• 67 | SCENARIO | Dry vs Drowning– Managing Fluid-Depleted and Fluid-Overloaded Patients
    Feb 16 2026

    A method-driven clinical episode that gives EMS a repeatable decision model for fluids, CPAP, nitrates, and blood products. This episode teaches how to differentiate hypovolemia, cardiogenic pulmonary edema, sepsis, and hemorrhage—so medics stop flooding drowning patients and starving shocked ones.

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ep-67-dry-vs-drowning-managing-fluid-depleted-and-fluid-overloaded-patients

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    31 Min.
  • 66 | VALENTINES DAY | Love Me, Love Me Not — The Realities of EMS
    Feb 14 2026

    This Valentine’s Day, we’re talking about the relationship we’re all in: EMS. From the parts of the job we love — the purpose, the people, the adrenaline — to the parts that quietly wear on us, this episode is an honest look at what keeps us here and what makes it complicated. A little heart, a little humor, and a lot of truth about life in sirens. 🚑💘

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ep-66-valentines-special-love-me-love-me-not-the-realities-of-ems

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    40 Min.
  • 65 | COLLAB | Riot Control Rx: EMS Assessment & Transport in Civil Unrest
    Feb 9 2026

    (Life & Sirens × EMS1 Collaboration) A real-time clinical and safety-focused breakdown of EMS response to tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, and crowd-control injuries. Built from an EMS1 article and current protest medicine realities, this episode covers decontamination, respiratory compromise, blunt trauma, and provider safety in volatile scenes.

    Article used for this episode: Riot Control Rx: How to assess and when to transport patients injured by tear gas, pepper spray or rubber bullets https://www.ems1.com/ems-products/medical-equipment/articles/riot-control-rx-LeTti6fQoNzIIrl8/

    Listen to EMS1’s Inside EMS Podcast: https://www.ems1.com/inside-ems

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ep-65-riot-control-rx-ems-assessment-amp-transport-in-civil-unrest

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    30 Min.
  • 64 | CLINICAL | Sepsis in Pediatrics
    Feb 2 2026

    A high-acuity pediatric episode focused on how EMS identifies and manages sepsis before shock occurs. Using Handtevy-based pattern recognition, this episode covers early red flags, fluid strategies, perfusion assessment, antibiotic timing, and how EMS documentation triggers hospital sepsis pathways that save lives.

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ep-64-sepsis-in-pediatrics-ems-perspectives-handtevy-driven

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    40 Min.
  • 63 | CULTURE | Not Alone on the Scene: Co-Agency Response in EMS
    Jan 26 2026

    An in-depth look at how EMS interacts with fire, law enforcement, hospitals, nursing homes, flight crews, and federal agencies. This episode breaks down how multi-agency scenes affect patient care, legal exposure, and professional credibility, and why EMS documentation becomes the connective tissue between every system involved.

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ep-63-not-alone-on-the-scene-co-agency-response-in-ems

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    1 Std. und 23 Min.
  • 62 | EMS TRUE CRIME | The Murder of David Castor
    Jan 19 2026

    A full-length investigative storytelling episode examining how a quiet EMS call became a homicide case. Using real EMS documentation, medical examiner findings, and forensic timelines, this episode shows how one small detail—a cup of green liquid—prevented a murder from being buried as a “natural death.” This episode highlights the legal and clinical importance of EMS documentation and scene awareness.

    📝 Episode show notes: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/episode-guide/ems-true-crime-the-murder-of-david-castor-3p6g2

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    29 Min.
  • 61 | CLINICAL | When to Say When: How to Know When to Pull the Trigger—and When to Ride It Out
    Jan 12 2026

    There’s a moment every EMS provider knows—the patient is sick, but not crashing, and you’re standing in that uncomfortable space between acting too soon and waiting too long.

    In this episode, we dive into one of the hardest skills to develop in prehospital medicine: knowing when to pull the trigger on a major intervention—and when riding it out is the safer call. We talk honestly about how experience shapes clinical intuition, why protocols don’t always give clear answers, and how high-acuity patients often deteriorate quietly before they fall apart.

    This conversation breaks down practical decision-making anchors for newer providers, including how to read trends instead of single numbers, recognize work of compensation, spot subtle mental status changes, and prepare early without committing too soon. We also explore common high-risk patient presentations where waiting rarely helps—and when restraint and reassessment are the right move.

    This episode isn’t about perfection or hindsight medicine. It’s about building judgment, trusting preparation, and learning to recognize the moment when waiting stops being safe.

    Because knowing how to do the intervention is only half the job—knowing when to say when is what turns skill into practice.

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    23 Min.
  • 60 | CLINICAL | Bradycardia & Pacing — When Slow Becomes Dangerous
    Jan 5 2026

    Episode 60: Bradycardia & Pacing — When Slow Becomes Dangerous

    Bradycardia isn’t always the problem—until it is.

    In this episode, we slow things down and take a clear, practical look at bradycardia and pacing in the field. Not just the algorithm, but the why behind it. We talk through how to recognize when a slow heart rate is actually compromising perfusion, when monitoring turns into intervention, and how to make confident decisions when the patient in front of you doesn’t fit the textbook.

    We break down symptomatic vs. asymptomatic bradycardia, common pitfalls in assessment, and why pacing isn’t a failure—it’s a bridge. We also talk honestly about the hesitation providers feel around pacing: fear of causing pain, uncertainty with equipment, and the pressure of making a high-stakes call when time feels compressed.

    This conversation goes beyond button-pushing. It’s about clinical judgment, physiology, communication with your patient and your partner, and understanding when atropine isn’t enough—or isn’t appropriate at all.

    We also reflect on how bradycardia calls have shaped our confidence as clinicians, the lessons learned from pacing that didn’t go smoothly, and how repetition, preparation, and culture influence whether we act decisively or hesitate.

    This episode is about recognizing instability early. Trusting your assessment. Using pacing as a tool—not a last resort. And showing up calmly when the heart rate drops and the room gets quiet.

    🖥️ For more Life & Sirens content, visit www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com

    📱 Follow us on social media: @LifeAndSirensPodcast

    🎙️ To submit your stories, questions, or experiences to be featured on the show, follow this link: https://www.lifeandsirenspodcast.com/radioreports

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    52 Min.