Level Up Your Code Team Skills with ACLS
In the moments between “patient down” and “ROSC achieved,” the quality of your team’s training becomes the biggest variable. Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) is the bridge between strong BLS skills and orchestrated, high-stakes decision-making under pressure. If you work or train in hospital units such as ED, ICU, PACU, cath lab, telemetry, or procedural suites—or you practice in EMS, surgery centers, or urgent care—ACLS is not just a box to check. It’s a system for thinking clearly, communicating precisely, and running algorithms without losing situational awareness.
Chicago’s Pulse delivers AHA-approved ACLS with transparent schedules, pricing, and expectations. The ACLS page lists initial and renewal dates—often multiple Saturdays in October, November, and December—plus a simple “Sign up for class” action for each time slot. You’ll also see clearly posted tuition for both the full provider class and renewal. That clarity makes it easy to secure a seat before credentialing deadlines or unit audits, especially around the holidays. chicagospulse.com
What to expect in class: scenario-driven practice that puts airway, rhythm interpretation, defibrillation/cardioversion, and the pharmacologic toolbox into motion. The goal isn’t to “memorize and recite,” but to internalize the sequence of evaluate → intervene → reassess while maintaining closed-loop communication with your team. You’ll cycle through megacode stations where each participant rotates roles—compressor, airway, recorder, team leader—to strengthen both technical skills and leadership cues.
Preparation matters. The ACLS page spells out prerequisites—including the AHA online precourse self-assessment and required precourse work—as well as the need to review ECG and pharmacology before you come. You must bring the 2020 ACLS Provider Manual (AHA #20-1106), and you should arrive with BLS fundamentals fully dialed in. The course is compact by design; it assumes you’ve already refreshed the knowledge base and are ready to practice decision-making under time pressure. chicagospulse.com
What the course does not cover is just as important: you won’t be taught ECG from scratch or given a pharmacology lecture. Instead, instructors—who actively work in emergency care—will coach you through application of what you’ve prepared. That approach mirrors the real world: resuscitation never affords time for a primer, but it always rewards teams who understand how the pieces snap together. chicagospulse.com
Plan your timeline. If your badge audit or hospital credentialing hits in January, booking an October–December seat ensures you receive your ACLS e-card within 48 hours of successful completion. Departments often align expirations to reduce admin overhead; consider booking in pairs or in a small cohort so you can cover the unit while colleagues attend. Chicago’s Pulse also outlines refund and rescheduling policies, so managers can budget and calendar with fewer surprises. chicagospulse.com
Finally, make your gains stick. After class, schedule short, spaced reviews of the bradycardia, tachycardia, and cardiac arrest algorithms, plus post-ROSC care. If your facility uses mock codes, volunteer to run the next one; the best way to lock in leadership voice and timing is to practice it in a low-risk environment. Add quick reviews of medication indications and doses (epi, amio, adenosine, atropine, magnesium) and review synchronized cardioversion vs. defibrillation decision points until they’re second nature.
Sign up: ACLS — View schedule & register