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medicTHREE’s week in tweets

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  • Found out that medics hired after me with less experience make more than me…. #
  • @Atebitz_ASD done. Db #
  • Yes. There is something wrong with you. You're crazy. #
  • Boooooooo #
  • Why yes, I would love to RSI you! #
  • Soooo tired. 15 min left then run home, take boy to daycare and get some rest…. sad…. #
  • Dare I say it is rather qui…. No. No I don't dare…. #
  • needs to win the lottery. ASAP. #
  • good morning, friends. I have been awake since 2… am home with the kid, and have to work tonight! #
  • Didn't get a nap at work! Boooooooo #

Life

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is what happens when you’re making plans!

Haven’t been around much, for many reasons. 1, I have been trying to focus on my family. Asher is growing SOooooooo fast! 2, I have a little side venture going, a tiny business selling planted aquarium products.

Hope all of my readers are doing well! I have 2 drafts I plan to work on at work later. Hoping to get some sleep here…

Anyways! Just wanted to drop in, say hi and make sure my readers know I’m alive!

medicTHREE’s week in tweets

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  • On the terror train for 12 #
  • @nickyvw not fun…. been there though. in reply to nickyvw #
  • Haven't moved off the couch in 5 hours. I love my job…. #
  • I'm alive! See what I have been doing! Rootmedic.net #
  • test post from touiteur. Likely! #

medicTHREE’s week in tweets

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omg

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funny facebook fails
see more funny facebook stuff!

Reality Check

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As usual, the EMS blogosphere has found itself in yet another little tiff. This time Timothy Clemans and Medic22 are in a bit of disagreement about proper use of ALS, among other things.

Timothy seems to believe that ALS skills are wasted on patients that are not in risk of losing life or limb. While Medic22′s way of responding to him might be over the top, I can TOTALLY understand how and why that would happen. See here and here. We all take this pretty damn seriously, so I understand the frustration.

Because I agree with Medic22′s thought process on this, I thought I would chime in a little bit.

If it was up to me I would eliminate prehospital ALS except in cases where ALS care prevents the need for hospital/clinic care and in cases where evidence demonstrates that ALS saves lives. That said, Medic 22 did bring up an excellent point about prehospital pain management.

Is it really that simple? Simply put, I’m out of a job. All of us are. In a systemsign-realitycheck with 11,000 calls a year, we’d be able to pay one medic. Thats it. After the sob story of me being unemployed is over, we’ll address the real issue: why is it that you have to be dying to get compassionate, adequate, respectful care?

If you are sick or injured, but not dying, Timothy is saying that you should only get a taxi ride to the hospital(where you will wait in triage for an hour(or more) and then wait for a nurse to complete an assessment, then a doctor, then maybe get your treatment started).

Are there ALS skills that need to be reviewed? Absolutely, but until you have had to sit in a truck with patients puking their brains out(on your new, shiny boots) you will not understand the validity of our skills that are in between taxi driver and super hero. Pushing Zofran for that nausea not only helped to relieve the discomfort for that patient, it also helped prevent them from further dehydrating themselves (or like a patient a week ago… going into vfib every time she puked… Seriously).

Managing pain in patients is one of the best skill sets we offer(and either the most avoided due to paperwork or most abused by patients).  Allowing grandma some comfort for the 15 mile ride through my Wintry Mid-Western city riddled with potholes and ice chunks is the least I can do after she allowed my whiny ass to stay alive all this time.

I can’t agree more with you! I have been battling this topic for 7 years to no avail. At one point we had our agency MD on board yet the other program MDs in the county voted against it! Again, “nobody ever died of pain” was just one reason. Another was/is the potential abuse issue, especially with fentanyl compounded by the fear ketamine could be stolen off the trucks by youngsters for their Rave parties. Subsequently, our patients receive a proper induction via etomidate but very infrequently the administration of diazepam and morphine post intubation (only a few of us religiously use the agents). What you end up with is a patient who doesn’t remember undergoing paralysis and intubation but wakes up being paralyzed and intubated on a bumpy ride to the hospital.

All this says is that local MDs have zero faith in their medics. If you can’t secure your narcotics, you have no business being in this business. There are dozens of ways to secure them. This is simply an excuse for someone who is afraid to allow their medics the ability to treat.

Medic 22 a dehydrated girl with a low BP and tachycardia needs a line and a fluid blous. That’s ALS. Not an emergency… but something that a paramedic can, and SHOULD do.
Me: what’s the benefit of the prehospital als in that case? if it doesn’t save a life or shorten hospital stay what’s the point
Medic 22: It’s GOOD PATIENT CARE. Its what competent, caring prehospital care providers do.

If the care by paramedics could prevent the need for hospital then I’m all for it. Unfortunately in the case wouldn’t you just be delaying hospital care and doing something just to do it?

First of all, you are assuming we are delaying care. Like I said before:

My scene time consists of a brief primary assessment, possibly a 12 lead and loading the patient where I begin the rest of my treatment–unless the patient absolutely needs other interventions prior to departure. That being said, when I am 15 minutes away from the hospital with someone puking(and further dehydrating themselves) or someone who has moderate wheezes, why shouldn’t I begin treating them?

Again…. It seems that you assume there is some abundance of Life or Limb calls in EMS. Honestly, those exciting calls just don’t come all that much. What we get a lot of is sick baby boomers, indigents, drunks, and people who don’t know any better. Does that mean we shouldn’t treat them while we can?

It is our job to treat patients, and as long as I have time in the back of my truck, I am going to do everything I can to make them more comfortable, happier, and healthier–if at all possible.

Stubborn

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stubbornI am a stubborn guy. I know when I’m right, and I don’t back down. As a matter of fact, my insistence on being right has alienated more than one person in my life. I just can’t handle people who won’t admit they are wrong.

That being said… When I’m wrong, I admit it. I might not be happy about it–often I beat myself up over simple things. But I admit I’m wrong. In this line of work admitting you are wrong is more important than always being right. Knowing when to ask someone smarter than you is one of the most important things in EMS–hell, all of medicine.

If you can’t admit you are wrong. If you can’t understand that asking for help is a virtue, not a fault… Then maybe this business isn’t for you.

Assault with a deadly…. eww…

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Woman charged in breast milk assault on jailer

OWENSBORO, Ky. — A woman in jail for public intoxication was accused of assaulting a jailer by squirting breast milk at her. WYMT-TV reported that a 31-year-old woman was arrested Thursday on a misdemeanor charge of public intoxication. But as she was changing into an inmate uniform, she squirted breast milk into the face of a female deputy who was with her.

The woman now faces a felony charge of third degree assault on a police officer. Her bond was set at $10,000

wha… tha…. fa….

Sadly this sounds like more than one of my patients this last week.

On the Truck

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En Route to a Code 3 “Sick Person” my partner says….

“Oh, this should be good”

Why?

“Dispatched as a sick person, stumbling, falling down. Great. Another Fucking drunk”

Oh. You listen to that crap? After the address and the part about going fast or slow, I quit paying attention. Literally.

medicTHREE’s week in tweets

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  • @emtdani just for you http://medicthree.com/2010/02/if-you-are-offending-easily-plus-leave-now/ #
  • @Epi_Junky @medic_bella glad I could help. M3, always here to piss people off. And do MY GOD DAMN JOB WITHOUT WANTING FAME AND GLORY! in reply to Epi_Junky #
  • @MsParamedic if you don't like my drama dani has a button she can show you….. in reply to MsParamedic #
  • @MsParamedic but then I'd have to cut myself #
  • How can curling seriously be a sport… #
  • Sorry I'm a jackass. I take my job seriously and don't like people who make a mockery of this. This profession is a joke to a lot of people #
  • ugh #
  • So I think we're going to drop daycare and tough it out at home. SO much for me sleeping in between shifts. #
  • ugh….. need to win the lottery. asap. #
  • tweetdeck won't let me add a column. wtf #
  • fixed. Damn thing hates me. #
  • @mariah_ @paramedicdan was a ricky rescue who somehow saved everyone and went on the coolest calls. all by himself. and he violated hipaa. in reply to mariah_ #
  • is there a better multi twitter account app that tweetdeck? #
  • Trying seesmic. Not sure what I think. #
  • I am starting to get sick. Sore throat. Running nose. Congestion. Can't sleep and have a day at home with my little guy. Ugh. #
  • @scoolgirl101 had a mt dew? I would like some whiskey, but that seems irresponsible! in reply to scoolgirl101 #
  • @scoolgirl101 It wouldn't be bad at all if it wasn't for the throat. I live with congestion year round anyways…. in reply to scoolgirl101 #
  • @twnstar2 don't think i care for seesmic for multi account use…. in reply to twnstar2 #
  • @twnstar2 i like seesmic on my droid, though I use tweetcaster currently in reply to twnstar2 #
  • Follow me on FACEBOOK! http://bit.ly/9ZOKG0 #
  • I have been smoke free for 18 months. 1 single slip up. I am damn proud of myself. #
  • Really should be sleeping. when the kid gets up in a few hours I will be cursing this… #
  • @slichten01 I have temptations every now and then but using chantix made it easy in reply to slichten01 #
  • (603): wait can you just look around please? that was my favorite bra and i've already asked like 3 other guys #
  • (651): Just wanted to let you know that I always win at "whose ex is crazier" because of you. #
  • I love tfln….. #
  • @RVaMedic google "tfln" it is "texts from last night" in reply to RVaMedic #
  • why will gmail load in firefox, opera, and IE, but NOT chrome? That makes about NO sense… #
  • follow me on Facebook! http://bit.ly/9ZOKG0 #
  • @Bella_Medic Happy Birthday! #
  • wish @bella_medic a HAPPY BIRTHDAY! #
  • 69 yo m, pulse 50, bp 80 systolic, syncopal episode. What would you do? #
  • The above pt had a negative 12 lead. After 250 ml fluid challenge, pt vomits, pulse drops and stays at 45. #
  • .5 mg atropine on board, pt condition improves. Then pt codes as we roll him into the ED. #
  • @Monhae ding ding ding! Pt took 2 extra doses of his beta blocker today. Was released 3 hours later. in reply to Monhae #
  • had a guy that jumped off a 3rd story parking ramp… A&Ox4, no obvious injuries. Full spinal precautions and trauma team activated… #
  • pt had skull fracture and subdural hematoma. #
  • Seriously? Hot air ballooning when it is 9 degrees out? Wtf? #
  • Have had a week of actual calls. Crazy. trauma. SVT. Actual, real, fun calls. #
  • Seriously… How much can she pad her ego? http://bit.ly/aiAQRy This crap is insane. How can she talk to a nurse like that and be proud?? #
  • I am asking my followers to block @emtdani I can't handle it anymore. She is an ego padding, narscisistic lier who needs a reality check. #