Adenosine
The drug that briefly stops your heart to fix it. Patients hate it. SVT hates it more.
Listen Now →Where real EMS training meets the dark humor that gets you through a 24-hour shift. Because if you're not learning, you're not the only one dying.
Pharmacology that actually makes sense — because "I'll look it up on scene" is not a treatment plan.
⭐ Featured Episode
Epinephrine
Cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis, croup — Epi does it all. The one drug every EMS provider should be able to draw up in the dark, on a moving rig, with one hand. No pressure.
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"If pharmacology made sense, they wouldn't need to test you on it 47 times before you graduate."
Each episode breaks down one drug — mechanism, dosing, contraindications, and the field scenarios that make it click. No fluff. No textbook monotone. Just the stuff that actually shows up on scene.
20 drugs & counting ↓
The drug that briefly stops your heart to fix it. Patients hate it. SVT hates it more.
Listen Now →Bronchospasm's worst nightmare. Shake the MDI. Don't forget to shake the MDI.
Listen Now →The go-to when the rhythm looks like someone sat on the monitor. Handle with care — and a drip set.
Listen Now →324mg. Chewed. Chest pain. You know the drill — and so does every patient who watches Grey's Anatomy.
Listen Now →For the heart that forgot it's supposed to move faster. Also useful when organophosphates ruin someone's day.
Listen Now →Hyperkalemia, calcium channel blocker OD, and cardiac arrest — this one pulls weight. Give it slow or regret it.
Listen Now →Check a sugar. Give D50. Watch a "stroke" wake up and ask for a sandwich. Classic EMS magic trick.
Listen Now →Allergic reactions, dystonic reactions, and the unofficial nap sponsor of every antihistamine patient.
Listen Now →The OG. Cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis, croup. Push it, drip it, or nebulize it — Epi shows up for everything.
Listen Now →Fast-acting, titratable, and the reason your controlled substance log needs to be perfect. Every. Single. Time.
Listen Now →Cyanide poisoning's worst enemy. Turns everything it touches red — urine, skin, the inside of your IV tubing. Everything.
Listen Now →Pain management without the controlled substance paperwork. Your kidneys are fine. Probably. Don't use it too long.
Listen Now →V-fib, V-tach, and IO pain — lidocaine multitasks harder than you do on a double shift.
Listen Now →Seizures, sedation, and the uncomfortable truth that your patient will remember none of this. You will.
Listen Now →Old school pain management. Effective, respected, and requires enough documentation to write a novel.
Listen Now →Wakes up your opioid OD and occasionally their very grateful — or very angry — family. Always have a second dose ready.
Listen Now →Check the pressure before you give it. Then check it again. Then one more time. Your medical director will thank you.
Listen Now →The humble workhorse of the ambulance. It won't fix everything — but it'll buy you time while you figure out what will.
Listen Now →Still a drug. Still needs a dose. Still being given at 15L NRB to patients with a sat of 99%. We need to talk.
Listen Now →Organophosphate poisoning. If your patient is SLUDGE-ing and you're not reaching for this, we need to debrief.
Listen Now →Hemorrhage control in a syringe. Trauma patients with uncontrolled bleeding deserve this within the golden hour.
Listen Now →Run real patient scenarios without a preceptor breathing down your neck. Make your mistakes here. Learn from them. Repeat until it's reflex.
Full AI patient encounters from dispatch to hospital door. Your call. Your assessment. Your treatment. No do-overs.
Live
Patient Zero
Walk into any scene the AI throws at you — chest pain at 0300, unresponsive in a parking lot, pediatric fever gone sideways. Work through your assessment, differentials, and interventions in real time. The AI plays the patient, the family, and sometimes dispatch. You do the rest.
🚑 Launch Patient ZeroFive rhythm-specific AI bots. Spin the wheel. Read the strip. Don't guess — know. The Bad Medic is coming. He's not happy.
Live
Master the sinus rhythms — normal, brady, tachy, and everything in between. Because "it looks okay to me" isn't a rhythm interpretation.
Launch Bot →Live
A-fib, A-flutter, SVT, PACs — when the atria decide to stop taking orders. Identify it, treat it, don't panic.
Launch Bot →Live
The AV node got tired of waiting. Junctional rhythms, escape beats, and the strips that make new medics sweat through their uniform.
Launch Bot →Live
1st, 2nd, 3rd degree — heart blocks that range from "watch it" to "pace it now." Know the difference before the patient does.
Launch Bot →Live
PVCs, runs of V-tach, torsades — when the ventricles stop following the rules entirely. Recognize it fast or the strip writes the ending.
Launch Bot →Live
V-fib, V-tach, asystole, PEA. The rhythms that end lives if you hesitate. Work your ACLS until the algorithm is muscle memory.
Launch Bot →Coming Soon
He's still in custody. We're working on his release. Some things shouldn't be rushed — especially this one.
Locked →[ Where EMS meets… — coming soon ]
Built for the EMT ready to level up and the paramedic student in the thick of it — clinicals, didactic, skills labs, and everything in between. Our goal is simple: help you get through your program, pass your National Registry, and hit the streets ready to work.