PLAY PODCASTS
EMS Today

EMS Today

JEMS

108 episodesEN

Show overview

EMS Today launched in 2025 and has put out 108 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 75 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 26 min and 57 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Health & Fitness show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed earlier today, with 32 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 76 episodes published. Published by JEMS.

Episodes
108
Running
2025–2026 · 1y
Median length
43 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

News, updates and commentary on the world of emergency medical services powered by JEMS.

Latest Episodes

View all 108 episodes

Prehospital POCUS Is Transforming EMS Care

May 14, 202633 min

Practical Lessons Learned About Ventilation and Cardiac Arrest

May 11, 202653 min

From Paramedic to Physician

May 7, 202658 min

Rethinking Sleep and Resilience in the Fire Service

May 4, 202658 min

Hands-Free Hemorrhage Control

Apr 30, 202623 min

Building Resilience for First Responders

Apr 27, 20261h 0m

From Non‑Transport Care to AI‑Enabled Territorial Medicine

Apr 16, 202641 min

Humility and Hazmat at the Firehouse Table

Apr 13, 202656 min

Ep 534Rethinking Calcium Use in Trauma Resuscitation

JEMS Development Editor Mike Brown sits down with Dr. Stacy Shackelford, a coauthor of a new JAMA Network Open paper, to unpack findings about calcium abnormalities in trauma patients. The authors tracked a cohort of 1,270 trauma patients arriving at three level I trauma centers and found that 22% presented with hypocalcemia and 5% with hypercalcemia. Early mortality varied significantly by calcium status: 11.9% among hypocalcemic patients, 4.3% among eucalcemic patients, and 22.8% among hypercalcemic patients. Although hypercalcemia was less common than hypocalcemia, it was associated with substantially worse early mortality, suggesting the need for further research into the underlying mechanisms.

Apr 9, 202618 min

Ep 533Humanizing Paramedicine

Paramedic, educator and consultant John Todaro joins Eric Chase to trace a 49-year career at the intersection of prehospital care, nursing, and public health. Todaro argues for degree-based education for paramedics, emphasizes soft skills—communication, empathy and cultural awareness—and explains how broader clinical training strengthens judgment and the patient narrative. He examines professional tensions between nursing and EMS, advocates collaborative roles instead of hierarchical oversight, and offers organizational culture and work-life balance strategies to reduce burnout and moral injury. Through a vivid helicopter rescue—holding a young trauma patient’s hand and later being recognized by that child—Todaro shows why human connection matters as much as clinical skill.

Apr 6, 202650 min

Ep 531Building Resilience in Emergency Managers

Jennifer Pearsall joins the Not a-Fib Podcast to share insights from her Naval Postgraduate School thesis on the strengths that can emerge in emergency managers after life‑changing events. We explore her career across local and federal emergency management, the contrasts she encountered along the way, and the experiences that inspired her to create EM Wellness and define its mission. She reflects on her time at the Naval Postgraduate School, and we dive deep into the core findings of her thesis. Our conversation covers the types of transformative events that can lead to post‑traumatic growth, the conditions that make that growth possible, and the personal and organizational factors that either support or hinder it.

Apr 2, 20261h 2m

Ep 532Inside the First Responder Wellness Debate

In this episode of Just a Little Salt, Cody Spaulding talks with Jon Vought, a firefighter and the owner of Rescue 1 CBD, to break down what CBD actually is and why it’s become a serious topic in the fire service. Jon explains the difference between hemp and marijuana, how cannabinoids interact with the body’s endocannabinoid system, and what the research says about CBD’s impact on inflammation, sleep quality, mood, and anxiety. They also get into the biggest concern most firefighters have: drug testing. John shares details from a university-backed study involving the University of Arcadia and the University of Maryland, including how urine samples were tested under strict lab conditions for THC.

Mar 30, 202659 min

Ep 530Pushing the Clinical Edge in Respiratory Care

Respiratory crises in the field rarely fit textbook categories. JEMS Development Editor Mike Brown talks with Hamilton Medical’s Jesse Carroll to separate Type 1 (hypoxemic) from Type 2 (hypercapnic) respiratory failure and recognize the mixed presentations clinicians actually see. They walk through practical cues (SpO2 trends vs end‑tidal CO2), common causes (CHF, COPD, obesity, neuromuscular weakness), and epidemiology: roughly 360,000 prehospital respiratory calls annually with 41% involving COPD and obesity rates rising from 32% to about 60% since 1988. Jesse explains why pressure, flow and volume, not oxygen alone, drive meaningful physiologic change, how device limitations (disposable CPAP, pneumatic and turbine systems) affect flow delivery, and when early noninvasive strategies can buy time or prevent intubation.

Mar 26, 202658 min

Ep 529Get Resus Ready

JEMS Development Editor Mike Brown sits down with Jonathan Epstein, who leads the American Red Cross healthcare product management team, to unpack the Red Cross’s new Resuscitation Suite. Jonathan explains how the suite reimagines BLS, ALS and pediatric/neonatal resuscitation with EMS-first blended learning, a “practice as you perform” approach that embeds local protocols and integrated cognitive aids, including a digital app with step-by-step algorithms and clinical decision support. They discuss adaptive learning and computer-adaptive testing that shrink classroom time, an upcoming VR pathway that delivers team-based practice and certification, and realistic expectations for AI, dual sequential defibrillation and mechanical CPR. Ventilation, measurement and device design are highlighted as targets for education and engineering solutions.

Mar 23, 202644 min

Ep 528Putting the P Back in CPR

Bob Page of the Manual Ventilation Academy walks through why bag-valve-mask (BVM) ventilation often fails in the field and how measurement and real-time feedback fix it. He outlines the four simultaneous skills rescuers must master—opening and holding an airway, achieving an effective mask seal, delivering the correct tidal volume, and timing breaths—and shows why muscle memory alone isn't enough. In multi-center simulations and device head-to-head tests, blinded providers rarely met guidelines. Once teams used point-of-care feedback, performance climbed above target, even on intubated patients and during pediatric scenarios. Two-person BVMs and brief 30:2 pauses for breaths also improved delivery compared with continuous compressions. If you teach or deliver airway care, this podcast lays out practical techniques, device pitfalls, and why Bob's FDIC International course is a rare chance to train with measured, real‑world simulations and evidence.

Mar 19, 202656 min

Ep 527Trevor Williams on Service, Culture, and Building a Tool That Took Off

Trevor Williams didn’t take a typical path into the fire service. He grew up overseas, living in places like Zaire during the Rwandan genocide and later Haiti during periods of civil unrest. His family’s missionary work with humanitarian organizations exposed him early to crisis, relief work, and the reality of helping people when things fall apart. Years later, that mindset carried straight into a career with the Los Angeles County Fire Department. In this conversation, Williams talks about the long road to getting hired, the culture shifts he’s seeing among newer firefighters, and why mentorship inside the firehouse still matters. He also breaks down how a homemade tool he built for forcing doors eventually turned into a widely used product across departments and industries. The story moves from firehouse camaraderie to small business lessons, covering product design, marketing mistakes, fraud scares, and what it actually takes to turn an idea into something firefighters trust on the job.

Mar 16, 20261h 1m

Ep 526Real-World Wisdom for Medics and Nurses

Flight nurse and creator Nurse Gwenny joins the show to talk frankly about what it really takes to thrive in emergency care when the textbook ends and the hard calls begin. She walks through her path from pre‑med burnout to ER and flight nursing, why traditional courses left her memorizing instead of understanding, and how that frustration drove her to build highly visual, short-form education that actually sticks for busy medics, EMTs, and nurses. Along the way, she shares the cases that still sit with her, the mentors who modeled clinical excellence with zero ego, and concrete ways to protect your mental health in a career built around other people’s worst days.

Mar 2, 20261h 3m

Ep 525Updated HIV Post‑Exposure Guidance for Healthcare Providers

Infection control consultant Katherine West breaks down the latest HIV post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) guidelines published in mid-2025. Highlighting key changes since the 2013 update, she explains the shift toward less toxic antiretroviral regimens, elimination of routine baseline lab testing for PEP, and new protocols for exposures involving patients with undetectable viral loads. West emphasizes the importance of expert follow-up care, clarifies who is responsible for source patient testing, and underscores the low risk of occupational HIV transmission. She also discusses challenges faced by emergency providers managing exposures outside regular occupational health hours and the role of 24/7 consultation services. The segment covers legal nuances, especially OSHA and state laws regarding HIV testing consent, and reiterates the CDC’s push for routine HIV screening to aid in the national goal of ending the HIV epidemic by 2030.

Feb 23, 202623 min

Ep 524Leadership Lessons from EMS Frontlines

Host Chief Shane Wheeler and Assistant Chief Jon Detweiler dive into the complexities of team conflict and the essential role of trust in leadership. Drawing from his decades-long career, Jon shares firsthand experiences managing difficult conversations, especially transitioning from peer to leader. He highlights why many leaders mistakenly view conflict as failure rather than opportunity, and stresses the importance of emotional awareness, asking thoughtful questions, and fostering psychological safety. Jon also emphasizes the power of modeling behavior and setting clear expectations to maintain respect and accountability within teams. Whether you're a new leader or aspiring to grow, this conversation offers practical strategies for creating a culture where honesty, trust, and collaboration thrive, ultimately aligning teams to achieve shared missions effectively.

Feb 19, 202623 min

Ep 523Navigating Stress, Communication, and Healing in Relationships

In this episode of Just a Little Salt, licensed counselor Kimberly Ingram dives deep into the unique challenges first responders face in their relationships. Drawing on her extensive experience working with law enforcement officers, firefighters, and other public safety professionals, Kimberly sheds light on the impact of shift work, chronic stress, and trauma on emotional connection at home. They discuss common misconceptions about therapy, the critical need for culturally competent mental health support, and how partners can build stronger communication even amid the toughest schedules. Kimberly also explores the delicate balance between a first responder’s identity and personal life, the risks of emotional distancing, and practical advice for couples recovering from infidelity.

Feb 16, 20261h 0m
Copyright 2021 All rights reserved.