CED dispatcher exam — medical protocol questions or ICS framework — which section is harder?
I've been a 911 dispatcher for about 3 years and I'm prepping for the CED exam. I started studying 4 weeks ago and I'm consistently hitting 69-72% on practice tests, which is right on the edge of the passing threshold. I need to push that up 5-6 points to feel safe going in.
My problem areas are the medical priority dispatch protocol questions and the incident command structure integration material. On the medical side I keep mixing up the determinant codes and correct interrogation sequences for cardiac versus respiratory calls. It's frustrating because I handle these calls every shift, but the exam asks about them in a formalized way that doesn't match how we actually train at our center.
The ICS material is a different challenge — less about daily practice and more about knowing the formal NIMS structure cold. I feel like I understand the concepts but keep getting specific span of control numbers and unified command definitions wrong on scenario questions. Probably need another 2 full weeks on that section alone.
Anyone who's taken the CED recently — did the exam feel more weighted toward call handling protocols or toward administrative and ICS content? I want to allocate my last 3 weeks of prep correctly.
The medical protocol formalization is exactly as annoying as you described. I work MPDS every shift and still had to basically re-learn it in textbook form for the exam. The APCO and NENA standards are phrased differently than how any center I've worked at actually trains its dispatchers.
Give yourself a week on the formal protocol documentation, completely separate from your on-the-job knowledge. They really do test different things.
At 69-72% you're close. The last push is usually about eliminating the almost-right answers on scenario questions, not learning new material. Do timed tests and review every wrong answer in detail for the last 2 weeks rather than reading new content.
Span of control gets asked in multiple ways — optimal range, maximum range, and in specific scenario contexts. Learn all three framings. I got tripped up by a question about degraded-operations span of control that I hadn't seen in any study material.
Call handling protocols were the majority on my version — I'd estimate 55-60% of the questions were directly about dispatch procedures, priority coding, and caller interrogation. The ICS material was there but felt more like a supporting section than a dominant one.
Quick update on my end -- I just hit 74% on a full-length practice run yesterday, which is the first time I've broken through that 72% wall. I've been drilling medical protocols almost exclusively for the past week and it's finally clicking. The ICS stuff was actually easier once I stopped trying to memorize the charts and just focused on the command structure logic.
I'm planning to sit the real exam in about three weeks. Feeling cautiously optimistic but I'm not letting up yet. If you're stuck in that 69-72% range, honestly just pound the medical protocol sections -- that's where I was bleeding the most points without realizing it.