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Owned by Nate

Clinician training focused on fundamentals, confidence, and clinical thinking that prepares you for advanced practice.

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Skoolers

181.2k members • Free

15 contributions to MedicNate Training Academy
What topic do you want us to break down next?
Choose the one you want to feel more confident with. No judgement here. This helps me build the next lesson for you.
Poll
4 members have voted
0 likes • 14h
@Elizabeth Demers This one is important and you should treat it with care and confidence. That’s a really common miss, and you’re not alone. Pediatric hypotension shows up late, and most of the warning signs happen before the BP ever drops. We’re going to break that exact situation down so it’s easier to recognize early next time
0 likes • 14h
@Elizabeth Demers Fair enough 😄 Pediatrics tends to expose a lot of gaps at once. We’ll tackle it in a way that makes the rest start to feel easier too.
Voting in poll for next topic..
If you haven’t voted in the new poll yet, take a second and click the topic you want broken down next. This community works best when I’m teaching what you actually want to understand. No judgement, no pressure — just pick the one you want to feel more confident with. Your vote literally shapes the next lesson. If you’re unsure which one to pick, choose the topic that makes you hesitate the most. That’s usually the one worth learning.
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If you feel behind read this
Feeling unsure early in EMS is normal Confidence comes from repetition not perfection Ask questions Learn from mistakes Master the basics Everyone you respect in this field started exactly where you are What are you struggling with right now?
1 like • 15h
@Elizabeth Demers That’s exactly the skill that separates new providers from confident ones. Knowing which questions matter, and why, comes from understanding what each system is trying to tell you. We’ll build that together. One clean framework at a time.
The first mistake new EMTs and medics make
The first mistake new EMTs and medics make is trying to do everything at once. Slow your thinking before you move your hands. Primary assessment Airway Breathing Circulation Find and treat life threats first. Everything else comes after. What part of the call do you feel rushed or unsure about?
1 like • 15h
@Elizabeth Demers That’s a common one. When the call feels wide, your brain wants to chase every possibility. The trick is narrowing your differentials by starting with the system that’s failing and ruling things out step by step. We’ll go over how to build a clean mental flow you can use on any call.
New EMTs and students start here
If you are new to EMS or still in school this is your space No bad questions No judgement Ask what you are unsure about I will answer clearly and honestly
0 likes • 1d
@Timber de Jager Love it. That’s exactly the mindset that helps people grow fast in here. Ask anything as you go — that’s what this place is for. We’ll take it one clean step at a time.
1 like • 15h
@Timber de Jager You picked a great topic. Oxygenation and ventilation get mixed up all the time, but once you separate them in your mind, everything in respiratory care finally makes sense. I’ll break it down in the classroom so it clicks, and you’ll be able to spot the difference on real calls without overthinking it.
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Nate Bragg
3
44points to level up
@nate-bragg-4249
Veteran paramedic and educator focused on critical care fundamentals, clinical reasoning, and real world decision making.

Active 9h ago
Joined Dec 10, 2025