AI communication simulation for paramedic services, base hospitals & college paramedicine programs.

Training the Unteachable

Communication training built by a practicing paramedic for the emotionally complex calls that decide an outcome and never make it into a protocol.

Try a live scenario

Or try it yourself first: type what you’d actually say, and watch the call shift. Runs in your browser, no signup.

The conversation decides the call.

Not the protocol. The minute before it.

Starting in Ontario · Built for Canadian paramedicine
  • PCP & ACP practice levels
  • NOCP → CPCF aligned
  • Provincial care-standards context
  • Base hospital / medical-oversight-ready records
  • Privacy-law aligned
  • Data resides in Canada

The Scenario Library

The calls that don’t fit a protocol.

Each one targets a call type that research consistently flags as among the hardest to communicate through: mental-health crises, pediatric emergencies, agitation, and care refusal.

01
Ray, 71

He Called It Nothing

A man on his bedroom floor. His daughter two hours away. You can hear his lungs from the doorway, and he does not want your help.

“I’m fine. You didn’t need to come.”

Care refusalIsolationTrust-building
02
Cass, 19

Just Take Me to Him

Blood is running down her face and she won’t let you near it. She isn’t confused. She’s nineteen, furious, terrified, and the only thing she’ll talk about is her boyfriend. She’ll let you drive her to the hospital. Getting her to let you actually assess her is the hard part.

“Stop. I don’t care about my head. Where is he?”

Refusing assessmentAcute distressCapacity
03
Daniel, 15

He Already Had a Plan

A teenage boy in crisis, with injuries he’s caused himself and a plan he’s already made. The clinical care is the part you know. Keeping him talking, and keeping him here, is the part nothing trained you for.

“You can’t fix this. Nobody can.”

AdolescentMental health crisisCrisis rapport
+
The full library

More calls. In the full library.

High-conflict refusals, overdose and shame, dementia, pediatric panic, the partner who’s gone quiet. The library keeps growing across the call types research flags as hardest to communicate through, written from real shifts.

Licensed services and programs get the complete, expanding scenario set. Request a demo to see it all

Sequence

A path, not a pile.

Scenarios are sequenced from first contact and refusal toward acute crisis, so a learner builds the read before they meet the hardest calls. Run the recommended progression, or assign by call type.

Inside a Scenario

The character responds to how you speak, not what you say.

There is no right phrase to find. Trust, agitation, and engagement shift quietly beneath every exchange. Rush, and the patient closes. Slow down, and the door opens. Learners can’t optimize a number they never see. They have to read the person.

AdaptiveTone and pacing move the conversation, not keywords.
ConsequentialCalls end in connection, shutdown, or refusal, like real ones.
ReflectiveStructured prompts follow. The reflection is the lesson.
Scenario 01: He Called It Nothing

Illustrative animation: a simulated text conversation between a paramedic and Ray, a 71-year-old patient who initially refuses help. As the paramedic slows down and listens, hidden trust, agitation, and engagement meters shift, and Ray agrees to be assessed.

“Paramedics are trained to respond to cardiac arrests. Nobody trains them to talk to a man who doesn’t want to be alive. That gap is where the hardest moments of the job actually live.”
Sandra Trejo, PCP — Founder, Empathia Learn

How the Program Works

Practice the conversation. Then sit with what happened.

Text-based exchanges with AI-driven characters that respond to tone, followed by structured reflection. No pass. No fail. No scripts.

01

Enter the scenario

A brief, field-realistic setup: a call type, a character, a situation. The learner reads it, then starts the conversation cold.

02

Read the person, not the metric

Hidden state (trust, agitation, engagement) shifts on tone and pacing. Rushing escalates. Slowing down opens the door. The variables stay invisible by design.

03

The call ends like calls end

Stabilization, shutdown, resistance, or connection. No score is tallied. Every outcome is a real outcome the learner has to own.

04

Leave with something you can use

Guided prompts turn the experience into a habit, and every scenario maps back to a single portable anchor the learner carries into the field.

The Anchor · PRESENCE™

In a real call, you won’t remember a debrief. You’ll remember one word.

Every scenario and reflection ladders back to one word a paramedic can actually recall mid-call. That word is PRESENCE.

It begins with P — Pause, before you act or speak. The rest is taught inside the program, in context, where teaching belongs — and we’ll walk any coordinator or faculty lead through the whole framework in a demo. Our pedagogy isn’t a secret; it’s a syllabus.

After the Program

What a learner can do after.

Outcomes, not a score. Here is what changes.

  • Recognize the moment a call stops being clinical and becomes a communication problem.

  • Read shifts in trust, agitation, and engagement from how a person responds.

  • Adjust pacing and framing to keep a frightened or resistant patient in the conversation.

  • Stay with a patient’s distress without rushing to fix or override it.

  • Recall a single anchor mid-call, when there is no time to think.

Why it transfers

Why typing transfers to a real call.

The hard part of these calls is not the words leaving your mouth. It is the read and the choice. What do you say when a man on his floor tells you to leave. Where do you go when a teenager says nobody can help. Practising that decision again and again, with a patient who reacts the way real patients do, builds the judgment you carry into the room. Speaking the words out loud comes later on the roadmap. The thinking is what we train first.

Facilitation & debrief

Built to be facilitated, or run solo.

Every scenario ends in structured reflection, and the same prompts run as a guided group debrief. Coordinators and faculty get a facilitator guide: how to open the debrief, what to listen for, and how to close it without turning it into a critique. In simulation, the debrief is where the learning lands. We treat it that way.

What It Is, and Isn’t

If it feels like a quiz or a chatbot, something is wrong.

Conventional simulation drills the clinical interview (history, vitals, documentation) and scores it. Empathia trains the part of the encounter no rubric can reach. That takes a different set of rules.

What it does

The experience should feel like a real call.

Feel human and serious, like a real encounter, not a simulation.

Allow emotional discomfort without resolving it artificially.

Adapt gradually to how the learner communicates.

Mirror real consequences, not sanitized outcomes.

Prioritize reflection over performance.

What it never does

What happens in these calls cannot be reduced to a number.

Gamify with points, badges, or streaks.

Score or grade learner performance.

Diagnose or label a learner’s communication style.

Act like a chatbot or hand back scripted answers.

Cross into therapy. It stays firmly in education.

A Different Category

Most simulation scores the interview. We train the moment it can’t.

Clinical simulators are built to measure reasoning: history, vitals, the right differential. Empathia is built for the human encounter that decides whether any of that gets to happen.

 
Conventional clinical simulation
Empathia Learn
What it trains
ConventionalClinical reasoning, history-taking, documentation
Empathia LearnThe emotional encounter, the minute before the protocol
How the patient behaves
ConventionalFollows a clinical script toward the correct path
Empathia LearnResponds to your tone, driven by a hidden emotional state
Feedback
ConventionalScored: pass, fail, a competency number
Empathia LearnStructured reflection, never a score
How it ends
ConventionalA correct answer
Empathia LearnA real consequence: connection, refusal, or shutdown
What the learner leaves with
ConventionalA grade in a gradebook
Empathia LearnPRESENCE, one anchor they can reach for mid-call
Built by
ConventionalA software vendor
Empathia LearnA practicing paramedic and researcher

Why They’ll Actually Use It

Built for people who are already exhausted.

Most training assumes a captive, motivated audience. Frontline responders are neither — they are stretched thin and tired of click-through modules. The honest fix is both: assign it as required training so it actually gets done, and make it the rare required module a tired medic won’t resent.

Their device, their time

Five quiet minutes between calls or at home, on any phone or laptop. No lab to book, no shift to schedule, no travel. Self-paced, always.

Private by design

Their words stay theirs. By design, coordinators see that someone practiced and which call types they covered, and never the conversation itself or any judgment of how a learner did.

Made by one of them

Built by a working paramedic, from real calls. It treats the people doing the job as professionals worth respecting, not learners to be processed.

Sandra Trejo, founder of Empathia Learn

Built in the field.

Empathia Learn was founded by Sandra Trejo, PCP, a practicing Primary Care Paramedic and researcher in Ontario. She is building the program from both sides of the work at once: the clinician who has stood in those doorways, and the researcher proving what actually helps. The hardest moments on a call are almost never technical, and every scenario here comes from a real shift.

Empathia rests on a documented framework, registered trademarks, and an active research program, not on one person’s availability.

Read the founder’s story

Research & Evidence

An evidence program, stated plainly.

Nobody in this space has outcome trials yet — including us. Our evidence program is young and we say so: here is exactly where each piece stands.

Manuscript in preparation When the Protocol Ends: an emotionally adaptive AI simulation platform for communication training in prehospital care
Survey in distribution Needs-assessment survey with practicing Ontario paramedics
Pilot planned · 2026 to 2027 Prospective pilot study: emotionally adaptive simulation in the field
Frameworks EARS™ and PRESENCE™: the frameworks behind the platform, currently under peer review

Sources for the claims on this page: complaint patterns — Ombudsman Ontario oversight reporting on paramedic services; the state of the literature — published scoping reviews of communication training in paramedicine; hardest call types — studies of new-graduate paramedic preparedness. Full citations available on request, and in the manuscript.

Who It’s For

Built for prehospital care, start to finish.

Empathia Learn starts exactly where your gap is — whether you run the service, audit the care, or train the next crews.

For service chiefs

Paramedic Services

The calls that draw complaints are communication failures, not clinical ones. Empathia slots into new-hire onboarding and the CME / in-service hours your service already mandates — facilitated or self-paced — and gives you exportable evidence of practice when the question comes to your desk.

For base hospitals

Base Hospitals & Medical Oversight

Audit-ready records for the competencies hardest to evidence. Per-learner completion and call-type coverage export cleanly for CQI review and medical-director oversight — participation and breadth, never surveillance of a medic’s words.

For educators

College Paramedicine Programs

Repeatable practice before a student ever meets a patient who refuses their help — mapped to the communication competencies (NOCP → CPCF) your EQual-accredited program is measured against.

Curriculum & Competency Alignment

Built to satisfy the standards you’re already measured against.

NOCP Area 2 → CPCF

Mapped through the framework transition

Every scenario targets the NOCP’s communication competencies — effective oral (2.1) and non-verbal (2.3) communication — and maps forward to the communication competencies of the Canadian Paramedic Competence Framework (CPCF) as programs and regulators make the transition.

Performance Environment

A recognized simulated setting

Both the NOCP and the CPCF recognize a simulated environment as a valid setting to practise and demonstrate competency. Empathia gives learners repeatable reps at the hardest conversations before placement, supplementing high-fidelity sim and preceptorship, never replacing them.

CME · In-service

Slots into the hours they already earn

Run it as a facilitated in-service day or a self-paced module. Completion records map to the continuing-education and CME hours services and base hospitals already require, exportable for audit, review, and recertification.

For the People Who Run Training

Accountability without a scoreboard.

Proof your people are practicing for the moments that draw complaints — participation, breadth, and reflection — without turning the encounter into a grade.

Empathia Learn · Coordinator View Illustrative preview Spring intake · 24 learners
24
Active learners
312
Scenarios practiced
287
Reflections completed
13
Avg. sessions / learner

Learner participation

LearnerScenariosReflectionsCall types practiced
A. Okafor1615
J. Lindqvist1414
M. Whitefeather1311
D. Santos1110
R. Bélanger98

Scenario coverage

Care refusalfully covered
Mental-health crisis88%
Impaired driver / MVC71%
Pediatric & caregiver54%
Agitation & de-escalation44%
Participation & coverage.Export for base hospital audit ↓

Getting Started

Up and running without the IT ticket.

Empathia is built to drop into how your service or program already trains. No hardware to procure, no install, no lab to book. We set it up with you.

1We set it up with you

Onboard your cohort

We create your account, load your roster, and organize learners into cohorts. No IT ticket, no procurement of equipment. Learners get a link and sign in from any device.

2Where training already lives

Assign it as required training

Slot it into the CME and in-service hours your service mandates, or into a course in a college program — facilitated as a group in-service or self-paced. It counts toward the hours or credit your people already have to complete.

3Proof at review time

See coverage, and renew with evidence

The coordinator dashboard shows participation and breadth as it builds, with exportable cohort reports and per-learner completion records. Hand the evidence to your superintendent, accreditor, or base hospital when the license comes up for renewal.

Personal onboarding is included with every license. You’re not buying software and figuring it out alone. We roll it out with your team or faculty, and stay reachable after. Most teams are practising within days, not quarters.

Larger services can add single sign-on and integration with your existing training system as you scale — see Security & Privacy.

Starting Small

What a pilot looks like.

A pilot runs one cohort through the library on your real training calendar, with onboarding and a facilitator guide included. You watch participation and coverage build in the coordinator view, and at the end you have the evidence to decide on a full license.

Cost and first step: a pilot is a fixed, cohort-sized quote — a purchase-order line, not a capital request — and nothing renews until you've seen the data and decided. Email admin@empathialearn.com or request a demo; you'll have a quote and a proposed start date within two business days.

Where It’s Going

A program that deepens every year.

The library keeps expanding, and the way learners practice keeps getting closer to the real thing — so the training never goes stale, and renewal is a decision to keep growing, not just to keep access.

Core to the platform

A library that keeps growing

New scenarios across call types and patient populations are added on an ongoing basis, so onboarding and continuing education always have fresh, relevant material to draw on.

On the roadmap

Practice out loud

Voice-based scenarios will let learners speak to the patient instead of typing, closer to the pressure, pacing, and instinct of a real call.

On the roadmap

Progress you can see

Longitudinal tracking will show how a learner, and a whole service, grows across scenarios over time, turning quiet practice into development you can point to.

Ontario is where we start — then the rest of Canada, and prehospital care beyond it.

Security & Privacy

Built to pass your privacy review.

Empathia Learn stores no patient health information and is designed for public-sector procurement from day one. Here is what your privacy and security reviewers will ask, answered up front.

Privacy-law aligned (PHIPA & provincial equivalents) Canadian data residency No PHI stored Encrypted in transit & at rest Never used for discipline — contractual SSO / SAML available

Data stays in Canada

All learner data is hosted in Canada and encrypted in transit and at rest. Scenarios are simulations: no patient health information ever enters the platform, so there is no PHI to safeguard, move, or breach.

Aligned with privacy law

Our data-handling practices are designed to align with PHIPA in Ontario and the equivalent health-privacy legislation in each province we operate in, and with your organization’s own privacy obligations. When your reviewers ask for documentation — architecture, retention, subprocessors — we provide it.

A firewall around discipline

Training data is never used in discipline, performance management, or employment decisions — and we put it in the contract. A medic practicing a hard conversation must never be creating evidence against themselves. Larger services can add SSO / SAML and LMS integration.

Running a formal procurement? Request the procurement package — security and privacy documentation included. See also our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

Questions Services Ask

The questions a review board asks first.

Putting an AI in front of your people raises fair questions. Here are the ones we hear most, answered plainly.

What stops the AI from saying something harmful or clinically wrong?
The character is not an open chatbot. It plays one person, in one scenario, driven by a hidden emotional state, and it stays there. It never gives medical advice, never acts as a clinician, and never crosses into therapy. Every scenario is written from real calls by a practicing paramedic and reviewed before it ships, and the reflection that follows is structured and authored, not an AI verdict on the learner.
Where does our data live, and what can coordinators see?
Empathia stores no patient health information. All learner data is encrypted and hosted in Canada, and our data-handling practices are designed to align with PHIPA and the equivalent health-privacy laws of each province we operate in. A learner’s words stay theirs: coordinators see that someone practiced and which call types they covered, never the conversation itself or any judgment of how they did. When your privacy and security reviewers ask for documentation, we provide it — see Security & Privacy.
Can this data ever be used in discipline or performance management?
No — and we put it in the contract. Empathia Learn data exists for training and program evaluation only. It is never used in discipline, performance management, or employment decisions, and we contractually refuse to provide it for those purposes. The whole program depends on that being true.
There’s no score. How do we prove completion to a base hospital or accreditor?
The coordinator view records participation, scenario coverage, and completed reflections, exportable as cohort and per-learner records that map to the CME, in-service, and NOCP / CPCF communication competencies you already report against. The grade is what we leave out, on purpose — never the evidence.
Does this replace our high-fidelity sim or preceptorship?
No. It supplements them. Manikin sim and preceptorship train the clinical interview and the procedure. Empathia trains the emotional encounter that decides whether any of that gets to happen, the part those settings can’t easily rehearse, and the NOCP recognizes a simulated environment as a valid place to practise it.
How much time does it take, and how do learners fit it in?
A scenario takes a few quiet minutes, on any phone or laptop, between calls or at home. It runs in the browser with nothing to install and no lab to book, assigned as required training so it counts toward the hours your people already have to earn.
What if a scenario lands close to a call one of our people still carries?
We treat that as a design requirement, not an edge case. Emotionally heavy scenarios carry a content note up front, a learner can step away at any point — leaving is never recorded as a failure — and every reflection screen points to peer-support and EAP resources. The facilitator guide includes guidance on recognizing when a debrief has become disclosure and what to do next.
What does it cost, and how do we start?
Empathia is licensed annually, scaled to the size of your service or program and quoted around your roster, not a tier you have to fit into. Licenses can be timed to your fiscal year or semester. Most teams start with a cohort-sized pilot, so you decide on a full license with evidence in hand. Request a demo to talk specifics.

Bring this to your service or program.

Version 1 is built, and the first pilots open Summer 2026. Whether you run a paramedic service or teach in a college paramedicine program, tell us about your team — we reply personally, usually within two business days.

Running a formal procurement or RFP? Request the procurement package — security and privacy documentation included.