of stable internal physiological conditions (like body temperature or the pH of blood), which enables the optimal functioning of an organism.
Hypotonic: When comparing two solutions, the one with a lower solute concentration. Water moves into the cell and it swells.
Hypertonic: When comparing two solutions, the one with a greater solute concentration. Water moves out of the cell and it shrinks.
Triage: The sorting and prioritization of patients based on the urgency of their need for care.
Urgent: Care is needed quickly but can be delayed temporarily
Semi-urgent: Care is needed but can wait if other higher-priority patients exist
Medical surge: Occurs when the number of new patients challenges or exceeds a hospital’s ability to serve all of them.
Surge capacity: This is a measure of how many patients a medical facility can triage, treat, and manage in addition to its normal average number of patients.
End-user: A representative consumer for whom a hardware or software product is designed.
User interface: The visual display of a computer app or operating system, through which an end user interacts with the computing device or software.
Platelets(Thrombocytes): A minute, colorless, anucleate disk-like body of mammalian blood that assists in blood clotting by adhering to other platelets and damaged epithelium.
#23. [OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONs] What are the 3 conditions that would require the use of a tourniquet? Pooling of blood, Causing Injury trauma, If compression does not work.
#24. Where should the tourniquet be placed? Leg and arm
#25. ABCs of stopping the bleed? Alert, Bleeding, Compression.
#26. ABCs of patients assessment? Airway, Breathing, Circulation.
#27. Rank the patients as emergent, non-emergent, semi-urgent, urgent
#28. Physical assessment, vitals, patient history, and appropriate care.
#29. How do you test for skin turgor? Pinching the hand between two fingers so that it is tented up.
#30. Why do we prepare for lockdowns? Safety
#31. Describes the Pros and Cons of mobile apps: Faster communication, faster to take action, etc. A virus could occur at any time, the internet could be slow.