{
  "short_form": [
    {
      "id": "short1",
      "source": "yt1",
      "clips": [
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "How THC overdose is actually treated in the ER (Clip 1)",
          "script": "HOOK: Here's what people get wrong about THC overdose: they assume it isn't a medical emergency.\n\nI've treated a 9-year-old for THC toxicity. I've treated adults who called 911 convinced they were dying. And I've treated teenagers who didn't know their vape was fentanyl-laced.\n\nHere's the clinical truth.\n\nWhen you come into the ER with suspected THC toxicity, the first thing we do is assess your airway, breathing, and circulation. Are you breathing? How fast? Is your airway protected?\n\nThen continuous cardiac monitoring. Oxygen saturation. Blood pressure. We're looking for hypoxia, low blood oxygen, and for evidence that something other than cannabis is in your system.\n\nHere's what families need to know before the ER: if someone cannot be woken up, if their breathing is slow and shallow, put them in recovery position, on their side, and call 911. Do not leave them face-down. This prevents aspiration if they vomit.\n\nIf you can't rule out opioid involvement, use Narcan if you have it. It does nothing if opioids aren't present. It reverses the overdose if they are.\n\nThe ER is not the first responder. You are.\n\nLink in bio for the full guide. It's free.",
          "caption": "THC overdose in the ER: what actually happens, step by step. Clinical truth from 30 years of emergency care at Emory Healthcare. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link in bio. #THCoverdose #overdose #nurseeducation #ER #opioidcrisis #fentanyl #Narcan",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt1 Segment 2. Strong for LinkedIn healthcare audience."
        },
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn B",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The four-minute window before the ambulance arrives",
          "script": "HOOK: The ambulance's average response time in the U.S. is eight minutes. The critical window for opioid overdose is four.\n\nThat gap between the call and the arrival is where families need to know what to do.\n\nI have spent thirty years watching what happens when families know, and when they don't.\n\nHere is what the four minutes looks like when a family is prepared.\n\nRecovery position: on the side, airway open. One action. Prevents aspiration if they vomit.\n\n911 on the line. The dispatcher guides you through it. Rescue breathing if needed. What to report when we arrive.\n\nNarcan in the home. Over the counter. No prescription. If opioids are involved, two to five minutes to reversal.\n\nFour minutes. This is the difference.\n\nFree Overdose Response Guide at the link.",
          "caption": "The ambulance takes 8 minutes. The critical window is 4. What families need to know before help arrives. 30+ years emergency care, Emory Healthcare. Free guide at the link. #overdose #opioidcrisis #Narcan #ER #nurseeducation #fentanyl #preparedness",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt1. LinkedIn second post: four-minute window angle. Complements the ER treatment clip."
        },
        {
          "platform": "Instagram Reels",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The 4 steps we follow in the ER for THC overdose (Clip 2)",
          "script": "HOOK: Four steps. This is what we do in the ER when someone presents with THC toxicity.\n\nStep one: check the airway. Is the patient breathing? What's the rate? Fewer than eight breaths per minute is an emergency.\n\nStep two: cardiac monitoring. Oxygen saturation, blood pressure, heart rate. We're looking for hypoxia.\n\nStep three: differential diagnosis. THC overdose looks like other things. We run a toxicology screen to confirm what's in the system.\n\nStep four: supportive care. There is no antidote for THC toxicity the way Narcan reverses opioids. We support with IV fluids, anti-nausea medication, monitoring.\n\nBut here's what matters most: if opioid contamination is suspected, we use Narcan immediately.\n\nThe four minutes before I get to you matters. Recovery position. Airway open. Call 911.\n\nFull guide is free. Link in bio.",
          "caption": "4 steps for THC overdose in the ER. Every family should know this before they need it. Free Overdose Response Guide linked in bio. #overdose #THC #ER #Narcan #nurseeducation #fentanyl #opioidcrisis",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt1 Segment 2. Fast-paced for Reels. Upper-third text overlay recommended."
        },
        {
          "platform": "TikTok",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "What actually happens to your oxygen during THC overdose (Clip 3)",
          "script": "HOOK: Your oxygen level during a severe cannabis overdose can drop to dangerous levels. Here's what that means.\n\nHypoxia. Low blood oxygen. When cannabis, especially when contaminated with fentanyl, causes respiratory depression, breathing slows. When breathing slows, oxygen drops.\n\nIn the ER, we're watching that number constantly. Anything below 94 percent, we intervene. Below 90, we intervene aggressively.\n\nIn a home, before the ambulance arrives, families cannot monitor oxygen. But they can do this:\n\nCheck for breathing. Slow and shallow is a warning sign. Not breathing is an emergency.\n\nPosition on their side. Recovery position. Airway open.\n\nCall 911 and stay on the line.\n\nIf there's any chance opioids are involved, use Narcan. It's OTC at any pharmacy. No prescription needed.\n\nThirty years in the ER. This is what families need to know.",
          "caption": "What actually happens to your oxygen during a THC overdose. Clinical truth from 30 years of ER nursing. Free guide at link in bio. #THCoverdose #overdose #hypoxia #Narcan #ER #nurseeducation #opioidcrisis #fentanyl",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt1 Segment 1. Strong hook for TikTok algorithm. Upper-third captions."
        },
        {
          "platform": "YouTube Shorts",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Four things to do before the ambulance arrives (from an ER nurse)",
          "script": "HOOK: Four things. Do these before the ambulance arrives.\n\nOne. Check breathing. Less than eight breaths per minute is an emergency. Slow and shallow is a warning.\n\nTwo. Recovery position. On the side. Head tilted back. Airway open. Not face-down.\n\nThree. Narcan. If opioids might be involved. OTC. No prescription. Tilt the head back. One spray per nostril. Wait two minutes.\n\nFour. 911. Stay on the line. Give the address. Say what you see. Say what you did. Do not hang up.\n\nThirty years in the ER. These four things protect the window before I get to you.\n\nSubscribe for more on emergency preparedness.",
          "caption": "4 things to do before the ambulance arrives. From 30 years of ER nursing. Subscribe for more emergency preparedness. #overdose #Narcan #opioidcrisis #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #YouTubeShorts",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt1. YouTube Shorts: numbered list format, fast-paced, ends with subscribe CTA. Upper-third captions."
        }
      ],
      "week": 1,
      "day": "Tuesday"
    },
    {
      "id": "short2",
      "source": "yt2",
      "clips": [
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The roommate who didn't know the Narcan was in the cabinet (Clip 1)",
          "script": "HOOK: There was a 22-year-old in my ER. Fentanyl-laced counterfeit pill. Oxygen at 60 percent when we got to him.\n\nHis roommate had found him unresponsive and called 911. Did everything right: stayed on the line, didn't move him.\n\nWhat he didn't know: there was naloxone nasal spray in the cabinet in that bathroom. Someone had left it there weeks earlier.\n\nThe roommate didn't know it was there. Didn't know what Narcan was. Didn't know it could have reversed that overdose before the ambulance arrived.\n\nBy the time we administered it in the ER, he had eight minutes of significant hypoxia. Respiratory depression robbing his brain of oxygen while his roommate waited.\n\nHe survived. His outcome was not what it would have been.\n\nNarcan does nothing if opioids aren't present. It reverses the overdose if they are. It's available OTC at every major pharmacy. No prescription. This is what preparation looks like.\n\nThe ER cannot be the first line. Families are the first line.\n\nFree Overdose Response Guide at the link.",
          "caption": "The Narcan was in the cabinet. The roommate didn't know it was there. This is the preparation gap I'm trying to close. 30+ years emergency care, Emory Healthcare. Free guide at the link. #Narcan #naloxone #fentanyl #opioidoverdose #ER #nurseeducation #opioidcrisis",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt2 Segment 1. Narrative-driven, strong for LinkedIn."
        },
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn B",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Thirty years changed how I think about the naloxone conversation",
          "script": "HOOK: I did not start my career talking about Narcan to the public. In nursing school, in early ER shifts, naloxone was a clinical tool. Hospital. Healthcare providers. Prescription.\n\nThirty years of emergency care changed that.\n\nWhat changed: the drug supply. Fentanyl contamination means a person using what they believe is a pain reliever, a sedative, a pressed pill is at risk of opioid overdose without knowing it.\n\nNarcan is now OTC. No prescription. Available at CVS, Walgreens, Walmart. The access barrier is gone.\n\nWhat remains is the knowledge barrier.\n\nMost families do not know what Narcan is. Do not know how to use it. Do not know it does nothing if opioids are not present.\n\nThat is the conversation I am trying to have.\n\nFree guide at the link.",
          "caption": "Thirty years in the ER changed how I see the naloxone conversation. The drug supply changed. The access changed. The knowledge gap didn't. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link. #Narcan #naloxone #opioidcrisis #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #opioidoverdose",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt2. LinkedIn second post: professional belief-shift angle. Strong for healthcare and parent audience."
        },
        {
          "platform": "Instagram Reels",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "What Narcan actually does, in plain language (Clip 2)",
          "script": "HOOK: Here's what Narcan actually does. Not the package insert language. Plain language.\n\nNarcan, also called naloxone, is an opioid antagonist. It binds to the same receptors in the brain that opioids use, and it kicks the opioid off.\n\nResult: respiratory depression reverses. The person starts breathing again.\n\nIt works in two to five minutes. It's available over the counter. No prescription. CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, most pharmacies carry it.\n\nHere's what families get wrong: they think it's dangerous. They think using it without a prescription is illegal. They think it will harm someone if opioids aren't actually the cause.\n\nNone of that is true.\n\nNarcan does nothing if opioids aren't present. No harm. No risk. If opioids are present, it can save a life.\n\nI administer this in the ER regularly. You can do the same thing at home in four minutes flat. Get the guide. It's free. Link in bio.",
          "caption": "What Narcan actually does. No jargon. Just clinical truth. Free Overdose Response Guide linked in bio. #Narcan #naloxone #opioidoverdose #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #overdose",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt2 Segment 2. Educational hook, strong for Reels saves/shares. Upper-third captions."
        },
        {
          "platform": "TikTok",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "I administer Narcan daily. Here's what you need to know. (Clip 3)",
          "script": "HOOK: A colleague of mine said this to me last month: I make Narcan IV too often at work. Daily.\n\nDaily. That's not an exaggeration for emphasis. That's what the opioid crisis looks like from inside an emergency room.\n\nNaloxone, Narcan, is OTC. Over the counter. Four milligrams nasal spray. Available at any major pharmacy without a prescription. Covered by many health benefit cards.\n\nIf you have anyone in your life, anyone at all, who uses opioids, prescription or otherwise, or who might be exposed to fentanyl-laced substances, Narcan in your home is preparation.\n\nIt doesn't expire for two years. It fits in a drawer. It does nothing if opioids aren't involved. It reverses an overdose in minutes if they are.\n\nThirty years of emergency care. I have never once thought having Narcan available made a situation worse. Not once.\n\nGet the free guide. Link in bio.",
          "caption": "I administer Narcan every day in the ER. This is what every family needs to know about it. Free guide at the link. #Narcan #naloxone #opioidcrisis #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #overdose #substanceuse",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt2 Segment 2. Social proof hook, strong TikTok opener. Upper-third captions."
        },
        {
          "platform": "YouTube Shorts",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Three things people get wrong about Narcan (from an ER nurse)",
          "script": "HOOK: Three things people get wrong about Narcan.\n\nMyth one: you need a prescription. False. It's OTC. CVS, Walgreens, Walmart. No prescription. No ID. Walk in and buy it.\n\nMyth two: it's dangerous to use without medical training. False. Nasal spray. One spray per nostril. That's it.\n\nMyth three: using it when you're not sure will harm someone. False. If opioids are not involved, Narcan does nothing. Nothing. No harm. No risk.\n\nIf opioids are involved, it works in two to five minutes.\n\nThirty years in the ER. Having Narcan has never made a situation worse. Not once.\n\nSubscribe for more on overdose preparedness.",
          "caption": "3 things people get wrong about Narcan. Clinical truth from 30 years in the ER. Subscribe for more. #Narcan #naloxone #opioidcrisis #overdose #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #YouTubeShorts",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt2. YouTube Shorts: myth-busting format, strong hook, fast retention. Upper-third captions."
        }
      ],
      "week": 2,
      "day": "Tuesday"
    },
    {
      "id": "short3",
      "source": "yt3",
      "clips": [
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "She sat in my waiting room at 2 a.m. and asked me what she did wrong.",
          "script": "She sat in a plastic chair in my waiting room at 2 a.m.\n\nHer son had come in by ambulance forty minutes earlier. Opioid overdose. He survived.\n\nShe looked at me and asked: \"What did I do wrong?\"\n\nI have been an emergency nurse at Emory Healthcare for more than 30 years. That question stopped me.\n\nHere is the clinical answer I gave her, and the answer I want every parent and family member to have.\n\nThe three things that change outcomes in those first four minutes before the ambulance arrives.\n\nFirst: position. If someone is unconscious, they go on their side. Recovery position. Not face-down, not sitting up. On the side, head tilted back, airway open. This one action prevents aspiration if they vomit. Most families do not know this.\n\nSecond: stay on the 911 line. The dispatcher is your real-time clinical guide. Rescue breathing instructions. What to watch for. What to say when we arrive. Do not hang up.\n\nThird: Narcan. Naloxone nasal spray is available over the counter at any major pharmacy. No prescription. If you cannot rule out opioid involvement, use it. It does nothing if opioids are not present. It can reverse an overdose in two to five minutes if they are.\n\nWhat did she do wrong? Nothing. But here is what she could have known.\n\nThe Overdose Response Guide is free at the link. Before you need it.",
          "caption": "She asked me what she did wrong. 30 years of emergency care at Emory Healthcare. The three things families need to know before they end up in that waiting room. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link. #overdose #opioidcrisis #Narcan #nurseeducation #ER #familypreparedness #fentanyl",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt3 waiting room story and Segment 2. Strong narrative anchor for LinkedIn healthcare professionals and parent audience."
        },
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn B",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Same overdose. Same ambulance. Two very different outcomes.",
          "script": "HOOK: The same overdose. The same 911 call. The same ambulance. But two very different outcomes, depending on what happened in the four minutes before we arrived.\n\nIn thirty years of emergency care at Emory Healthcare, I have seen both.\n\nWithout preparation: person found face-down. 911 call dropped at minute two. No Narcan in the home. We arrive to significant hypoxia.\n\nWith preparation: person in recovery position. Dispatcher still on the line. Family administered Narcan at minute one. Breathing resumed before we arrived.\n\nThe clinical difference between those two outcomes is not the ambulance. It is what the family knew how to do.\n\nThe Overdose Response Guide teaches the preparation side. It is free at the link.",
          "caption": "Same overdose. Same ambulance. Two very different outcomes depending on what the family knew. 30+ years emergency care, Emory Healthcare. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link. #overdose #opioidcrisis #Narcan #ER #nurseeducation #fentanyl #preparedness",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt3. LinkedIn second post: with/without preparation comparison. Clinical authority framing."
        },
        {
          "platform": "Instagram Reels",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The 3 mistakes families make during a drug emergency",
          "script": "Three mistakes. This is what I see families do when someone overdoses in their home.\n\nMistake one: leaving the person face-down. Face-down is dangerous. If they vomit, they aspirate. Recovery position is on the side, head tilted back. Ten seconds to do. Potentially lifesaving.\n\nMistake two: hanging up with 911. The dispatcher can guide you in real time. Rescue breathing. What to watch for. Stay on the line.\n\nMistake three: not having Narcan.\n\nNaloxone nasal spray. Over the counter. No prescription. Twenty to fifty dollars at any pharmacy. If opioids are involved, it reverses the overdose in two to five minutes. If opioids are not involved, it does nothing. No downside.\n\nThirty years in the ER at Emory Healthcare. These three things are the difference between preparation and panic.\n\nFree guide at the link in bio.",
          "caption": "3 mistakes families make when someone overdoses. The clinical truth from 30 years in the ER. Free Overdose Response Guide linked in bio. #overdose #Narcan #opioidcrisis #ER #nurseeducation #fentanyl #familypreparedness",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt3 Segment 2. Fast-paced listicle format for Reels. Upper-third text overlays. Each mistake as a visual callout beat."
        },
        {
          "platform": "TikTok",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "She asked me what she did wrong. Here's the honest answer.",
          "script": "2 a.m. ER waiting room. A mother. Her son had just survived an opioid overdose.\n\nShe looked at me and asked: what did I do wrong?\n\nThirty years of emergency care. That question stopped me.\n\nHere is the honest answer.\n\nShe did nothing wrong. But there were three things she could have known.\n\nRecovery position. On the side. Prevents aspiration.\n\nStay on the 911 line. The dispatcher guides you through it.\n\nNarcan. Over the counter. No prescription. Two to five minutes to work.\n\nThe preparation gap is not a character flaw. It is an information gap. And this is the information.\n\nFree guide at the link.",
          "caption": "She asked me what she did wrong. The honest answer from 30 years in the ER. Free Overdose Response Guide linked in bio. #overdose #opioidcrisis #Narcan #ER #nurseeducation #fentanyl #2am",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt3 Hook and Close. Emotional anchor, short declarative rhythm, strong for TikTok retention. Upper-third captions. Open on the scene, not on an introduction."
        },
        {
          "platform": "YouTube Shorts",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Recovery position in 30 seconds (from an ER nurse)",
          "script": "HOOK: Recovery position. Here's exactly how to do it.\n\nStep one. Kneel beside them. Take the arm closest to you, extend it straight out.\n\nStep two. Take the far arm, bend the elbow, place the back of the hand against their cheek.\n\nStep three. Grab the far knee. Bend it. Foot flat on the floor.\n\nStep four. Use that knee as a lever. Roll them toward you. On their side. Head tilted back. Airway open.\n\nThis is the single most important bystander skill for any drug emergency. Takes ten seconds.\n\nDo this. Then call 911. Then get Narcan.\n\nSubscribe for the full protocol.",
          "caption": "Recovery position in 30 seconds. The most important bystander skill in a drug emergency. Subscribe for the full overdose response protocol. #overdose #recoveryposition #Narcan #opioidcrisis #ER #nurseeducation #YouTubeShorts",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt3. YouTube Shorts: instructional step-by-step format. Consider on-screen demonstration. Upper-third captions with step callouts."
        }
      ],
      "week": 1,
      "day": "Thursday"
    },
    {
      "id": "short4",
      "source": "yt4",
      "clips": [
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The Narcan was in the cabinet. He didn't know it was there.",
          "script": "Twenty-two years old. Fentanyl-laced counterfeit pill. His roommate found him unresponsive and called 911.\n\nBy the time we got to him at Emory, his oxygen saturation was sixty percent. Normal is ninety-five to one hundred. Eight minutes of respiratory depression.\n\nHere is the detail that stayed with me.\n\nThere was a box of naloxone nasal spray in the bathroom cabinet. Someone had left it there weeks earlier. The roommate did not know it was there. Did not know what Narcan was. Did not know it could have reversed that overdose before the ambulance ever arrived.\n\nThis is the preparedness gap I talk about on this channel. It is not a knowledge gap. It is not an access gap. There was a box in the cabinet. The gap was that no one had communicated what it was and how to use it.\n\nNarcan is available over the counter. No prescription. Twenty to fifty dollars. Most pharmacies carry it. In many states it is free through harm reduction programs.\n\nThis is what preparedness looks like for healthcare professionals who work with families: the education piece matters as much as the access piece. Having it in the cabinet is step one. Knowing what it is, step two.\n\nThe free Overdose Response Guide covers both. Link below.",
          "caption": "The Narcan was in the cabinet. Eight minutes of hypoxia because no one knew. 30+ years emergency care, Emory Healthcare. The preparedness gap is not access, it is communication. Free guide at the link. #Narcan #naloxone #opioidoverdose #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #opioidcrisis",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt4 Open section. Narrative-driven, clinical credibility for LinkedIn. Professional education framing for healthcare and parent audience."
        },
        {
          "platform": "LinkedIn B",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The one instruction I give every 911 caller: do not hang up.",
          "script": "HOOK: I have been on the receiving end of those calls for thirty years. The families who stay on the line with dispatch, and the families who don't.\n\nHere is what happens when you stay on.\n\nThe dispatcher assesses in real time. Breathing rate, responsiveness, color. They give rescue breathing instructions if needed. They prepare the incoming team for what to expect before we walk through the door.\n\nHere is what happens when you hang up.\n\nWe arrive with less information. The patient has received no bystander intervention. The four-minute window closes untouched.\n\nDo not hang up. Give your address first. Then tell them what you see. What you did. Whether Narcan was used.\n\nStay on the line.\n\nFree Overdose Response Guide at the link.",
          "caption": "Do not hang up with 911. This is the one instruction that changes outcomes. 30+ years emergency care, Emory Healthcare. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link. #overdose #911 #opioidcrisis #Narcan #ER #nurseeducation #fentanyl",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt4. LinkedIn second post: stay-on-911 angle. Clinical authority tone."
        },
        {
          "platform": "Instagram Reels",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Recovery position. What it is and why it matters.",
          "script": "Recovery position. This is the one bystander skill most families have never practiced.\n\nHere is how to do it.\n\nKneel beside the person. Extend the arm closest to you straight out from the body. Take the far arm, bend the elbow, place the back of the hand against their near cheek. Grab the far knee, bend it, foot flat on the floor. Use that knee as a lever. Roll them toward you, onto their side.\n\nHead tilted back slightly. Airway open.\n\nHere is why this matters clinically.\n\nIn opioid overdose, vomiting is common. An unconscious person cannot protect their own airway. On their back, they aspirate. On their side, gravity clears it.\n\nFace-down is wrong. Sitting upright is wrong. On the side.\n\nTen seconds. Could save a life.\n\nFull protocol in the free guide at the link.",
          "caption": "Recovery position. How to do it and why it matters. Clinical instruction from 30 years in the ER. Free Overdose Response Guide linked in bio. #overdose #recoveryposition #opioidcrisis #Narcan #nurseeducation #ER #familypreparedness",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt4 Segment 2. Instructional format, strong for Reels saves. Upper-third captions with step callouts. Consider on-screen demonstration if Charles can film hands-on segment."
        },
        {
          "platform": "TikTok",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "Four things. This is the protocol.",
          "script": "Four things. This is the entire protocol for a drug emergency.\n\nOne. Recognize. Breathing under eight times per minute. Pinpoint pupils. Unresponsive with gurgling sounds. One sign is enough to act.\n\nTwo. Recovery position. On the side. Head tilted back. Airway open. Not face-down.\n\nThree. Narcan. Over the counter. No prescription. Tilt the head back. Nozzle in the nostril. Press the plunger. Wait two minutes. Second dose if no response.\n\nFour. Call 911. Stay on the line. Address first. Tell them what you see. Tell them what you did. Do not hang up.\n\nFour things. This is the difference between the four-minute window being enough and it not being enough.\n\nFree guide at the link.",
          "caption": "4 things. The entire drug emergency protocol in 30 seconds. Recognize. Position. Narcan. Call and stay. Free Overdose Response Guide at the link. #overdose #Narcan #opioidcrisis #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #protocol",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt4 Hook and Close. Fast-paced numbered format for TikTok. Each step as a visual beat. Upper-third captions. Opens on the number four, not an introduction."
        },
        {
          "platform": "YouTube Shorts",
          "format": "45-60s",
          "title": "The 4-minute window explained by an ER nurse",
          "script": "HOOK: The four-minute window. Here's what it means.\n\nOpioid overdose causes respiratory depression. The brain needs oxygen. Every minute without it matters.\n\nAverage EMS response time in the U.S.: eight minutes.\n\nThat means you have four minutes to act before the ambulance closes the gap.\n\nFour minutes to get someone in recovery position. Four minutes to use Narcan. Four minutes to stay on the 911 line and get live instructions.\n\nWhat happens in those four minutes determines what I see when I walk through the ER door.\n\nThirty years of emergency care. The four minutes before I arrive is not empty time. It is the protocol.\n\nFree guide at the link in bio. Subscribe for more.",
          "caption": "The 4-minute window. What it means and what to do with it. Clinical explanation from 30 years in the ER. Free guide at link in bio. #overdose #opioidcrisis #Narcan #fentanyl #ER #nurseeducation #YouTubeShorts",
          "status": "Draft",
          "notes": "Clip from yt4. YouTube Shorts: concept explanation format with urgency. Upper-third captions. Ends with subscribe CTA."
        }
      ],
      "week": 2,
      "day": "Thursday"
    }
  ]
}