Name Value
Examinee: Your Name goes here.
Exam Name: Pediatric Life Support 
Passing Score: 70% 
# of Questions: 40 
Question Order: Randomized 
Maximum # of Attempts: Unlimited 
# of Attempts:
# of Attempts Remaining: Unlimited 
Description:
Children and infants are most likely to develop cardiac arrest from the progression of respiratory failure or shock (Young & Seidel, 1999). It is for this reason airway management skills are core to effective cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for this population in conjunction with high quality chest compressions (Kitamura et al., 2010). Practitioners should be knowledgeable in pediatric airway anatomy and highly efficient in assessment and management to optimize outcomes of CPR (Kleinman et al., 2010). This module will review CPR for the pediatric patient.  
 
View Objectives
  • Perform an initial assessment of the pediatric patient
  • Understand the differences in the pediatric airway
  • Be able to position a pediatric patient  airway in the correct position
  • Know how to use oropharyngeal and nasal airways
  • Be familiar with an LMA for a pediatric patient
  • Know how to intubate a pediatric airway
  • Know how to size an ETT for a pediatric patient
  • Know about cricoid pressure for intubation of the pediatric patient
  • Know about the proper depth of the ETT for a pediatric patient
  • Know how to ventilate a pediatric patient
  • Know how to place and fit a mask on a pediatric patient
  • Know how much ventilation pressure to deliver to a pediatric patient
  • Know how to treat a pediatric patient who cannot be ventilated
  • Be familiar with CO2 detectors and capnography
  • Be familiar with the anatomy of the vocal cords
  • Know the complications of intubation
  • Know who to insert an orogastric tube and what depth to insert
  • Know how to deliver chest compressions including the method, rate, location, and depth
  • Know how to coordinate chest compressions and ventiations
  • Know about resuscitation drugs, indications, doses for neonatal resuscitation
  • Know about volume administration
  • Know about defibrillation in resuscitation
  • Know how to estimate the weight of a pediatric patient
View Exam Directions
Each Exam consists of 40 questions.
The exam questions are multiple choice (MC).
Read the question and the four foils below the question.
Select the answer.
Select a button to go to the next or previous question.
If you are at the last question, selecting next question will go to the first question.
If you are at the first question selecting previous question will go to the last question.
When you have answered all of the questions select save & grade exam.
The exam is not timed.
Once you start the exam, you must finish. Partially completed exams are not graded.
 
The number of questions, if they are randomized, and the passing score is set by the institution that signs you up.