Whole blood is here. Why?
All tagged EMT
What do we do now as clinicians? How is the end of Roe v. Wade going to impact us?
Should EMS clinicians be allowed to purchase and use recreational marijuana? If you haven’t been aware of this controversy, it will probably be coming to your area sooner than you think.
How can EMS education take these positives, these negatives, and the pandemic and mold it into a brand-new form of EMS education? An education system where we can feel somewhat prepared for the possibilities that we are coming into? EMS education owes it to the future paramedics and EMTs to teach us these skills AND how to mentally prepare ourselves.
Your first call. A cardiac arrest. In front of you. Now what?
Why does this happen to the around 1,100 EMS clinicians of FDNY*EMS, and not the 118 female firefighters of the FDNY? Why is it that the members of FDNY*EMS are given short shrift? Why is turnover so high in the command that paramedics leave to drive garbage trucks, EMTs stay only a few years before getting out, and so few stay on long enough that a pension may as well be a lottery ticket?
Maybe the answer is staring us in the face.
The second year of COVID, looking over the edge into the abyss.
Ever feel like you won’t get it? Feel like things are moving too fast? Ever been new at something?
Welcome to Rookieworld.
As we end 2018 and head into the New Year, Dan shares what he’s learned about moving into a command-level position…and what the pitfalls are for those of us who choose to take the path.
“We could fist fight in the parking lot of a “coffee with an officer” event and then wonder why no one takes us seriously…”
My entire EMT class was a blur. The lessons were quick, the skills stations were chaotic, we had two chances to pass a test and if you didn’t pull off that magical 70% you were out! Go sell shoes! You don’t belong here with the road dogs. You’re not part of the elite. Before I knew it, 3 months had gone by and I was ready to sling and swath with the best of them. I was going to save lives, snatch grandma from the jagged jaws of death with nothing but a non-re breather and tube of glucose; I. WAS. READY.
We’ve all had that call come across from dispatch that you know from the start is an overdose. “Man in car in abandoned parking lot, unresponsive and possibly not breathing.” The opioid crisis being what it is, the likelihood that we will be responding to a patient who has had just this side of too much is more likely than not. We go screaming down the boulevard, lights and sirens, and dispatch comes back and tells us that one Narcan has been deployed. Great!