Guest guest Posted October 14, 1998 Report Share Posted October 14, 1998 The hospital where I work has decided to have the hospital's paramedics respond to calls in the city This would make the EMS an ALS service-a definite plus for the community. The EMS service is presently staffed by volunteer ECAs and EMTs who have resisted system upgrades by saying that they are too close to a hospital for ALS to be worthwhile. Hospital administration advises us that he EMT-P is to travel to the scene in the paramedic's personal vehicle. The EMT-P will not clock out from the hospital. They say that when the EMT-P leaves on the call, he is covered under the workman's comp insurance for the city's volunteer EMS. Opinions, please? Please feel free to mail me directly or post to the list. Thank you. J. wildheart3@... ___________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] ______________________________________________________________________ 2X 2X 2X DOUBLE REWARDS POINTS! 2X 2X 2X Open a new NextCard Internet Visa account with a qualifying balance transfer and you'll earn DOUBLE Rewards points. Earn free airline tickets in half the time! Intro rates as low as 2.9% APR and NO annual fee! Apply Online NOW! http://ads./click/63/0/nextcard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 1998 Report Share Posted October 14, 1998 Some questions: (1) Will the hospital's liability policy cover you under these circumstances? The carrier must be notified or it might deny coverage if there's a claim. Seek an opinion in writing from the insurance carrier. (2) Will you be responding with red lights/siren? If so, will your auto insurance policy cover you for the same premium? Will they deny coverage if you have an accident and they didn't know you were operating an emergency vehicle? Would you be covered by the hospital's blanket motor vehicle policy? Get a written opinion from your agent. (3) If you're on the payroll of the hospital and on the clock, will the volunteer EMS's comp policy cover you? Seek a written opinion from the comp carrier. (4) Will you be using hospital equipment? Are they going to give you a monitor/defib to keep in your car? If not, what are you going to use? Will they supply you with IV stuff, airway stuff, medications and a bag to put it in? (5) Whose medical license will you be working under? You'll have to have a medical director. Are there existing MICU protocols? Is the volunteer service licensed as an ALS or MICU provider by TDH? Is the hospital? Whose provider license will you be working under? Will this be a first responder arrangement? (6) Is the hospital requiring you to do this as a part of your job? Can you refuse? If this is a job requirement, you're definitely under their comp policy and they're liable for anything you do, I'll bet.. (7) Who will pay for the wear and tear on your auto? If you're required to have emergency signal equipment, will they pay for it? (8) Will you have radio communications with EMS and the hospital? Who will furnish you with that? (9) What kind of uniform will you wear? What do you wear at work? Will you be identified as an EMS volunteer or a hospital employee? (10) If you make a call at the end of your shift will you be paid overtime? There are probably more questions that could be asked, but these may be a start. Gene Gandy E. Gandy, JD, EMT-P EMS Professions Program Director Tyler Junior College Tyler, TX ggan@... Check out our website at: http://www.tyler.cc.tx.us/emmt/ Victor GA Szebehely wrote: > The hospital where I work has decided to have the hospital's paramedics > respond to calls in the city This would make the EMS an ALS service-a > definite plus for the community. > The EMS service is presently staffed by volunteer ECAs and EMTs who have > resisted system upgrades by saying that they are too close to a hospital > for ALS to be worthwhile. > Hospital administration advises us that he EMT-P is to travel to the > scene in the paramedic's personal vehicle. The EMT-P will not clock out > from the hospital. They say that when the EMT-P leaves on the call, he is > covered under the workman's comp insurance for the city's volunteer EMS. > Opinions, please? > Please feel free to mail me directly or post to the list. > Thank you. > > J. > wildheart3@... > > ___________________________________________________________________ > You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. > Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com > or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] > ______________________________________________________________________ > 2X 2X 2X DOUBLE REWARDS POINTS! 2X 2X 2X > Open a new NextCard Internet Visa account with a > qualifying balance transfer and you'll earn DOUBLE > Rewards points. Earn free airline tickets in half the > time! Intro rates as low as 2.9% APR and NO annual fee! > Apply Online NOW! > http://ads./click/63/0/nextcard > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 1999 Report Share Posted January 10, 1999 << What does everybody think of the idea of having a DON (Director of Nurses) running the ambulance? The EMS is hospital based and the guys that work there are mad! >> That is incredibly inappropriate. Unless this DON is also a paramedic, with **current** EMS management experience, s/he is absolutely not qualified to administer an EMS program. Nursing practice and paramedic practice are fundamentally different. Although I have about 10 years of experience working in hospitals, I am in no way qualified to manage nurses. Likewise, being a nurse/manager does not qualify this individual to manage EMS personnel. Such a decision reflects poorly on the administration of your hospital. Good luck, because you and your co-workers are going to need it. , BS, EMT-P EMS Manager City of Beaumont Public Health ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 1999 Report Share Posted January 10, 1999 Those are great thoughts, ! Thanks for sharing them...and I didn't think you were ranting at all. You said a lot of what I was going to say. I really didn't like the comments about " sitting on their asses " and " talking to their husbands and boyfriends. " Perhaps the writers didn't mean it, but those sounded like blanket indictments. That type of flaming is offensive to me and I hope to lots of other folks who want to be treated with respect. I am not a nurse, am not married to a nurse, mom's not a nurse, daughter is not a nurse. However, I have worked with nurses in many capacities and haven't found there to be a lop-sided quantity of b------'s as compared to any other profession. I have been a paramedic for 16 years (EMS for 19), and I now work as a firefighter (when you see the old woman with a walker getting off the truck in Sugar Land...that's me). PLEASE, please, please folks, try not to bash other medical professionals; it makes us look UNprofessional. By the way, ...you are AWESOME ;-) Cheryl K. Bakhtiari Sugar Land (two words is correct) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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Guest guest Posted January 10, 1999 Report Share Posted January 10, 1999 Easley wrote: ÿþ< For the absolute lowest price on Video/PC Games visit: http://ads./click/58/1/bottomdollar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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Guest guest Posted March 29, 2002 Report Share Posted March 29, 2002 Thanks all of you who have replied. I did exercise this morning, and as soon as I started exercising, the cramps slowed down, and weren't really there, It wasn't as bad as I thought it was. The cramps haven't been excruciating like they are sometimes...a few times before instead of cramping and being tired, I get sick feeling, like I'm gonna puke, and that was interesting to say the least, lol. Anyway, I guess this exercising isn';t so bad during the period. This also has been the first period I've had since January, so it's a little...annoying, lol. Thanks for the replies again, and God bless Deirdre/t RE: QUESTION > hi juliet - i get awful cramps with my period so i take ibuprophen for the > first 2 days or so and that enables me to do my workouts. really i find > that the stretching and exercising helps to ease the cramps, if i can get > just get started. the only other problem i have with it is that exercise > makes my flow really heavy, especially on the first day... so, sometimes if > the cramps are really bad and the flow is heavy i will rest on the first day > of my period and get back into it on the second day. if your cramping is > killing you, talk to your doctor. mine prescribes me a great pain reliever > (which is a strong ibuprophen) which women use as pain relief after > delivering a baby. it works great as long as i take it at the first sign of > my period... before the pain starts. another thing about exercising is > that it makes my pms symptoms alot less severe... the more in shape i am > in, the less bloating i get and im less irritable. > *~*~*~*~* > Carolyn in ONT Canada > > RE: > > Do you all do Tae-bo during your period? I was just wondering, > > I've never excercised during my period, because I just feel like > > never moving again, also I get bad....and I do mean bad... > > cramps. Will it harm you in any way to do Tae-Bo even when you > > are on your period? Even if the cramps are killing you? > > > > As Deb has said: " Fitness is a journey and it begins with the first step. " > " This isn't about weight loss, it's about enlightenment " - > > Visit our new vault site http://taeboon.isportsdot.com/ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 Question: Are you planning on doing the work with the single mom? Please answer me. Grrr T Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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