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Why it Hurts

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Like a page from a book, dispatch sends us code 3 for a finger amputation. Grumbling as I roll out of bed while dispatch updates us–a 27 year old female at one of the local state-run group homes who intentionally put her hand in a garbage disposal. The grumbling increases. The staff at these facilities leave something to be desired and the patients usually are fine. This has to be an overreaction, doesn’t it?

As we round the corner inside the door, the scene is as expected–practically empty.  One staff member sits with our wheelchair bound patient, everyone else seems to be missing, despite it being meal time. A quick once over leads me to believe there is no amputation, the annoyance sets in.

So I ask my patient “whats going on tonight? How come you did this?” I am completely unprepared for the answers that follow. My patient–a 27 year old paraplegic female who suffers from Bipolar disorder, severe depression, and a gamut of other psychological issues–literally just came from our Behavioral Hospital. The very behavioral hospital she has requested to be transported to several times over the last few weeks due to depression and serious thoughts of suicide.

The story goes like this… as a child she was sexually abused by her father, her brothers, and her uncles. Her father pushed her down a set of stairs leading to a mild Traumatic Brain Injury and complete paralysis from the belly button down.

The state put her back in this home where these ingrates continued to sexually assault, mentally abuse, and psychologically destroy her for the next 9 years.  Finally the father is arrested for assaulting a neighbor’s daughter–when the story comes out again and the state takes her into their custody–only to be bounced from group home to group home, from one mental facility to another and back to the group homes. She has literally begged to be given inpatient treatment and the physicians say she just needs long term counseling. She is unable to do anything for herself–she cannot function without someone pushing her along. Not because she is physically weak, but because she is mentally broken.

She hurts because she has to actually hurt herself to get anyone to listen. I tell her we’ll get her help but she knows what that means. I will take her to yet another hospital where yet another doctor will push her back into the care of undereducated and overworked group home staff. All she wants is to feel safe. She wants to know that she can’t get out and THEY can’t get in–but no one will give this to her.

By the time we arrive at the hospital I know her story. I know enough to know that she needs this help. She knows what she needs, but doesn’t have the resources to do it herself.  As I transfer care I take the doc aside and give him the story. I tell him how I think she is a genuine threat to herself and that her mental anguish is real–not like so many of the calls we go on–the ones that made me grumble as I rolled out of bed. This is the real deal.

– — –

Two months later the tones startle me awake. Code 4, Any unit in position, Cardiac Arrest to an address I am all too familiar with. Dispatch updates with a 28 year old female, unconscious, not breathing, her throat is cut.

My foot reaches the floor. My knuckles are white on the wheel. My partner looks at me and asks me if I’m O.K.  I just drive faster. I walk in, the same deserted scene. The same deafening silence. I look down and know we’re too late. I let out a sigh, turn around and make the call.

I hurt because we failed.


Memorial Day

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I didn’t get a post up this year, so here is this:

And my post from last year: Remember The Fallen

Awake.

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Living days while working nights has proven to be a challenge. It seems as though every night I fall asleep with little effort, but wake up every night between 2 and 3 am–like clockwork–and just can’t seem to fall back asleep.

Tonight I woke up and it was like a switch had been clicked. Wide awake. I hate it. I want to sleep when I’m home, and want to be able to function during the day when possible. Honestly, I wish when I woke up NORMALLY it was that quick.

I am sure part of this is from getting up with Asher for soooooo many nights at nearly that exact time, but I know most of it is from my Night work schedule. It has proven to be a challenge I didn’t expect.

I know that the final key to the puzzle is a little anxiety. Honestly, we’re just skating by financially and have been going through several other medical issues between Mrs Medicthree, Asher, and myself. Asher’s Kidney draining issue is still undiagnosed, despite nearly 30,000 dollars in tests and doctor visits. Mrs. MedicThree’s problems seem to be in the clear, but will require frequent monitoring to be sure. As for myself, I am scheduled for Nissen Fundoplication surgery on Tuesday for my Acid Reflux/Gerd and I am rather anxious to get it over with. I have such frequent reflux that it is a serious burden on our lives. I’m also hesitant because of some of the terror stories out there about the side effects, but I feel as though I have no choice at this point.

Anyways, I plan on fininshing up a few posts in the making this morning/tonight, so please keep coming back to see what I’ve got.

Godspeed, Friends.

The Little Ambulance that Couldn't

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On December 7th, 2008 I took a job with a little ambulance service in my hometown. The town where I grew up–where my parents still live. My wife and I moved back home this spring.

The Little Ambulance that Couldn’t has one hell of a reputation. When I was hired on I thought most of it was BS. I was HOPING it was all BS. They said the owner was crazy. They said he was unprofessional, unqualified, unstable…. They said the medics were out of practice, that they were just stretcher jockies.

I tried. I really, honestly tried to make the best of it. I needed an out, and this was it. I took what I had and ran with it… But the breaking point was always on the horizon.

Every time someone went wrong at the Little Ambulance that Couldn’t it was always the end of the world. Out of soap… the sky is falling. Missed an IV… the apocalypse is near! Had a patient get pissed…. OMG… The dinosaurs are coming!!!

The LCTCn’t was more concerned with LOOKING like a real ambulance service than BEING a real ambulance service. We spent more time sweeping, washing trucks, and mopping floors than we did running calls. Since January 1st I was ON 46 calls. I was lead on 26. On 12 of those calls there were 3 or more staff members on the call(any time we had an “exciting” call, every damn staff member in town showed up cause they thought we NEEDED the help. I’m sorry, but I don’t need 27 people vying for control of MY call.).

The owner at the LCTCn’t had a hair trigger. Any time something tiny happened he went off half cocked. When business was bad he wouldn’t hesitate to let us all know how we were all replaceable and he was willing to work 24/7(I raise you this and challenge you to actually do this now!).

I am a paramedic. I want to run calls, restock my truck, and run some more. I’ll wash my rig when it is dirty. I’ll mop a floor when it NEEDS it. I won’t do busy work for the sake of doing busy work. I’ll also take a nap when time permits.

When you treat me like I am disposable, I will do everything my power to prove you otherwise. Step one, walk out. Step two, fight back. Step three…. Win.

Do not try to intimidate me with reminder mailings of my confidentiality agreement. My complaint with the department of labor is well within my rights. You have failed to realize everything I did for you during the last 7 months. I wrote your protocols, designed your website(which you are now unable to update without me), implemented your EPCR program(which you are clueless on) and set up and maintained your internal network. You have no one who can do these tasks. Enjoy finding a medic/maid/IT guy to replace me.

When you are working back to back to back 24 hr shifts with your medics who can’t even spell succinocholine let alone provide you dosages. Enjoy your CPAP device I researched that you aren’t even sure when to use. Enjoy back to back 8 hour transfers. Enjoy continuous turnover because you aren’t willing to take the tools we gave you to succeed.

You’ve proven all you care about is LOOKING like a real ambulance service. When you’re ready to BE a real ambulance service… don’t call me. I have moved on. Gone. Done. Finished.

Good Bye.

Unspoken

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Here at the little ambulance that could, we are scheduled by need, and thus we rarely work with the same partner. I have some partners that I love to work with, some that I dread working with, and some that I rarely, if ever work with. As a matter of fact there are two medics I have never worked with.
Every partner has a different way of communicating with their partners. Me… I usually keep to myself. I do my job, then find a place to escape. Some Chat, chat, chat all day long. Regardless of whether I chat back. Others get pissed about everything. Every time something goes wrong(from getting a hang nail to crashing the truck) they scream at the top of their lungs.
I find that GOOD partners need not say a word to communicate. My Brother-from-another-mother and I just know. We walk in, we know whose call it is, who is doing what, and why we are doing it. When the shit hits the fan, we know where eachother will be stepping, what we’re going to do, and when we will do it.
When I work with my favorite partner, we hardly talk on calls. I find that the partners I don’t trust are the ones I talk to the most. I feel like I have to make sure they aren’t f’ing my license throughout the call. But the good ones just do their jobs.
A few weeks ago I was on a call with someone I will call notsogoodmedic and I just couldn’t figure it out. She had to tell me everything she was doing. She’d ask what I wanted to do. She’d ask if we were ready—all while it was her run. I think that calls like this make everyone think we’re all idiots. The patient cant rest because they don’t know if you can handle their care… The LEO’s and FF’s think we’re disorganized and stupid… The patient’s family gets scared because we’re about to take their loved one away and they don’t trust us…
The little ambulance that could has a “reputation”. One that isn’t one most services would be looking for… I just wish that some of the medics here a) saw that reputation b) realized their actions were responsible for it c) gave a damn to change it…
Tomorrow I work with one of my favorite partners, and I can’t wait. When we get a call we both know that the other person is going to do their job and thats it. Is it really that complicated?
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This Is Not a Test…

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Everyone is familiar with the Emergency Alert System…. You know… That damn “this is a required weekly test” bullshit…
So every day for 8 days straight… I have seen something similar to this:
Problem is…. how can it be weekly (or monthly) when it is every fucking day!!!!
Just what I need to annoy the piss out of me while I’m stressed out to the max!

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Never Did I know…

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Just how hard being away from my baby would be. Tonight is my first shift away from home–away from my little boy.

I hate it. It leaves me with the worst feeling in the world. I can’t describe it at all. 
I had no idea something so small and new could have such a strong pull on my emotions.
I love you Asher. 
Mrs. M3–I’m sorry I didn’t get you anything for V-day. I promise I will make up for it on your Birthday–next friday(see! I do remember). Thanks for the cards… they were so very sweet.
Take care of our little boy. His daddy misses him…..

It started

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With Ninja Medic. Then Epi followed suit. 


Really about once a month one of my fellow EMS bloggers(and I’ve done this too) eludes to one of the many stories of terror that haunt our Nightmare Bank. 

There will always be a few memories of calls past that will NOT go away.

The irony for me is that tomorrow I am teaching a SIDS portion of our refresher as well as a Neonatal Care refresher. 

More than a few things are ironic about this:
  • My haunting pt is just a wee 18mo baby. Helpless. 
  • We talk about CISM(Critical Incident Stress Management) in both classes–how often do we actually use those tool? How many systems HAVE them?
  • I’m about to have a baby. A helpess baby. I know far more than I wish I did. 
Be safe out there, all. Godspeed. 

I feel…

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Like death… 

Sick day numero uno. 

Ps, figuring out which stroller/car seat/etc to go with sucks… Being who I am–it is likely to be the most expensive one there is…

For most people…

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Today is a solemn day of remembrance. Today, September 11th, 2008 is the 7 year “anniversary” of one of the most infamous days in American history.

For my family and I today is more. Sept. 11th, 2001 was also the day we burried my grandfather. 

I remember everything about this day. I remember waking up to the phone in our hotel ringing–my grandmother telling us to turn the TV on. I remember watching the second tower fall–and I remember praying for all involved–especially those who ran IN despite the impending danger.

I also remember the tears in the eyes of the VFD members who came to mourn my grandfather–undoubtedly more to those tears than our day of mourning…

I remember the vintage fire engine that lead our way–not knowing who would be left to maintain it now that grandpa was gone.

I remember everything. I think about these things every day. 

You are not forgotten Grandpa… None of you are. 

May God have Mercy on your Souls.

Memo to my patients:

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Stop Signs Exist for a reason. You stop at them. Speed limit signs follow the same principle. 

You are damn lucky that Bus didn’t have any kids in it. Though you, your girlfriend, and your unrestrained passenger are going to be a little sore. 

To Usually subpar BLS servce: Don’t call for a ALS assist only to give us the ONLY patient with no injuries. Oh, and if I ever catch you putting a C-collar on a patient without backboarding them again I might do things to you that will make your mother cry. IF they NEED a C-Collar, they need a backboard. And don’t give me that “we only have two boards in our rig” crap. There were 4 fire trucks–3 of which had upwards of 3 boards each. 

PS, they didn’t need either. 

Asshats. 

Oh, and friendly Volunteer fire department… When there is no fire, and the vehicles have been removed from the scene, you can take your helmets off. ER… you could atleast flip the visor up… I know it looks cool… but it makes me look at you kinda funny…

Oh, back to you BLS crew. Don’t tell me how to treat my patients. You are the one that decided they needed a collar. That collar bought that 17 year old girl a 21 mile trip on a backboard.

Blah. 

I want something more…

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I’m not a fool. I know that the likelihood of be lasting in EMS forever is minimal. Especially on the streets. So, I bring myself to wanting more. I have some college, not a lot. Definately nothing impressive. So what do I do? Do I do an online program, do I attend school locally? I know I can’t go full time. I can’t afford to not be working. 

I’d just assume get started on it sooner than later. I don’t know what I want to get started on though… Do I want to just get a degree so I’m elligible to be supervisor/director somewhere in the future? Do I want to be an RN? I don’t think I could handle being a floor nurse, or a clinic nurse. It just isn’t my cup of tea. Any tips/pointers out there? What would YOU do?
I’m considering a few options, but am interested in those online Moron… err Medic to RN bridge programs. Are they worth a damn? I know “The College Network” is a joke. But what about Excelsior? Eh, I guess I’ll keep digging.
(Random Side thought) I want this ambulance. Not only is the “lift” brilliant, but take a real close look at that back window (click to enlarge). It reads: “It’s not a Taxi. Use it, Don’t Abuse it. 
Maybe I will become a professional Blogger. You know, start 40 blogs, most of them useless. Somehow make money doing nothing? Nah? Well, guess The Golden Arches will always be around too…
I just know that the stress, the obese patients that can never walk, the hours, and the PAY will make it impossible to do this forever. What would YOU do?












(resume side thought) Ah hell, don’t bother clicking that image. Here is the close up. I rock at Google. Think I can get a job as a professional Googlerer? Yup. I made up a word, and a job.

I should add: They have an entire campaign associated with this. Good Stuff. 

When to become a Paramedic. The battle to the death…

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So… My buddy EE over at Backboards and Band-Aids thinks that you should be an EMT for 2 years before you go to Medic School(mind you, she is slow and her post isn’t up yet…). This is a rather common belief in EMS. Lots of people hate rookie medics and even more so hate rookie medics with no field experience.

Enter me. I have no field experience(field internship excluded), was never a EMT-B in the field, and went about 4 months between Basic class and the start of my Medic class. During that four months, I worked in a crappy warehouse job. Yup. Not EMS.

But my experience in school exposed me to a variety of Prospective Medics. We had about 5 students with some field experience. Emt-B, Emt-I/85, etc. Some had a couple years, some had 6 months of field experience. All but 2 of them ranked below me in the class. 2 of them were dead last in the class. Does that mean anything? Not necessarily. While I think a good foundation of info is important in EMS, you learn a lot of things–and are tested on a lot of things–that you will never, ever need to know. So my ability to regurgitate pointless pieces of information on a test doesn’t mean I’m a good medic. Being first in class or being last in class doesn’t discern your abilities either…

However, I think the one thing that was different from me and my “seasoned” classmates was their attitudes. I came into class knowing I knew jack shit. A few of them came into class knowing they knew everything. They knew they were perfect at skills. They knew their assessment was top-notch. Sure, my assessment was weak. I think my lack of field experience was the only reason it was weak. But… I think my clean slate allowed me to pick up solid skills, while discerning good practices from bad practices.

My first solo assessment in the field I flopped around like a fish out of water… Finding a groove and flow is tricky, and that set me back from my “seasoned” classmates. What didn’t set me back from them was a false impression that I didn’t have anything to learn. I haven’t met a medic student who was a practicing EMT who didn’t have this problem. All of my classmates who were practicing EMTs walked into class with their heads high and their chests puffed out. They had the typical “future paragod” look on their faces. To this day I still know that I know nothing…

So I think the real positive side to me not having been a practicing EMT was that I knew I had to try harder. I had to compensate for what I perceived as a weakness, and in reality may have proven a strength. I didn’t come into medic school with false impressions, bad habits, or a shit-tastic attitude. I walked in the way I walked out. Knowing that Medic school is only designed to create “Entry Level Competent Paramedics”. Not Paragods.

I think one of the Most important factors in deciding to go to Medic School is AGE. I was in the middle of the age bracket in my class. Not to say all 18-19 year olds aren’t ready to be Medics–But I KNOW without a doubt that I wasn’t ready at 18, 20, or 22. Obviously my friend EE is much wiser than her years on this planet. I look to her as a Role Model–despite her disgruntled, un-compassionate ways…

EE Knows her shit. She is also doing what she can to better herself, and her family. She isn’t like most of my younger classmates. So maybe it isn’t “AGE” so much as it is “life experience”. When you are truly and adult–not just legally–then I think you are ready to enter Medic School, regardless of experience… But if you can’t figure out a Basic Skill, and appreciate their uses(not everyone needs an IV, Tube, or obnoxious over use of medical terminology…) then you need to get your head out of your ass. I am willing to bet the people who have lead many to think unexperienced medics are bane on the existence of EMS have dealt with people who just shouldn’t be in EMS. I don’t think it was their lack of experience in the field that was the problem–it was their lack of experience at all that was the problem.

Sitting. Waiting. Wishing.

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So… Took my CBT exam today. Walked out feeling like a huge moron. There were questions I just absolutely didn’t expect. Even worse… the whole “choose the MOST correct answer” bullshit just riles me up. You aren’t choosing the CORRECT answer. You are choosing the MOST correct answer. The answer is often not the one that I would chose to do in the field.

Computer Adaptive Testing(CAT) also makes judging your performance on the test very difficult. Unlike a written test in class, this test will either get easier or harder, depending on how big of a moron you are.

Whatever. I’m pissed, anxious, and preparing myself for the reality that I might have to retest. Hopefully I’ll have something to tell you tomorrow. I’m well on my way to being my own Psych patient.

Registry Smegistry…

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Thats right. Screw you National Registry and Pearson Vue. So it turns out my local Pearson Vue doesn’t have a CBT exam slot for me until July 11th. Yeah… That’s right. My new job is scheduled to start July 7th(and even by then I won’t have a state license). The next closest location isn’t available till July 8th.

Nope, that won’t work either. So… I’m left to drive 138(.87) miles to podunk community college in a different state to take my CBT exam. Better yet, it’s at 9am, supposed to be there by 0830. That means I need to leave by 0615… so I should get up by 5:30, realistically 0600… Fantastic.

I’m not too worried about the practical exam, which as of now is 9 hours away. I’m actually so confident that I’ve put all my eggs in one basket and planned a bbq/drunken bonanza at my little ghetto abode after the test. Brilliant, I know.

None the less… I hope to be reporting back to all of you faithful readers tomorrow with good news and one less step to go in my Paramedic journey of misery.

Until then… Chicken Wing.

Good News all around…

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So… I’ve made it through 2 days of practicals at school. It is definitely weird to be in class again…

We took a 210 question test yesterday that is supposedly very indicative of the pass rate with registry. I got an 80%. Not thrilled, but it helped me identify some areas I need to study.

Next… I found a job. It’s with the service described below. I’m pretty excited about it. Now all I have to do is actually become a paramedic…

We found a house in said town too. Pretty nice older house, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, blah blah. It’s cheap, nice, and only a block from the station.

Finally, the exciting news. We’re expecting! Not real far along right now, but we couldn’t be more excited. And terrified. We have dogs–but that doesn’t exactly equate to children…

Anyways… time to do a little studying(by osmosis), get some rest, and get at it again tomorrow…

National Registry

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Is just a little over a week away… And I’m terrified. Seriously. I feel like I don’t know my stations at all, and the CBT test? Oh sweet jesus…

It’s time to buckle up, hunker down, and get this crap pounded into my head… Any Suggestions?

Interview number 1(or is it 3)

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So I had an interview today with a County Ambulance close to home. They have a county population of 6,500, run ~500 calls a year, and have 3 medic positions total…

But It sounds interesting. It is a salaried on-call position. 7 days on call(24 hrs a day) then 4 days off. I would be on call. Not at a station. So basically, I get paid to sit at home, and come in to work when I get a call. Then go home….

There would be a good amount of transfers to the bigger hospitals about 40 minutes away. The coverage area includes a small reservation, a large casino, about 20 miles of interstate and a rather infamous intersection.

It would definitely be interesting. Most surprising was the pay. It would pay the same as any of the other local services, plus benefits are covered 100%. So… if we can find a place to live in small town X I think we might consider it.

We’ll see. It would be something to last me a couple years at least.

Slacking Off, Things I've learned, Blah Blah Blah.

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So I’ve been slacking off for the last few weeks. Yup. That’s me. Really, I’ve been slacking off for 24.5 years and only sometimes people notice…

So Here goes:

Life as a student is pretty much over. Sure, I’ve got tons of studying to do. But that often leads to things less productive… ie spending entirely too much time online. I’ve been lurking in the background in a few blogs, of course EE always keeps some of my blogosphere attention.

A few others will be deserving of a post all there own soon…

My internship experience is still sinking in. I learned a lot during that 6 weeks that school couldn’t possibly teach us. It also helped make the things they taught me seem real and practical.

Things I learned:

  • Pediatric Codes will never be easy.
  • Crazy people rock. Most people are crazy–just varying degrees and quirks.
  • I’m Crazy–What was I thinking entering this field? Seriously? Lack of sleep, underpaid, overworked(I’ll do my best to slack off when possible) and seriously–how can we forget the STRESS.
  • EMS is a JOB. You hear a lot of EMT/Firefighters say that EMS is a LIFESTYLE. Sure, on call shifts, etc make it hard not to take your work home with you, but it shouldn’t be your LIFE. If you can’t separate the two I don’t think you can survive in this field long.
  • I am a Type A personality. My wife could have told me that a long time ago, but being on the streets proved that.
  • Without my wife, I’m useless. She is my rock, my stability, my counselor, and my doctor. She’s smarter than most Counselors and Doctors too.
  • I like my life. I’ve done lots of things. Worked on high profile campaigns, fished the Gulf, Backpacked in Glacier, been to college, Got Married, got yet another DOG, and have nearly finished Medic School. I love this life.
  • When you’ve had a bad day, 1 beer is just fine. 10 is not. A bottle of Jack Daniels will NEVER fix the problem–despite the feeling that it might.
  • IF you need 10 beers or a bottle of JACK to function, get the hell out of EMS.
  • I’m lucky.

That’s good enough to call a post, isn’t it?

Coping.

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So I mentioned yesterday my chest pain patient who said “I just know I’m gonna to die”… And like they told us in class–believe them, because she did.

But what class doesn’t teach us is how to deal with that. I know that I helped her– but I didn’t save her life. I have no glory story to tell around the station. But I helped her. I made her comfortable, relaxed, and even got a smile or two out of her. But she died. Something isn’t sitting right with me here.

She told me she was going to die, and really, I didn’t believe her. I’ve heard patients say it before–but they didn’t look like her. They didn’t use the voice inflection that she did. She meant it. She knew it. And there wasn’t anything I or that bunch of lollipops could do about it.

School doesn’t teach us how to cope–the real world does that. School doesn’t teach us how to treat patients with respect–the real world does that–hopefully. School doesn’t teach us how to improvise, how to juggle multiple patients in one truck(they actually teach us NOT to have more than one critical patient–but this is the real world), how to deal with shitty partners, or how to look at a family member in the eyes who is just staring at you with those “you’re here, everything will be ok” eyes–when you know that it isn’t going to be ok. That even if you get pulses back all you’ve done is created a 150 lb vegetable with a heartbeat. Crass. maybe. Reality. Yes.

School doesn’t teach us much really. Sure, we gaind a lot of “knowledge”. Pathophys, pharmacology, anatomy, drug calcs, cardiology and even some grasp at “medical” illnesses. But where in that book did it actually show me how to care for my patients?

I didn’t see it.

Honestly, if it wasn’t for my wife–there isn’t any way I could do this. That little old lady yesterday wrecked my world in the same way a little boy did 3 weeks ago. People Die. It’s a fact. When you get old you’re supposed to die–often death itself is a relief. Too many times in my life I’ve seen loved ones suffer only to have death as their savior. But they aren’t supposed to tell me they’re going to die–and mean it. I don’t have anything to fix that.

If I could go back to that 23 minutes I spent with that little old lady yesterday just to make them a little better, a little more comfortable I would. Knowing they were some of her last just wreaks havoc in my little world. But, for just a few minutes, I do know that I did comfort her. I guess that’s all I have.

Whipped with a wet noodle

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Sorry it’s been a few days since I’ve posted… life is a bit hectic, I’m not sleeping well and by the time I make it home each day… I’m completely spent.

I feel like I’ve been whipped with a wet noodle.

Today we had one particularly interesting transfer… We’ll keep it short. Upon arrival at the rural ICU, our PT had 12(TWELVE, 10+2, 6×2, 8+4, get it?) drips going. He had drugs to increase his BP, that increased his HR, so he had drugs to lower his HR. It goes on like this for days.

HE also had 14 primary diagnoses on his most recent dictation from his doctor… Fantastic.

On another note, did you know the bible(or at least major portions) has been translated into 2,287 languages.

On the 5a-5p critical truck (Medic/RN) then headed home for a fantastic 3 day weekend with my wonderful wife and terrible dogs… Anyone want a little monster of their own?

In The Arena…

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When I was younger and having trouble with “fitting in” my dad came to me and gave me a plague with a pretty famous Teddy Roosevelt quote on it. It was a plaque he had gotten some time ago from the huge corporation he worked for–when they used to care about their employees.

It always meant a lot to me, and that quote has stuck with me ever since. For many reasons–but one of them has been to prove to my friends, family, and myself that I could be that man. I don’t need or want thanks, praise or admiration. I want to do my job, and do it well. Sometimes that means holding a lonely old man’s hand and taking him in for a routine checkup, and sometimes that means telling a family that their mother/father/son/daughter have died and there just isn’t anything we can do or them. And… Every now and then we get to save a life–if only temporarily.

But on to the Roosevelt quote:

“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.”

“Citizenship in a Republic,”
Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, April 23, 1910

Thanks Dad. That has always stuck with me.

A common theme…

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Among EMS blogs and mediblogs in general is the “you don’t need an ambulance/doctor/Rx” philosophy. And truth be told–most of the people who call 911, go the ER, the Doctor, or the pharmacy don’t need the services provided by said facilities.

But, thinking a patient doesn’t need your service and saying it are two different things. In EMS we rarely get the luxury of telling our patients off. Some Docs will do it, but rarely.

This week, I had a Doc actually stand up to a pt. We picked up a frequent flyer who knows the hospitals in this county better than we do–hell, better than docs/administrators/nurses/dispatchers know them.

He has “chronic pain” which of course, can only be cured by morphine. But morphine only works when he gets atian too.

The Doc flat out, no qualms just walks in the room. “I’m out of morphine… Wait. I have a shit-ton of morphine. I’m just not going to give you any. You should feel lucky I wrote you a prescription for tylenol. Come back here again looking for drugs you don’t need and I’ll make sure you wait in triage till the last patient in this hospital dies.”

Well. He walks out while we all stand outside the door gawking –and says… “Next time make sure to remind him what I just said. And tell the secretary that if she ever gives him a room prior to being triaged again I’ll make sure she’s the last patient to die here.”

Ok… so funny went creepy. This doc might be a bit of a dick. This is one of the much smaller facilities around. But still, Docs rarely actually tell their patients they are drug seekers. They beat around the bush. You should see some of the creative dictation they give just to make sure they don’t call their pt a drug seeker.

Fuck it. I think we should brand them.

But all those posts about not needing our services were right. You don’t need an ambulance. You need a glass of water, a bandaid, 3 tylenol, a pepto, some neosporin, a hot meal and some god damn sleep. There are other places you can get those marvelous things other than the damn hospital. But if you think you MUST go to the hospital. Call YELLOW CAB.

PS… it’s f’ing cold outside.

We are trained.

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We are trained to save lives. We are trained to get up early, rush to work, do what it takes, and get to the scene. We are trained to push through blood/guts/tears/vomit/feces to find the cause. We are trained to decipher the difference between minor symptoms. 
We are trained to treat. We are trained to diagnose. 
We are trained to respond. We are trained.

But are we trained to take it all home at night and deal with it?
I’m not sure. Sure, CISM is there to help–but you have to reach out for that. De-briefings are standard sometimes… But even then, you have to go to bed at night with everything you’ve done in your head. You have those pictures there. How do we decode that into something to strengthen us–not tear us apart.

Maybe that’s part of what being a seasoned medic means. You learn how to deal. You learn how to cope. Hopefully that isn’t what has turned so many of the medics I think of as “burnt out” or disgruntled away from their love for the field.

Someday I hope to answer that question a little better.

I want to tell you lies

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This is going to have to sum up the last few days. Not sure I have it in me to write it all out.


I WANT TO TELL YOU LIES

I want to tell that little boy his Mom will be just fine
I want to tell that dad we got his daughter out in time
I want to tell that wife her husband will be home tonight
I don’t want to tell it like it is, I want to tell them lies

You didn’t put their seat belts on, you feel you killed your kids
I want to say you didn’t … but in a way, you did
You pound your fists into my chest, you’re hurting so inside
I want to say you’ll be OK, I want to tell you lies

You left chemicals within his reach and now it’s in his eyes
I want to say your son will see, not tell you he’ll be blind
You ask me if he’ll be OK, with pleading in your eyes
I want to say that yes he will, I want to tell you lies

I can see you’re crying as your life goes up in smoke
If you’d maintained that smoke alarm, your children may have woke
Don’t grab my arm and ask me if your family is alive
Don’t make me tell you they’re all dead, I want to tell you lies

I want to say she’ll be OK, you didn’t take her life
I hear you say you love her and you’d never hurt your wife
You thought you didn’t drink too much, you thought that you could drive
I don’t want to say how wrong you were, I want to tell you lies

You only left her for a moment, it happens all the time
How could she have fell from there? You thought she couldn’t climb
I want to say her neck’s not broke, that she will be just fine
I don’t want to say she’s paralyzed, I want to tell you lies

I want to tell this teen his buddies didn’t die in vain
Because he thought that it’d be cool to try to beat that train
I don’t want to tell him this will haunt him all his life
I want to say that he’ll forget, I want to tell him lies

You left the cabinet open and your daughter found the gun
Now you want me to undo the damage that’s been done
You tell me she’s your only child, you say she’s only five
I don’t want to say she wont see six, I want to tell you lies

He fell into the pool when you just went to grab the phone
It was only for a second that you left him there alone
If you let the damn phone ring perhaps your boy would be alive
But I don’t want to tell you that, I want to tell you lies

The fact that you were speeding caused that car to overturn
And we couldn’t get them out of there before the whole thing burned
Did they suffer? Yes, they suffered, as they slowly burned alive
But I don’t want to say those words, I want to tell you lies

But I have to tell it like it is, until my shift is through
And then the real lies begin, when I come home to you,
You ask me how my day was, and I say it was just fine
I hope you understand, sometimes, I have to tell you lies

~ Kal The Rebel ~

http://www.thelunatick.com/ems/i_want_to_tell_you_lies.htm