All recordings are free for members


The College provides members with hundreds of free recordings to assist you with professional development. You can filter and search for recordings of interest, plus “like” recordings so you can find them easily in the future.

All the recordings are designed to help you meet the requirements of paramedic registration, so they automatically include self reflection, and when completed they are added to your learning record in the CPD Tracker.

Non-members can view a small selection of recordings for free (try before you buy), view all other recordings at a cost, or simply join to access all the content for free. Learn about Membership here.

ACPIC 2022: Mental Health and Sedation
ACPIC 2022: Mental Health and Sedation
Released: 09-11-2022
Sandra Garner, Dr Jason Waddell & Marty Nichols
This session consists of three individual presentations as well as a panel discussion on Mental Health and Sedation
82 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Frequent calls to the ambulance service and the ways we managed this in a small community – a case study
This session is a case study around a patient that was calling the ambulance multiple times and the ways in which the Paramedics, health system and other agencies worked together to reduce the overall impact.
20 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Shaping the Future of Access to Health Care with New Partners; community paramedicine based in community health services
The aim of this study was to implement a CP service in a community health service in Victoria, Australia
30 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Ambulance service use by patients with lower back pain: an observational study
This presentation will discuss the findings from a study of patients calling a UK ambulance service complaining of back pain over a 12 month period
29 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Conscious state assessment in emergency ambulance calls in Western Australia
There is an anecdotal view amongst frontline ambulance paramedics that patients are frequently incorrectly assessed as “not alert” and thus over-triaged. We analysed a year’s worth of emergency calls to understand the accuracy of this assessment
27 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Rapid establishment of a COVID-19 cell to support triage of emergency ambulance calls
We rapidly stood up a new service to provide secondary triage for COVID-19 related calls with a view to ensuring appropriate health care for patients while managing demand and minimising staff exposure.
21 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: The 2019 Christchurch Terror Attacks - Lessons To Be Learned
On the afternoon of March 15th 2019, a terrorist attacked two mosques in Christchurch, NZ, killing 51 people and injuring 40 more, truely a Mass Casualty Incident.
27 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: The development of community paramedicine across education, scope of practice, models of delivery and outcomes; a restricted review
This presentation will explore current evidence and assist participants to better understand the successes and learnings of community paramedic programmes
22 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: The burden of mental health cases and Deliberate Self-Harm presentations for South African prehospital emergency medical care providers
The aim was to appraise the burden of DSH, attempted suicide and suicide cases for an EMS using a 3-year census of a district EMS Incident Management Records (IMR).
24 minutes
View
ACPIC 2022: Perceptions of academic performance in 1st year paramedicine students
This presentation summaries a study exploring first-year paramedicine student perceptions of future academic performance based on previous academic results.
24 minutes
View
Logo

The College is the peak professional body representing and supporting paramedics and student paramedics across Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand since 1973.

The College acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the traditional custodians of the land and sea in which we live and work, we recognise their continuing connection to land, sea and culture and pay our respects to Elders past, present and future.

We recognise the unique role of Māori as Tangata Whenua and embrace Te Tiriti o Waitangi, recognising Māori as tino rangatiratanga of Aotearoa New Zealand while supporting the guiding principles of Te Tiriti – Tino rangatiratanga, Equality, Active protection, Options, and Partnership.