A pale and very sleepy but arousable 3-year old child with a history of diarrhea is brought to the hospital. Primary assessment reveals a respiratory rate of 45/min with good breath sounds bilaterally. HR is 150/min, BP is 90/64, and SPO2 is 92% on RA. Capillary refill is 5 seconds, and peripheral pulses are weak. After placing the child on a NRB with 100% O2 and obtaining vascular access, which is the most appropriate immediate treatment for this child? {Ans: administer a bolus of 20 ml/kg isotonic crystalloid}You are giving chest compressions for a child in a cardiac arrest. What is the proper depth of compressions for a child {Ans: Compress at least 1/3 the depth of the chest , about 2 inches (5cm).}You are called to help treat an infant with severe symptomatic bradycardia (HR 66/min) associated with respiratory distress. The bradycardia persists despite establishment of an effective airway, oxygenation, and ventilation. There is no heart block present. Which is the first drug you should administer? {Ans: Epinephrine}child hypoglycemia {Ans: less than 60 mg/dL}A 10-month-old infant boy is brought to the emergency department. Your initial assessment reveals a lethargic, pale infant with slow respirations and