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Emergency Protocol Verification Service (EPVS)

A white-glove curation and verification service that audits emergency medical protocols from public sources (Wikipedia, outdated textbooks, training materials) and produces certified, current protocol cards and quick-reference guides reviewed quarterly by active emergency medicine physicians and trauma surgeons. Organizations subscribe to receive updated bleeding control, airway management, and shock protocols tailored to their equipment and scope of practice.

SERVICE

50 weeks • 70% confidence

Value Proposition

Eliminates the liability and patient safety risk of outdated protocols by providing legally defensible, expert-verified procedures that are current within 6 months. Saves agencies from hiring full-time medical directors to audit their own training materials. Protocols are formatted for quick reference during actual emergencies (laminated cards, mobile app integration), not just classroom use.

Target Audience

Fire departments, EMS agencies, paramedic training programs, hospital emergency departments, occupational health clinics, military units, and first aid certification bodies (Red Cross, American Heart Association affiliates)

Key Features

  • Quarterly expert review cycle with board-certified emergency medicine physicians
  • Protocol comparison tool showing what changed from previous version and why
  • Customizable cards based on agency scope (BLS vs ALS, rural vs urban, equipment available)
  • And more, with full implementation detail...

Tech Stack

Airtable or Notion for protocol management and version control Google Forms or Typeform for customization intake Figma for protocol card design templates Zapier for automation between intake and card generation
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Original Problem

Medical professionals and first responders rely on outdated emergency protocols from Wikipedia that haven't been updated in 20 years

Emergency medical personnel, paramedics, and first aid instructors are unknowingly teaching and applying outdated bleeding control techniques because Wikipedia's medical articles aren't regularly reviewed by current medical experts. This creates a critical gap where life-saving procedures taught in 2006 are still being referenced in 2026, potentially compromising patient outcomes. Current solutions like medical textbooks and official training programs exist but aren't accessible in real-time during emergencies when people search for quick reference information.

Score: 17.5%