The Delegate Series

Kitsap County EMS and Trauma Care Council

Kitsap EMS Medical Delegates, Dr. Bennett, Dr. Brenner, and Dr. Ekin, discuss a wide range of topics for the EMS provider community.

  1. APR 8

    Season 6: Episode Four. The ACLS Update You Didn't Know You Needed

    What if the most important thing about the 2025 ACLS guidelines isn't what changed — but what the science is already outpacing? In this episode, Dr. Martin Bennett, Dr. Adam Brenner, and Dr. Scott Ekin walk through the latest American Heart Association updates and hold them up against what the evidence is actually telling us. Dr. Ekin breaks down the official changes — from the atropine dose that quietly doubled to the oxygen saturation target that finally got specific — while the delegates weigh in on where AHA is playing it safe. Double sequential defibrillation showed a 30% survival-to-discharge rate in its landmark trial, but the guidelines won't commit. Calcium for hyperkalemia? Three delegates and decades of clinical experience respectfully disagree with "insufficient evidence." Along the way, the conversation lands on what might matter most: the growing recognition that BLS owns the cardiac arrest. Early CPR and rapid defibrillation still move the survival needle more than any drug or advanced airway — and the delegates make the case that an i-gel and uninterrupted compressions beat a heroic intubation attempt every time. Dr. Brenner previews emerging research on CPR hand positioning that could change what we teach about compressions, and the group tackles the post-ROSC tightrope of blood pressure targets, ventilation goals, and why a second hypotensive episode can undo everything you just fought for. Join the Kitsap physician delegates for an episode that separates what's settled from what's evolving — and reminds us that in ACLS, the most dangerous thing isn't a wrong answer. It's an old one you never thought to question.

    50 min
  2. APR 1

    Season 6: Episode Three.Geriatric Topics: The Calls That Make or Break You

    What if the most dangerous call you run today isn't the cardiac arrest or the multi-vehicle pileup — but the 82-year-old who "just fell"? In this eye-opening episode, Dr. Martin Bennett, Dr. Adam Brenner, and Dr. Scott Ekin tackle the patient population that makes up nearly half of all EMS contacts — and the one most likely to hide life-threatening pathology behind seemingly normal vital signs.  Dr. Bennett walks us through a landmark review from the Journal of Emergency Medicine, exposing the clinical landmines lurking in every geriatric call: the shock that masquerades as a normal blood pressure, the cervical spine fracture hiding behind a simple "lift assist," and the massive subdural that presents with a perfect GCS of 15. With nearly 70 million Americans now over 65, these aren't edge cases — they're your bread and butter.  The delegates break down the art and science of slowing down in a profession built on speed — why shutting your mouth for two minutes gets you better information than rapid-fire questioning ever will, how a shock index below one can still spell disaster in an elderly patient, and why the single most high-yield question you can ask might just be, "Did your doctor change your medicines?" From the deceptive normalcy of geriatric vital signs to the hidden dangers of the "routine" lift assist, this episode arms you with the clinical street smarts that separate good providers from great ones.  Join us for an episode that proves the unsexy calls are where real clinicians are made. Because in geriatric EMS, what looks like nothing can kill — and the provider who slows down is the one who catches it.

    1 hr
  3. 07/01/2025

    Season 5: Episode Five. Toxicology and Addiction

    Ever wonder why most addicts aren't actually trying to get high anymore? In this episode, Dr. Martin Bennett, Dr. Adam Brenner, and Dr. Scott Eakin dive deep into toxicology and addiction medicine - exploring the cutting-edge science behind why humans make the decisions they do and how new treatments are revolutionizing addiction care. Fresh from an addiction medicine conference, Dr. Eakin shares groundbreaking insights about the anti-reward pathway, the neurochemistry of withdrawal, and why most people using substances are actually trying to avoid pain rather than chase pleasure. The delegates tackle the latest treatments for alcohol, tobacco, and opioid addiction, including revolutionary medications like acampersate, varenicline, and buprenorphine that are changing the game for EMS providers. Dr. Bennett presents a fascinating case of diabetic ketoacidosis with normal blood sugar - a tricky presentation from the new SGLT inhibitor medications that's becoming increasingly common. The episode also features Dr. Brenner's dramatic case of a body stuffer who swallowed massive doses of fentanyl and methamphetamine, highlighting the critical differences between packers, stuffers, and pushers. So sit back and join us for another educational episode designed to provide practical insights for EMS providers throughout Kitsap County, as we explore the complex world of toxicology and the promising future of addiction medicine.

    59 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.3
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Kitsap EMS Medical Delegates, Dr. Bennett, Dr. Brenner, and Dr. Ekin, discuss a wide range of topics for the EMS provider community.

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