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Editor

Ernest Wang   Editor-in-Chief

Editorial Board

Jose Victor L. Nable, MD, MS, NRP  Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC

Christopher Gaeta, BS, EMT  Editor Emeritus

Nicholas M.G. Friedman, MD   Founding Editor Emeritus, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA

Matthew J. Levy, DO, MS, FACEP, FAEMS, NRP  Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

Benjamin J. Lawner, DO, MS, EMT-P, FACEP • Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA

David Goroff, MS, NRP  New Castle County EMS, New Castle, DE

Albert Jagoda, MD  Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY

Patricia Bosen, MSN, FNP-C  Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY

Joseph M. Grover, MD  University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC

Michael W. Dailey, MD, FACEP, FAEMS  Albany Medical College, Albany, NY

Jeffrey S. Lubin, MD, MPH, FACEP, FAEMS  Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA

Brittany J. Dingler, MHS, PA-C Co-Founder

Michael J. Beautyman, Jr., Eng., MS, EMT-B  Founder of the Research Mentorship Program

Editorial Operations

Marissa Canty • Managing Editor

Andrew Chen, MPPA • Senior Copy Editor & Manager of Layout & Design

Business Operations

Tom Goode, MS Director of the Research Mentorship Program

Adhitya Balaji Co-Director of Partnerships and Outreach

Jacob Robishaw-Denton Co-Director of Partnerships and Outreach

Joseph Caruso  Manager of JCEMS Conference Activities

Reviewers

JCEMS employs a double-blind peer review process for Original Research, Case Reports, and Reviews. The clinical and scientific quality of this publication relies on the vigorous and diligent reviews provided by independent reviewers with subject-matter expertise. JCEMS is grateful for all anonymous independent reviewers who dedicated their time and expertise to contribute to the collegiate EMS community.

Latest

Presumptive Diagnosis of Alcohol Intoxication as the Etiology of Altered Mental Status in Collegiate...

Altered mental status is a common emergency call at universities, and for collegiate-based EMS providers this chief complaint is frequently found secondary to alcohol intoxication. The results of this research demonstrate evidence that EMTs may presumptively attribute alcohol intoxication as the etiology of AMS, as evidenced by the underutilization of key AMS assessments.

2024 Conference Academic Poster Session Posters

Posters from the Academic Poster Session at the 2024 Annual National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation Conference

Advising Resilient Healthcare Teams

McMaster University's Emergency First Response Team (EFRT) has curated a multi-step, highly selective hiring process that has led to exemplary retention rates.

Opioid and Alcohol Co-Ingestion

Although college campuses have historically been regarded as a protective influence against the development of substance use disorders, substance use and misuse have risen to become one of the most widespread public health concerns facing U.S. college campuses in the past decade. This article discusses pertinent pharmacology, clinical presentations, and treatment guidelines for co-ingestion of alcohol and opioids.