Bought these the first few weeks of medic school as pharmacology was one of my classes. Not only did they provide me with great success through that class, they've helped in all aspects of medic school. I'm still using them today to study for my program final and the NR. A huge asset to EMS education.
The pharm cards over 32,000 students used to stop guessing on meds.
On a real call, there's no curve. Your career's on the line. So is their life. Every drug. Every dose. Every route. Cold.
VERIFIED SINCE 2022
By now, you probably already know someone who has these.

Built for students, by a student.
On a ride-along, my preceptor asked me a med question I should have known. I didn't. He didn't say a word the rest of the shift. I drove home that night promising myself I'd never get caught like that again.
That's why I built these. After 8 months of design, research, and clinical review with working medics, they're what I wish I'd had in my pocket that day. If you've ever guessed and held your breath, these are for you. You won't study the same way again.

Named the 2024 EMS World Innovation Award Winner.
Every year, EMS World names the tools shaping the next generation of paramedics. In 2024, Paramedic Flash won. A stack of laminated cards beat out simulators, software, and six-figure training rigs.
That win is why 840+ EMS programs trust the deck in their classrooms.
Pulled from break rooms, station floors, and classrooms around the country.
DON'T JUST TAKE IT FROM US
We are also trusted by your favorite EMS creators!
WHAT'S INSIDE?
Everything you need to know cold for exam day and shift one.
- Abbreviations
- Mnemonics
- Patient Assessment
- Medication Classes
- Alpha & Beta Receptors
- Pharmacokinetics
- The 10 R's
- Medication Storage
- Medication Security
- Administration Routes
- IV Gauge
- IV Sizes
- IV Solutions
- IV Sites
- IM Sites
- IO Sites
- Insertion Angles
- Metric System
- Metric Conversions
- Vial Concentrations
- Dopamine Formula
- Dopamine Clock
- Dopamine Chart
- Lidocaine Formula
- Lidocaine Clock
- Infusion Drip Charts
- H's & T's Treatments
- 72 Medications from A-Z
EMT & Paramedic Pharmacology Cards
Complete EMS pharmacology flashcard system with dosages, contraindications, drip formulas, critical pro tips, and so much more!
Card Case Size: 6.25 in (L) X 2 in (W) X 4 in (H)
Number of Cards: 117 Flashcards
Topics Included:- Abbreviations
- Mnemonics
- Patient Assessment
- Medication Classes
- Alpha & Beta Receptors
- Pharmacokinetics
- The 10 R's
- Medication Storage
- Medication Security
- Administration Routes
- IV Gauge
- IV Sizes
- IV Solutions
- IV Sites
- IM Sites
- IO Sites
- Insertion Angles
- Metric System
- Metric Conversions
- Vial Concentrations
- Dopamine Formula
- Dopamine Clock
- Dopamine Chart
- Lidocaine Formula
- Lidocaine Clock
- Infusion Drip Charts
- H's & T's Treatments
- 72 Medications from A-Z
Shipping: Due to a recent spike in demand, please allow 24 hours for your order to be processed and fulfilled. After that, it will be shipped out and delivered within 6-8 business days. If this item is sold out, it will be on pre-order and the estimated delivery date will be clearly displayed under the product price.
Free Returns: All physical product orders come with a 30-day money-back guarantee. If you decide to return your order, you must first contact info@paramedicflash.com to confirm that your order is eligible for return. If approved, you will be provided with a free shipping label. Please allow 2-4 days for your refund to process after we receive your items.
For orders of 1-20 units, proceed to checkout as usual, and the correct discount will be applied. For orders exceeding 20 units, please contact info@paramedicflash.com for more details.
WHICH ONE WOULD YOU REMEMBER AT 3 AM?
Look at both for five seconds.
Epinephrine is a sympathomimetic amine acting on alpha and beta adrenergic receptors. It is indicated in cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis, and severe asthma. The dose for cardiac arrest is 1 milligram of the 1:10,000 concentration administered intravenously or intraosseously every 3 to 5 minutes, while the dose for anaphylaxis is 0.3 milligrams of the 1:1,000 concentration administered intramuscularly. Practitioners should note that the two concentrations are commonly confused and that confusing them may result in underdosing during a cardiac arrest or an overdose during an anaphylactic reaction.
Your brain just told you which one IT WANTS.
ELIMINATE YOUR PHARM ANXIETY IN 4 WEEKS
No cramming. No tricks. Just a 4-week plan that makes pharm stick.
BUILD THE FOUNDATION
Start at the front of the deck. Drill the abbreviations, mnemonics (SAMPLE, DCAP-BTLS, AEIOU-TIPS), and drug class overviews. Read each card, then cover it and say it back out loud from memory. Any card you can't recall goes in a "redo" pile for the next morning.
DRILL ONE CLASS PER DAY
Move into the medication cards. Work through one drug class per day. For each card, try to recall all six categories before flipping: Action, Indications, Contraindications, Adverse Effects, Dose & Route, Onset & Duration. Say it out loud, then check.
SHUFFLE & MIX
Pull cards from 3-4 different drug classes, shuffle them, and quiz yourself in random order. It feels harder, and that's the point. The NREMT won't ask you cardiac drugs in a tidy block, so your studying shouldn't either.
TEST YOURSELF COLD
Hit the knowledge-check questions and med math problems at the back of the deck. Time yourself. Re-drill any card you miss the same day. By Friday, run a mixed pull of 50 random cards and aim for 90%+ recall.
Honestly not a single regret. The flash cards saved me a great amount of time in school. They're far more informative, in depth, and user-friendly than anything I could have made myself.
Got this while already in an EMT program and I wish I'd gotten it beforehand. This is helping me WAY more than my college courses. I love how you break things down into relatable things instead of just blasting people with medical terms.
Failed pharm by 4 points. Was 6 from getting cut from the program. Couldn't afford a retake. Grabbed these Friday, drilled them 9 days straight, retook Monday, pulled a 91. The cards aren't magic but they break it down the way the lectures never did. Honestly still in the program because of them.
The packaging is amazing. I like the box the cards come in. But the information on the cards is top-tier. I was skeptical about how much useful info would actually be on the cards, but I was very pleasantly surprised. These will be very helpful in my future as an EMT student and Paramedic.
The products this company is making are truly going to make a difference to all students looking to become great paramedics. Along with great customer service, they're there to support everyone in their journey. Definitely recommend and looking forward to all of their future products.
Walk into the exam. Pass. Or get every dollar back.
We don't sell hype. If these cards don't help you pass, you keep the deck and we refund your money. No return shipment. No customer-service runaround. That's the guarantee, in writing, because we've seen the results.
QUESTIONS BEFORE YOU GRAB YOUR SET
Pharmacology is one of the most missed sections on the NREMT and most pharm exams. These cards drill the meds the registry actually tests, in a format your brain can recall under stress. 35,000+ students have used them to walk into the exam confident on pharm, and we back it with a pass-or-refund guarantee. If you fail, you get every dollar back and you keep the cards.
Anki and textbooks work—if you have eight months to build a deck the right way. Most medic students don't. These cards took us 8 months of design and clinical review with working paramedics. Every card is organized the way the registry asks: action, indications, contraindications, dose, route, onset, duration. You skip the build-time and go straight to drilling the format your brain will recall on a real call.
The drug list is reviewed against the latest NREMT blueprint and updated by working paramedics. Every medication, dose, and route on the deck reflects current scope-of-practice. If a protocol or drug changes, the next print run gets it.
100+ pocket-sized cards covering 72 medications A–Z, mnemonics (SAMPLE, DCAP-BTLS, AEIOU-TIPS), alpha & beta receptors, pharmacokinetics, the 10 R's, IV/IM/IO administration, drip charts (dopamine, lidocaine), med math, H's & T's treatments, and more. Sized to drill on shift, between class, or before a ride-along.
Yes. These cards cover paramedic-level pharm, so some meds go beyond your current scope—but that's the point. EMT students who get familiar with these drugs before medic school hit the ground running. Even if advancement isn't on your radar yet, knowing what your medic partner is pushing on scene makes you a better EMT today.
Full refund and you keep the cards. Don't ship them back. We're confident in what these cards do for your pass rate. The guarantee is there because we've seen the results.
Ships within 24 hours of order. Delivered in 6–8 business days in the US.
Real medics. Real comments.
Pulled straight from our Facebook page. Not curated.