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West Shore Community College adds EOlife X to EMS training

May 5, 2026
West Shore Community College adds EOlife X to EMS training

By AI, Created 10:10 AM UTC, May 20, 2026, /AGP/ – West Shore Community College has integrated the EOlife X ventilation feedback device into its EMS and Fire Programs in Michigan. The move is designed to replace subjective ventilation training with real-time, objective feedback for students learning airway and resuscitation skills.

Why it matters: - West Shore Community College is shifting paramedic education toward measurable, data-driven ventilation training. - The change is aimed at helping EMS students reduce ventilation errors that can affect patient safety, especially in pediatric care. - The integration positions WSCC as an early adopter of objective ventilation feedback in Michigan paramedicine training.

What happened: - West Shore Community College announced the integration of the EOlife X Ventilation Feedback Device into its EMS and Fire Programs. - The announcement was made May 5, 2026, in New York. - Dan Yost, director of EMS and Fire Programs, is leading the rollout at WSCC.

The details: - WSCC is making EOlife X a standard part of airway and resuscitation labs. - The device gives students real-time feedback on ventilation performance. - The system is meant to help students identify and correct hyperventilation and insufficient volume during simulation. - WSCC has historically relied on visual chest rise as the main cue for adequate ventilation. - That method is subjective and correlates poorly with actual delivered tidal volume. - In adult patients, subjective ventilation can lead to too much or too little ventilation without the provider realizing it. - In very young pediatric patients, visible chest rise may require volumes several times higher than physiologically appropriate. - That mismatch can raise the risk of barotrauma, lung injury and potentially fatal outcomes. - Yost said EOlife stood out because it provides real-time, objective feedback on ventilation performance. - Yost said the device changed instruction from judging whether something “looks good” to showing what good ventilation actually looks like.

Between the lines: - The program reflects a broader move in EMS education away from intuition-based instruction and toward immediate performance measurement. - “Visualized ventilation” gives instructors a shared reference point, which can make coaching more consistent. - The adoption also suggests that schools are treating ventilation quality as a teachable skill rather than a subjective judgment.

What’s next: - WSCC is expected to continue using EOlife X as part of its airway and resuscitation training. - The college says the integration will help prepare graduates for real-world patient care and clinical excellence. - Archeon Medical says EOlife is used globally in educational and clinical settings and is becoming a new standard in emergency manual ventilation. - More information is available in Archeon Medical’s announcement.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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