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Steve,

The REAL world is when you transport a patient inappropriately by helo, one

that didn't need to go that way and would receive no benefit from it, and the

helo crashes and kills your patient. You're sued and your

certification/license taken away for inappropriately transporting the patient

that you could have,

should have handled on the ground.

Then what are you going to do?

Gene

In a message dated 4/15/2004 5:22:14 PM Central Daylight Time,

vidorfire249@... writes:

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

southeast texas.

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

study on the yahoo web page?

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

Steve

working in the REAL world

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Guest guest

Steve,

The REAL world is when you transport a patient inappropriately by helo, one

that didn't need to go that way and would receive no benefit from it, and the

helo crashes and kills your patient. You're sued and your

certification/license taken away for inappropriately transporting the patient

that you could have,

should have handled on the ground.

Then what are you going to do?

Gene

In a message dated 4/15/2004 5:22:14 PM Central Daylight Time,

vidorfire249@... writes:

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

southeast texas.

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

study on the yahoo web page?

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

Steve

working in the REAL world

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Guest guest

Steve,

The REAL world is when you transport a patient inappropriately by helo, one

that didn't need to go that way and would receive no benefit from it, and the

helo crashes and kills your patient. You're sued and your

certification/license taken away for inappropriately transporting the patient

that you could have,

should have handled on the ground.

Then what are you going to do?

Gene

In a message dated 4/15/2004 5:22:14 PM Central Daylight Time,

vidorfire249@... writes:

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

southeast texas.

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

study on the yahoo web page?

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

Steve

working in the REAL world

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Guest guest

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a scientific

study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast texas.

Who said you are an idiot or that people in East Texas are idiots?

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide that

during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden questions

my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a study on the yahoo

web page?

Do you want a copy of the studies? Send me Dr. Amsdens' email an I will send

him the studies.

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide behind

when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure out how I

can best deal with what I have. My state legislature and state EMS

association (lol) can't figure out we need some back up in our corner of the

world yet. The fastest ride to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller

on the roof.

You don't think I have done this in 30 years. In the emergency department we

don't hide behind the staff--but there are a few cleaning people that are

pretty big and I guewss we could hide behind them if we had to. How fast is

required? We know there is no such thing as The Golden Hour. How fast is

necessary? Will the difference between ground and helicopter transport make

a clinical difference.

I gotta go to work. I may even need to get the sherriffs department to set

up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi trauma patient

needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study? Perhaps you should.

You are the person responsible for patient care and it is incumbent upon you

to be up to date on the science of EMS--not the Sherriff's

Office.

Steve

working in the REAL world and having an emotional tirade

30+ years in the real world of EMS and emergency medicine (including working

as a flight paramedic)

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Guest guest

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a scientific

study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast texas.

Who said you are an idiot or that people in East Texas are idiots?

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide that

during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden questions

my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a study on the yahoo

web page?

Do you want a copy of the studies? Send me Dr. Amsdens' email an I will send

him the studies.

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide behind

when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure out how I

can best deal with what I have. My state legislature and state EMS

association (lol) can't figure out we need some back up in our corner of the

world yet. The fastest ride to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller

on the roof.

You don't think I have done this in 30 years. In the emergency department we

don't hide behind the staff--but there are a few cleaning people that are

pretty big and I guewss we could hide behind them if we had to. How fast is

required? We know there is no such thing as The Golden Hour. How fast is

necessary? Will the difference between ground and helicopter transport make

a clinical difference.

I gotta go to work. I may even need to get the sherriffs department to set

up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi trauma patient

needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study? Perhaps you should.

You are the person responsible for patient care and it is incumbent upon you

to be up to date on the science of EMS--not the Sherriff's

Office.

Steve

working in the REAL world and having an emotional tirade

30+ years in the real world of EMS and emergency medicine (including working

as a flight paramedic)

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Guest guest

Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a scientific

study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast texas.

Who said you are an idiot or that people in East Texas are idiots?

As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide that

during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden questions

my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a study on the yahoo

web page?

Do you want a copy of the studies? Send me Dr. Amsdens' email an I will send

him the studies.

I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide behind

when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure out how I

can best deal with what I have. My state legislature and state EMS

association (lol) can't figure out we need some back up in our corner of the

world yet. The fastest ride to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller

on the roof.

You don't think I have done this in 30 years. In the emergency department we

don't hide behind the staff--but there are a few cleaning people that are

pretty big and I guewss we could hide behind them if we had to. How fast is

required? We know there is no such thing as The Golden Hour. How fast is

necessary? Will the difference between ground and helicopter transport make

a clinical difference.

I gotta go to work. I may even need to get the sherriffs department to set

up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi trauma patient

needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study? Perhaps you should.

You are the person responsible for patient care and it is incumbent upon you

to be up to date on the science of EMS--not the Sherriff's

Office.

Steve

working in the REAL world and having an emotional tirade

30+ years in the real world of EMS and emergency medicine (including working

as a flight paramedic)

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Guest guest

You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries me:

" We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. "

Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time I

looked education was readily available in this country to just about anybody

who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

GG

In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

magnetass@... writes:

We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

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Guest guest

You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries me:

" We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. "

Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time I

looked education was readily available in this country to just about anybody

who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

GG

In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

magnetass@... writes:

We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

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Guest guest

Find another job? I was looking for a job when I found EMS, and I will be OK

when I leave it. We all get paid to make decisions, and not all....in fact,

a whole bunch of them, are either wrong, or could have been made better with

hindsight. You just have to do what you think is best. If you thought that

every decision you made was going to cost you your job/certs, how could you

ever do anything? We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. If somebody wants my

job or certification becuase I was doing what I thought was best for my pt.

they can have it on a plate. I, for one, am a pretty talented guy, and I'll

be just fine. I have to look at myself in the mirror, and I don't get paid

NEARLY enough money to asuage myself if I start compromising what I think is

the right thing because I'm afraid of getting fired or sued. There are

plenty of things I could do for money.

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

> Steve,

>

> The REAL world is when you transport a patient inappropriately by helo,

one

> that didn't need to go that way and would receive no benefit from it, and

the

> helo crashes and kills your patient. You're sued and your

> certification/license taken away for inappropriately transporting the

patient that you could have,

> should have handled on the ground.

>

> Then what are you going to do?

>

> Gene

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 5:22:14 PM Central Daylight Time,

> vidorfire249@... writes:

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

> southeast texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

> decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

> figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

> to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Find another job? I was looking for a job when I found EMS, and I will be OK

when I leave it. We all get paid to make decisions, and not all....in fact,

a whole bunch of them, are either wrong, or could have been made better with

hindsight. You just have to do what you think is best. If you thought that

every decision you made was going to cost you your job/certs, how could you

ever do anything? We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. If somebody wants my

job or certification becuase I was doing what I thought was best for my pt.

they can have it on a plate. I, for one, am a pretty talented guy, and I'll

be just fine. I have to look at myself in the mirror, and I don't get paid

NEARLY enough money to asuage myself if I start compromising what I think is

the right thing because I'm afraid of getting fired or sued. There are

plenty of things I could do for money.

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

> Steve,

>

> The REAL world is when you transport a patient inappropriately by helo,

one

> that didn't need to go that way and would receive no benefit from it, and

the

> helo crashes and kills your patient. You're sued and your

> certification/license taken away for inappropriately transporting the

patient that you could have,

> should have handled on the ground.

>

> Then what are you going to do?

>

> Gene

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 5:22:14 PM Central Daylight Time,

> vidorfire249@... writes:

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

> southeast texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

> decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

> figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

> to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Comments following the ridiculous rant.

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

> southeast texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

> decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

> figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

> to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

You need to quit hiding behind the fact that you work for a living, we all

do. What you are doing is avoiding studying anything because it makes YOU

make the decision. As it stands, if anything goes wrong, you can make the

vain attempt at blaming everyone else for what goes wrong, " It's in our

protocols " , " The Doctor said " , or my personal favorite " We've always done it

that way " .

One of these days, when the defecation hits the oscillator, and you get

sued, you'll fall back on those defenses and you will sink. They don't hold

water. They don't hold water with a jury, and they won't hold water when

they compare your care to the care of a prudent Paramedic given the same

circumstances.

Your comment about working in the real world is almsot sickening.

I am a Paramedic, I am a field paramedic, I have been a ground field Medic

for 14 years, and was a flight Paramedic for 2 years, you and I do the same

job, I work 48 hour shifts, 48 on and 48 off, so I spend half my life at the

station. I also work a part time job, so I don't want to hear crap about how

you have to work hard for your money. I still find the time to read

studies, and ask questions, for more than one reason, but to me the most

important is so that I can offer the best care to my patients as possible.

As an ex flight medic, I can't tell you how many times we were called to

ridiculous bullsh** because some idiot on the ground thought we practiced

magic medicine in the air, that since we were " Flight Medics " we could shake

up the mojo at 750 feet and perform miracles. I have had crews wait for

nearly 30 minutes for us to arrive when they could have been to the trauma

center is 20, because it " was in the protocols " that for any patient

suffereing from 'X', they should be flown. Get a hand on your protocols,

give your input istead of just whining about what's in them.

Use a little common sense, and for G**'s sake, quit thinking you are the

only one around here that has to work for a living.

You need some back up in your corner of the world? What are you doing to get

it? Surely you don't think that pissing and moaning on an EMS listserver

will instantly give you some magic answers do you? Your ESD is broke? Raise

the tax rate. Committee won't do that? If not there isn't diddly sh** your

state level politicians or an EMS organization can do for you, get your

public educated and let them go scream at the committee.

If you are not part of the solution, then you are certainly part of the

problem.

Mike

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Guest guest

Comments following the ridiculous rant.

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural

> southeast texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do

> decide that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to

> figure out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department

> to set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

You need to quit hiding behind the fact that you work for a living, we all

do. What you are doing is avoiding studying anything because it makes YOU

make the decision. As it stands, if anything goes wrong, you can make the

vain attempt at blaming everyone else for what goes wrong, " It's in our

protocols " , " The Doctor said " , or my personal favorite " We've always done it

that way " .

One of these days, when the defecation hits the oscillator, and you get

sued, you'll fall back on those defenses and you will sink. They don't hold

water. They don't hold water with a jury, and they won't hold water when

they compare your care to the care of a prudent Paramedic given the same

circumstances.

Your comment about working in the real world is almsot sickening.

I am a Paramedic, I am a field paramedic, I have been a ground field Medic

for 14 years, and was a flight Paramedic for 2 years, you and I do the same

job, I work 48 hour shifts, 48 on and 48 off, so I spend half my life at the

station. I also work a part time job, so I don't want to hear crap about how

you have to work hard for your money. I still find the time to read

studies, and ask questions, for more than one reason, but to me the most

important is so that I can offer the best care to my patients as possible.

As an ex flight medic, I can't tell you how many times we were called to

ridiculous bullsh** because some idiot on the ground thought we practiced

magic medicine in the air, that since we were " Flight Medics " we could shake

up the mojo at 750 feet and perform miracles. I have had crews wait for

nearly 30 minutes for us to arrive when they could have been to the trauma

center is 20, because it " was in the protocols " that for any patient

suffereing from 'X', they should be flown. Get a hand on your protocols,

give your input istead of just whining about what's in them.

Use a little common sense, and for G**'s sake, quit thinking you are the

only one around here that has to work for a living.

You need some back up in your corner of the world? What are you doing to get

it? Surely you don't think that pissing and moaning on an EMS listserver

will instantly give you some magic answers do you? Your ESD is broke? Raise

the tax rate. Committee won't do that? If not there isn't diddly sh** your

state level politicians or an EMS organization can do for you, get your

public educated and let them go scream at the committee.

If you are not part of the solution, then you are certainly part of the

problem.

Mike

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Guest guest

I hear Luby's cafeteria in Orange County is hiring.

Bledsoe, DO, FACEP

Midlothian, TX

" Faith is believing what you know ain't so. "

Mark Twain

Following the Equator

Don't miss EMStock 2004!http://www.emstock.com

Re: spell check omitted

Comments following the ridiculous rant.

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast

> texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide

> that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure

> out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department to

> set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

You need to quit hiding behind the fact that you work for a living, we all

do. What you are doing is avoiding studying anything because it makes YOU

make the decision. As it stands, if anything goes wrong, you can make the

vain attempt at blaming everyone else for what goes wrong, " It's in our

protocols " , " The Doctor said " , or my personal favorite " We've always done it

that way " .

One of these days, when the defecation hits the oscillator, and you get

sued, you'll fall back on those defenses and you will sink. They don't hold

water. They don't hold water with a jury, and they won't hold water when

they compare your care to the care of a prudent Paramedic given the same

circumstances.

Your comment about working in the real world is almsot sickening.

I am a Paramedic, I am a field paramedic, I have been a ground field Medic

for 14 years, and was a flight Paramedic for 2 years, you and I do the same

job, I work 48 hour shifts, 48 on and 48 off, so I spend half my life at the

station. I also work a part time job, so I don't want to hear crap about how

you have to work hard for your money. I still find the time to read

studies, and ask questions, for more than one reason, but to me the most

important is so that I can offer the best care to my patients as possible.

As an ex flight medic, I can't tell you how many times we were called to

ridiculous bullsh** because some idiot on the ground thought we practiced

magic medicine in the air, that since we were " Flight Medics " we could shake

up the mojo at 750 feet and perform miracles. I have had crews wait for

nearly 30 minutes for us to arrive when they could have been to the trauma

center is 20, because it " was in the protocols " that for any patient

suffereing from 'X', they should be flown. Get a hand on your protocols,

give your input istead of just whining about what's in them.

Use a little common sense, and for G**'s sake, quit thinking you are the

only one around here that has to work for a living.

You need some back up in your corner of the world? What are you doing to get

it? Surely you don't think that pissing and moaning on an EMS listserver

will instantly give you some magic answers do you? Your ESD is broke? Raise

the tax rate. Committee won't do that? If not there isn't diddly sh** your

state level politicians or an EMS organization can do for you, get your

public educated and let them go scream at the committee.

If you are not part of the solution, then you are certainly part of the

problem.

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

I hear Luby's cafeteria in Orange County is hiring.

Bledsoe, DO, FACEP

Midlothian, TX

" Faith is believing what you know ain't so. "

Mark Twain

Following the Equator

Don't miss EMStock 2004!http://www.emstock.com

Re: spell check omitted

Comments following the ridiculous rant.

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast

> texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide

> that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure

> out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department to

> set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

You need to quit hiding behind the fact that you work for a living, we all

do. What you are doing is avoiding studying anything because it makes YOU

make the decision. As it stands, if anything goes wrong, you can make the

vain attempt at blaming everyone else for what goes wrong, " It's in our

protocols " , " The Doctor said " , or my personal favorite " We've always done it

that way " .

One of these days, when the defecation hits the oscillator, and you get

sued, you'll fall back on those defenses and you will sink. They don't hold

water. They don't hold water with a jury, and they won't hold water when

they compare your care to the care of a prudent Paramedic given the same

circumstances.

Your comment about working in the real world is almsot sickening.

I am a Paramedic, I am a field paramedic, I have been a ground field Medic

for 14 years, and was a flight Paramedic for 2 years, you and I do the same

job, I work 48 hour shifts, 48 on and 48 off, so I spend half my life at the

station. I also work a part time job, so I don't want to hear crap about how

you have to work hard for your money. I still find the time to read

studies, and ask questions, for more than one reason, but to me the most

important is so that I can offer the best care to my patients as possible.

As an ex flight medic, I can't tell you how many times we were called to

ridiculous bullsh** because some idiot on the ground thought we practiced

magic medicine in the air, that since we were " Flight Medics " we could shake

up the mojo at 750 feet and perform miracles. I have had crews wait for

nearly 30 minutes for us to arrive when they could have been to the trauma

center is 20, because it " was in the protocols " that for any patient

suffereing from 'X', they should be flown. Get a hand on your protocols,

give your input istead of just whining about what's in them.

Use a little common sense, and for G**'s sake, quit thinking you are the

only one around here that has to work for a living.

You need some back up in your corner of the world? What are you doing to get

it? Surely you don't think that pissing and moaning on an EMS listserver

will instantly give you some magic answers do you? Your ESD is broke? Raise

the tax rate. Committee won't do that? If not there isn't diddly sh** your

state level politicians or an EMS organization can do for you, get your

public educated and let them go scream at the committee.

If you are not part of the solution, then you are certainly part of the

problem.

Mike

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I hear Luby's cafeteria in Orange County is hiring.

Bledsoe, DO, FACEP

Midlothian, TX

" Faith is believing what you know ain't so. "

Mark Twain

Following the Equator

Don't miss EMStock 2004!http://www.emstock.com

Re: spell check omitted

Comments following the ridiculous rant.

> Well once again and expected since I didn't post a message with a

> scientific study attached were all idiots over here in rural southeast

> texas.

>

> As I mentioned, we don't decide the transport destination. I do decide

> that during prolonged extrication, and by Dr. M. Amsdens'

> protocols we we will utilize air ambulance. Next time Dr. Amsden

> questions my protocol compliance I guess I better say that I read a

> study on the yahoo web page?

>

> I don't have a door, staff of nurses, and other specialties to hide

> behind when the call is toned out. I have a very few seconds to figure

> out how I can best deal with what I have.

> My state legislature and state EMS association (lol) can't figure out

> we need some back up in our corner of the world yet. The fastest ride

> to the best surgeon is usually got a propeller on the roof.

>

> I gotta go to work/ I may even need to get the sherriffs department to

> set up an LZ for me in a little while. When they ask if my multi

> trauma patient needs a helicopter, perhaps I should cite them a study?

>

> Steve

> working in the REAL world

You need to quit hiding behind the fact that you work for a living, we all

do. What you are doing is avoiding studying anything because it makes YOU

make the decision. As it stands, if anything goes wrong, you can make the

vain attempt at blaming everyone else for what goes wrong, " It's in our

protocols " , " The Doctor said " , or my personal favorite " We've always done it

that way " .

One of these days, when the defecation hits the oscillator, and you get

sued, you'll fall back on those defenses and you will sink. They don't hold

water. They don't hold water with a jury, and they won't hold water when

they compare your care to the care of a prudent Paramedic given the same

circumstances.

Your comment about working in the real world is almsot sickening.

I am a Paramedic, I am a field paramedic, I have been a ground field Medic

for 14 years, and was a flight Paramedic for 2 years, you and I do the same

job, I work 48 hour shifts, 48 on and 48 off, so I spend half my life at the

station. I also work a part time job, so I don't want to hear crap about how

you have to work hard for your money. I still find the time to read

studies, and ask questions, for more than one reason, but to me the most

important is so that I can offer the best care to my patients as possible.

As an ex flight medic, I can't tell you how many times we were called to

ridiculous bullsh** because some idiot on the ground thought we practiced

magic medicine in the air, that since we were " Flight Medics " we could shake

up the mojo at 750 feet and perform miracles. I have had crews wait for

nearly 30 minutes for us to arrive when they could have been to the trauma

center is 20, because it " was in the protocols " that for any patient

suffereing from 'X', they should be flown. Get a hand on your protocols,

give your input istead of just whining about what's in them.

Use a little common sense, and for G**'s sake, quit thinking you are the

only one around here that has to work for a living.

You need some back up in your corner of the world? What are you doing to get

it? Surely you don't think that pissing and moaning on an EMS listserver

will instantly give you some magic answers do you? Your ESD is broke? Raise

the tax rate. Committee won't do that? If not there isn't diddly sh** your

state level politicians or an EMS organization can do for you, get your

public educated and let them go scream at the committee.

If you are not part of the solution, then you are certainly part of the

problem.

Mike

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Gene:

The same thing caught my eye. The current DOT paramedic cirriculum is

difficult. In fact, when I wrote the chapter on pathophysiology, much of it

was the same level as I had in medical school. The airway material a

paramedic needs to know places them head and shoulders above all other

non-physician health care members (except CRNAs) and ahead of 90% of

physicians--save anesthesiologists, intensivists and emergency physicians.

Celebrate the knowledge--don't hide behind it.

Bledsoe, DO, FACEP

Midlothian, TX

" Faith is believing what you know ain't so. "

Mark Twain

Following the Equator

Don't miss EMStock 2004!http://www.emstock.com

Re: spell check omitted

You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries me:

" We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged with the most

responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are expected to be

damned near perfect in our judgements. "

Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time

I looked education was readily available in this country to just about

anybody who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

GG

In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

magnetass@... writes:

We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

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" Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time

I

looked education was readily available in this country to just about anybody

who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves? "

I mean the coursework for the certification, obviously. Who in their right

mind is going to invest in the ammount of education that, say, a PA or

bachelors degreed RN has....to make 11 bucks an hour? It's nobody's " fault "

it's just a factual statement that the educational requirements for

pre-hospital medicine rank towards the low end of the scale of healthcare,

but are charged with far more clinical responsibility than the vast majority

of them. Why does that statement worry you? I'm not saying that we aren't

responsible to learn as much as we can about our jobs, and medicine, I'm

saying that we are charged with performing more, with less, with little room

for error, for no money. Now, fortunately, the industry is populated with

people who are dedicated and love what they do. It's why I do it. You can't

put a price on job satisfaction, but the next thing that has to change is

what we are being paid. You aren't going to get people to commit to more

education without some financial benefit. Doctors are at the top of the heap

because they committed to the most education. I am paid little better than a

nurse aid or medication tech, but am trained in a lot of ways to RN level.

The security guard at the ER makes more money than I do. At some point are

we going to ask that somebody commit to a bachelors program in pre-hospital

medicine, to make 28K a year? Being a medic is cool, but it ain't that cool.

We can talk all day long about professionalism, and raising the standard of

our education, but until the compensation for the industry across the board

is raised dramatically, we are just spinning our wheels.

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

> You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries

me:

>

> " We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. "

>

> Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last

time I

> looked education was readily available in this country to just about

anybody

> who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

> " uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

>

> GG

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

> magnetass@... writes:

> We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Just when I get depreesed, somebody like Hatfield or Magnetass brings me

hope for EMS.

Education must come before pay. This is sad for the people who must get

education and tolerate poor pay for a while. I was in the same dilemna in

1980. I loved EMS and wanted to make a career of it. But I saw no future and

had a wife and two young kids at home. I was lucky in that school always

came easily and I earned a BS with pretty good grades while working as a

paramedic. I found that if I went to medical school, I could make 10-20

times my EMS salary and still stay involved in EMS. Unfortunatley, few have

such luck. Things will get better. Read my article at the following link and

see how some other countries do EMS. Peole give me grief about my fixation

with Australia (it is more than the topless beaches). Read about the

Australian paramedics in my article: http://www.bryanbledsoe.com/Pay.pdf

" Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time

I looked education was readily available in this country to just about

anybody who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves? "

I mean the coursework for the certification, obviously. Who in their right

mind is going to invest in the ammount of education that, say, a PA or

bachelors degreed RN has....to make 11 bucks an hour? It's nobody's " fault "

it's just a factual statement that the educational requirements for

pre-hospital medicine rank towards the low end of the scale of healthcare,

but are charged with far more clinical responsibility than the vast majority

of them. Why does that statement worry you? I'm not saying that we aren't

responsible to learn as much as we can about our jobs, and medicine, I'm

saying that we are charged with performing more, with less, with little room

for error, for no money. Now, fortunately, the industry is populated with

people who are dedicated and love what they do. It's why I do it. You can't

put a price on job satisfaction, but the next thing that has to change is

what we are being paid. You aren't going to get people to commit to more

education without some financial benefit. Doctors are at the top of the heap

because they committed to the most education. I am paid little better than a

nurse aid or medication tech, but am trained in a lot of ways to RN level.

The security guard at the ER makes more money than I do. At some point are

we going to ask that somebody commit to a bachelors program in pre-hospital

medicine, to make 28K a year? Being a medic is cool, but it ain't that cool.

We can talk all day long about professionalism, and raising the standard of

our education, but until the compensation for the industry across the board

is raised dramatically, we are just spinning our wheels.

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

> You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries

me:

>

> " We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. "

>

> Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last

time I

> looked education was readily available in this country to just about

anybody

> who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

> " uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

>

> GG

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

> magnetass@... writes:

> We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

>

>

>

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Tell it to the Marines, er, I mean Congress.

Mike

Re: spell check omitted

" Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last time

I

looked education was readily available in this country to just about anybody

who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

" uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves? "

I mean the coursework for the certification, obviously. Who in their right

mind is going to invest in the ammount of education that, say, a PA or

bachelors degreed RN has....to make 11 bucks an hour? It's nobody's " fault "

it's just a factual statement that the educational requirements for

pre-hospital medicine rank towards the low end of the scale of healthcare,

but are charged with far more clinical responsibility than the vast majority

of them. Why does that statement worry you? I'm not saying that we aren't

responsible to learn as much as we can about our jobs, and medicine, I'm

saying that we are charged with performing more, with less, with little room

for error, for no money. Now, fortunately, the industry is populated with

people who are dedicated and love what they do. It's why I do it. You can't

put a price on job satisfaction, but the next thing that has to change is

what we are being paid. You aren't going to get people to commit to more

education without some financial benefit. Doctors are at the top of the heap

because they committed to the most education. I am paid little better than a

nurse aid or medication tech, but am trained in a lot of ways to RN level.

The security guard at the ER makes more money than I do. At some point are

we going to ask that somebody commit to a bachelors program in pre-hospital

medicine, to make 28K a year? Being a medic is cool, but it ain't that cool.

We can talk all day long about professionalism, and raising the standard of

our education, but until the compensation for the industry across the board

is raised dramatically, we are just spinning our wheels.

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

> You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries

me:

>

> " We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements. "

>

> Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last

time I

> looked education was readily available in this country to just about

anybody

> who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of the

> " uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

>

> GG

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

> magnetass@... writes:

> We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

>

>

>

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>

> Just when I get depreesed, somebody like Hatfield or Magnetass brings me

> hope for EMS.

We're in a world of sh** if your hope for EMS lies in a guy who is an

opinionated, arrogant, egostitical SOB, and another guy with a nickname like

'Magnetass'....:)

No offense .......:)

Mike

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Fact is, most of us in pre-hospital medicine aren't paramedics. The

paramedic curriculum is difficult, but so is everything else in medicine,

and we sure don't recieve the general medical training of a BSN, PA or Nurse

Practicioner, but we sure have the responsibility....without the burden of

the paycheck. I celebrate the knowlege that I have, I really do, and I'm

proud of what I do. My point is that a field medic is faced with making

decisions that affect lives every time they work. We are held to a degree of

clinical responsibility that is completely unique. A BSN in the ICU has tons

of marvelous training and vast medical knowlege. They also have an ultimate

backup...an MD. I don't have that. I took a 9 month certificate course in

pre-hospital medicine, but my ass is standing there in a dark room at 3 in

the morning trying to figure out why gramma is dying, or in the middle of a

chaotic bar after a double shooting, usually by my lonesome. My decisions

better be right on the money too. I am fortunate in that I get to have

another paramedic with me, but most people don't have that luxury, so when

the guy quits breathing, everybody is staring at you. We are expected to

perform the miraculous, but with no fish, and only a couple of loaves. I

might be able to dazzle physicians with my knowlege of difficult airways,

but in most places, if I blow one, I'm out looking for another job.

Steve's, and my point, is that we are the ones out there in the dark and

rain, trying to figure out what to do. We are pushed out there with

inadequate support in most every aspect of EMS that you can name, trying to

make a difference, keeping in mind that a whole bunch of people are going to

be second guessing what you did, doctors, lawyers, families, and some guy

who has merely hung on longer than everybody else so gets to be

" supervisor " , despite the fact that.....you have the most responsibility,

with the least amount of education, for the least amount of money. What a

bargain we are!

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

>

> You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries

me:

>

> " We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged with the most

> responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are expected to

be

> damned near perfect in our judgements. "

>

> Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last

time

> I looked education was readily available in this country to just about

> anybody who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of

the

> " uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

>

> GG

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

> magnetass@... writes:

> We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Fact is, most of us in pre-hospital medicine aren't paramedics. The

paramedic curriculum is difficult, but so is everything else in medicine,

and we sure don't recieve the general medical training of a BSN, PA or Nurse

Practicioner, but we sure have the responsibility....without the burden of

the paycheck. I celebrate the knowlege that I have, I really do, and I'm

proud of what I do. My point is that a field medic is faced with making

decisions that affect lives every time they work. We are held to a degree of

clinical responsibility that is completely unique. A BSN in the ICU has tons

of marvelous training and vast medical knowlege. They also have an ultimate

backup...an MD. I don't have that. I took a 9 month certificate course in

pre-hospital medicine, but my ass is standing there in a dark room at 3 in

the morning trying to figure out why gramma is dying, or in the middle of a

chaotic bar after a double shooting, usually by my lonesome. My decisions

better be right on the money too. I am fortunate in that I get to have

another paramedic with me, but most people don't have that luxury, so when

the guy quits breathing, everybody is staring at you. We are expected to

perform the miraculous, but with no fish, and only a couple of loaves. I

might be able to dazzle physicians with my knowlege of difficult airways,

but in most places, if I blow one, I'm out looking for another job.

Steve's, and my point, is that we are the ones out there in the dark and

rain, trying to figure out what to do. We are pushed out there with

inadequate support in most every aspect of EMS that you can name, trying to

make a difference, keeping in mind that a whole bunch of people are going to

be second guessing what you did, doctors, lawyers, families, and some guy

who has merely hung on longer than everybody else so gets to be

" supervisor " , despite the fact that.....you have the most responsibility,

with the least amount of education, for the least amount of money. What a

bargain we are!

magnetass sends

Re: spell check omitted

>

> You know, I agree with most of what you said, but this statement worries

me:

>

> " We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged with the most

> responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are expected to

be

> damned near perfect in our judgements. "

>

> Whose fault is it that we receive the least amount of education? Last

time

> I looked education was readily available in this country to just about

> anybody who really wants it. So what's keeping us from breaking out of

the

> " uneducated " mold? Could it be......ourselves?

>

> GG

>

> In a message dated 4/15/2004 8:03:45 PM Central Daylight Time,

> magnetass@... writes:

> We recieve the least ammount of education, are charged

> with the most responsibility, and paid the least ammount of money, but are

> expected to be damned near perfect in our judgements.

>

>

>

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