[SOUND] Welcome to your final course in Become an EMT, preparing for the national registry exam. You have come a long way and we are so glad we had the opportunity to share this journey with you. The title for the course is little bit misleading. We do hope that at the completion of this course that you feel more prepared to take the skills portion as well as the written portion of the national registry exam. To accomplish this, there will be lots of videos to review from your prior courses, plenty of links to the national registry patient care checklist, and one full lesson dedicated to sharing some of the tips for the national registry written exam. We really do want you to be equipped to pass the exam if that's what your goals are. More than anything else, however, our greatest hope is that we have given you the knowledge and tools to provide high quality patient care once you're certified as an EMT or once you achieve whatever level of patient care provider you aspire to be. I think many of you have experienced in school or other trainings the difference between knowing the information needed to pass a test and being able to apply the information to a real life problem. For that reason, the overall objective of this course is to allow you to review and then apply the knowledge and skills you have acquired over the past weeks to a series of patient care scenarios. The next couple of weeks are designed to stretch your knowledge and guide you to apply it to potentially real patient presentations. In reality, there's no substitute for real-life experience. You signed up to be a lifelong learner if you're going into healthcare. When you first start out, it can feel pretty daunting. Your first real patient interactions will be challenging, feel awkward, and you will likely think of a whole list of things you would've done differently. This is all part of the process. And your next patient encounter will be better because of it. When you first take care of a patient with hypoglycemia, it might not be as obvious as you expected, you might even forget how to use the glucometer. These are all experiences that will accumulate to shape you into a better healthcare provider. Our hope with this specialization is that we have provided you with the basics tools you need for entry-level patient care that are the foundation in many healthcare environments. There are significant limitations to the online platform to accomplish actual patient interactions and real-time feedback on those. Whether you go on to become an EMT or go on to provide care in some other capacity, we hope this course in particular solidifies your knowledge and its application, so even though your first experiences might feel challenging, you will have a base of knowledge and practice to fall back on. As we have discussed multiple times before, the completion of this specialization alone does not get you your EMT certification. It does, however, provide you with the certificate of completion you will need to take the hands-on skills portion of the course. At the completion of that course, you will have the ability to take the national registry exam and get your EMT certification. For more information on this, please see the specialization page of frequently asked questions. Thank you for the time you have devoted to this journey to learn the information foundational to basic emergency level care. Your future patients thank you too. Have fun with the coming weeks as you have the opportunity to put it all together. Good luck.