our recommendations for you

Critical Care Transport Ready Path

Build the mindset, ventilation confidence, and hemodynamic logic you need to function in transport—without pretending it’s just “ALS with altitude.”
Transport-Level Framework
Learn how critical care transport thinks—priorities, risks, and what matters now.
Ventilator Confidence
Understand settings and troubleshooting so the vent isn’t driving the bus.
Hemodynamic Control
Make smarter shock and pressor decisions by actually understanding perfusion.

Available Courses

Current CE Credits

Recommended Subscriptions

Recommended Courses

Recommended Books

Critical Care Transport Handbook

A practical, no-fluff field guide built for clinicians working in the transport environment where decisions have to be fast and defensible. It ties physiology to what you actually do at the bedside, in the back of a unit, or in the aircraft. Use it as your day-to-day reference and your “what am I missing?” safety net when the call gets spicy.

Swearingen's Resource & Study Guide for Critical Care Transport Clinicians

This is the “everything in one place” study companion that goes way beyond a standard dump sheet. It’s packed with high-yield references, quick-look frameworks, and organized indexes that make it useful both for exam prep and real-world transport work. If you want one guide you can live out of during training (and still keep on your shelf afterward), this is it.

Vent Hero

Vent Hero turns ventilator management from button-pushing into clear, repeatable decision-making. It breaks down modes, settings, and troubleshooting in a way that sticks—especially when compliance, resistance, and acid–base start fighting each other. If you want ventilators to feel logical instead of mystical, this is your playbook.

Hemo Hero

Hemo Hero is your roadmap to understanding shock, perfusion, and hemodynamics without drowning in jargon. It focuses on how to recognize what’s failing, why it’s failing, and what to do next—fluids, pressors, inotropes, and ventilation effects included. The goal is simple: stop guessing and start managing with intent.