Ortonville EMS Education

Ortonville EMS Education Ortonville EMS Education is a division of the Ortonville Ambulance Service offering EMT & EMR classes and continuing education for EMTs and EMRs

Upcoming EMT Class - starts in October- Informational meeting Sept. 10, 6pm- spaces are limited
09/04/2025

Upcoming EMT Class - starts in October- Informational meeting Sept. 10, 6pm- spaces are limited

EMT class of 2025 - what an incredible group of diverse and talented students!!! Thank you for all for inspiring me to k...
04/26/2025

EMT class of 2025 - what an incredible group of diverse and talented students!!! Thank you for all for inspiring me to keep teaching!!!

Ortonville EMS Education’s 2025 EMT class had a fun day of learning about how our lungs and hearts work today! Followed ...
03/09/2025

Ortonville EMS Education’s 2025 EMT class had a fun day of learning about how our lungs and hearts work today! Followed by great deal of practice on Assessment of Respiratory Emergencies!!! I am very proud of this class of diverse students ready and willing to learn about emergency medicine!

Thank you to Old Mill MeatsOl’ Mill Meats in Milbank for the pig hearts and lungs for the students to explore

Thank you so much  Beardsley Fire Department and First Responders & Browns Valley Ambulance for another great Refresher ...
03/02/2025

Thank you so much Beardsley Fire Department and First Responders & Browns Valley Ambulance for another great Refresher it’s always an honor to come and work with you all!!!

Interested in becoming an EMT? Want to help your community? Ortonville EMS Education will be hosting an informational me...
01/30/2025

Interested in becoming an EMT? Want to help your community?
Ortonville EMS Education will be hosting an informational meeting regarding an upcoming EMT Class in Ortonville!!!

Upcoming EMT Class!!!
09/14/2023

Upcoming EMT Class!!!

Thinking about becoming an EMT or Paramedic… do it… because at the end of the day, you’re going to miss it when it’s ove...
07/30/2022

Thinking about becoming an EMT or Paramedic… do it… because at the end of the day, you’re going to miss it when it’s over…

5 things you're going to miss about EMS

It won't be until you have hung up the radio, stripped off the uniform and had a chance to reflect when will you be able to realize your contributions

By Michael Morse

I learned a thing or two while I was running 911 calls. One of the most important things I learned was to always have a plan. More important than having a plan was having a Plan B. But it is of utmost importance to have a Master Plan:

THE MASTER PLAN: ALWAYS REMEMBER; YOU ARE GOING TO MISS THIS.

That's it. That's the master plan. Sorry if you expected something grandiose, earth shattering or ingenious. I simply don't have anything to share other than that. It took me 25 years to realize that I was going to miss it. I wish somebody had told me these five simple words years ago. Nobody did, but I am telling you now. You're going to miss this:

1) THE LITTLE OLD LADIES

Not because their maladies are challenging. Not because they need an EMT or paramedic and by god you showed up and saved their lives. Rather, you are going to miss the interaction. You will miss knowing that a lonely old lady became far less lonely because of your presence in her life. You will miss the feeling of well-being you derive from connecting with another human being, and being a positive influence in that person‘s life by providing comfort, competent medical care and a willing ear for somebody who needs it.

2) THE LITTLE YOUNG LADIES

You will miss feeling larger than life when a 4-year-old's eyes light up at the sight of you. You will miss laying your hand on their forehead, and telling the worried mom that her child‘s temperature is 103 degrees, and that the seizure activity was fairly common, and that in all likelihood it was a result of the elevated temp. You will miss wrapping the child in a blanket, and protecting her from the cold as you carry her out of her home and into the frigid night, then making her comfortable in your office, the one that speeds through deserted streets a few hours before dawn, and deliver her to the emergency room.

3) THE SUNRISE

You will miss witnessing night give way to daylight as you speed through that sleeping city or town to the daybreak emergency call. You are going to miss the satisfied exhaustion at the end of your shift, and remember that in the big scheme of things a call just before shift change has the potential to be the one that made all of the others tolerable.

4) YOUR PARTNER

You will have friends, siblings and spouses. You will have parents and teachers, children and acquaintances. But you will miss your partner more than any of them when it's over. Because when it is over, it is over. Never again will you have the confidant sitting next to you as you try to make sense of the remains of the 20-year-old girl whose life ended at the end of a rope. Nobody else will be able to grasp the emotional rollercoaster that you experience together — and nobody will ever see you at your most raw, when the blood has yet to dry on your uniform, and the sights and smells are still alive inside of you — not as a memory that is fading, but as a reality that has just occurred.

5) THE SATISFACTION

You knew that you wanted to do something that made a difference. You wanted to help people. You wanted to matter. You may have lost sight of the fact that you have accomplished your objectives. While you are “in the soup” it may seem as if you are accomplishing nothing. People live, people die; you did your job and the end result remained the same. But to the people whose lives sometimes depend on you, you have accomplished far more. It won't be until you have hung up the radio, stripped off the uniform, put up your feet and had a chance to reflect will you be able to realize your contributions.

At the end of your career, when the ink has not only dried, but has begun to fade from the pages of history, it all becomes clear. You DID matter. You were one of the ones who made a difference. And while you were too busy to realize just how important your contributions were, somebody, perhaps your partner, maybe a patient or even a bystander was not too busy to notice, and was able to take some of what you offered, and make it part of themselves, and become better at what they do, and continue to do.

You are going to miss this. It will always be part of who you are, and who you were will always be a part of what EMS is.

Image courtesy of Paramedics on Facebook

07/26/2022

What is the optimal out-of-hospital systolic blood pressure (SBP) for severe traumatic brain injury?

You may be surprised by this data, but we feel that it deserves strong consideration for a change in national standards!

Hypotension that occurs early in the care of traumatic brain-injured patients is associated with worse outcomes. The problem is that the standard definition for hypotension in adults is typically 90mmHg. This new data may change your mind on what the ideal SBP is for severe TBI patients.

Let's get to the study.

What was the patient population?
• This study included the patients in the Arizona EPIC-TBI study database
• ~ 22,000 major TBI cases with linked hospital data.
• 12,169 cases of TBI were included with a range in SBP from 40 to 299 mmHg.
• Patients with isolated TBI were included as were patients with COMBINED multi-system injury + TBI.

What were the Results?
1. SBPs of 130 - 180 mmHg had the lowest probability of mortality.
2. The severely hypertensive cohort (SBP > 180 mmHg) was much more likely to have very severe brain injuries.

This debunks the myth of permissive hypotension for "all" trauma patients.... providing clarity that 90...even 100 or 110 mmHg may be too low for severe TBI.

A pattern of adjusted mortality revealed 3 distinct features across the spectrum of pressures:
(1) mortality improves as the SBP goes up from 40 to at least 125 mmHg,
(2) lowest mortality seen in the 130 to 180 mmHg group,
(3) a rapid increase in mortality above 180 mmHg.

How could this change protocols?
• These findings highlight how sensitive the injured brain is to compromised perfusion at certain SBP levels .
• The 130-180 mmHg population had the best chance of survival
• Suggesting that the "near hypotension" group (90-119 mmHg) may be highly consequential in TBI mortality.

What are your thoughts on raising the SBP goal for severe TBI?
Please read the paper linked below and share your thoughts below.

Read the study here:
http://ow.ly/pcST50K4GWb

07/18/2022

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232 NW 1st Street
Ortonville, MN
56278

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