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rock_shoes

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Posts posted by rock_shoes

  1. No one is debating this.  We have all had experiences like this.  Sadly, people who are competent enough to follow directions and understand it are far and few between.  Although I am glad to truly help someone, a majority of our patients have no interest in helping themselves, and I will not waste my breath on them.  Get you shoes, coat, purse and lets go ma'aam.

     

    What I refer to is this new approach being floating around where EMS makes appoints to go to someones house and follow up with them after a hospital discharge.  Being in a municipal service, and have no employment with a hospital or private company I frown upon being their lackey to help them retain more money for themselves in preventing readmissions.  

    I am lucky though, we have 75 ambulances on the Chicago Fire Department and that isn't even enough.  So some idea like this would never work, looks like I will be spared.

    Where one stands with regard to the cost part of the issue is going to vary dramatically depending on the nature of the system in which they work. I for example work in a publicly funded system whereby paramedic services, hospital services, and specialty services are all funded by the province (with a portion of federal transfer money earmarked for healthcare costs). A paramedic crew assessment and discharge costs the taxpayers a few hundred dollars. An emergency department visit costs the taxpayers several thousand dollars.

    In short, the more closely paramedic services are tied to overall health services in an area, the greater the potential cost benefit to paramedic services providing non emergent care and discharge.

  2. One of the best calls I ever did was for a newly diagnosed diabetic. He called because he was concerned his BGL was elevated and his family doctor had put the fear of god in him regarding the dangers of chronically elevated BGLs. Naturally we checked it for him and it was perfectly fine. Then we investigated a little further. The real reason he had called was because he didn't know how to use his home glucometer to check his BGL. He didn't know how to use his home device because he was functionally illiterate and unable to make any sense of the instructions.

    In a matter of 20 minutes we taught this gentleman how to use his home device and as a result he never accessed EMS services again for anything of a minor nature. That's community care and that's why EMS providers must accept that they have a valuable role to play within community care.

  3. I must've missed the part where Community Based Medicine involves first responders but I do believe in strict hospital based EMS which I've enjoyed in Noo Yawk. I have always pitched in to assist the ER staff in any endeavor required just as long as it didn't interfere with my bus being delayed for calls in my PAR, help work up patients, hold down EDP's, juggle stretchers, beds & equipment, run errands, mop blood off the Trauma room floor, whatever it took to keep the hive functioning, they took care of us & we took care of them. I'd never entertain the CVS concept even by direct order, I didn't attend EMS school for that.

    I can't decide if you're a troll or just naturally inflammatory. Either way I think I'm going to pop a couple of ASA before diving any further into this.

  4. I don't see this article as a strike for or against community paramedicine. What I do see it as is a call for both appropriate education and health team collaboration. The giant culture shock that's coming for many paramedics is that they were always meant to be a health care entity. What makes us unique is the fact that we are health care workers operating in an emergency service environment.

  5. You're welcome!

    Scariest thing at the moment is, that winter time here is just coming. We have a relatively warm autumn, usually we should have got the first frost and snow by now. However, it will come soon.

    Then, and this will be a tough call, we will have real winter. Winter in Germany and Austria (two of the main passing countries for refugees) is a real threat to outdoor life. Ice covered surfaces, several meters (1 meter = 3 feet) of snow, strong winds and freezing cold of about -5 to -10° Celsius (23 to 14° Fahrenheit) is just a usual daily phenomenon here between November and April.

    We already experience infectious rates up to 100% on incoming refugees, first with childrens, soon after on all others in the camp. I dare not to imagine if it gets real cold and icy. This sure will be deadly to refugees, all of them walking, not beeing sufficiently sheltered on all their way and wearing summer clothes. Especially children. I fear we'll face another escalation of this humanitarian disaster just at our gates. :(

    This is a very realistic concern regarding any refugees coming to Canada also. In the end I support taking in refugees with a proper screening process but I'm concerned our own in country resources are not prepared to care for these people adequately. 

  6. To be honest I've stopped counting. I did 3 in just my last block of work (4 days on 4 days off) which is fairly common; so I'm willing to estimate a conservative 20+ this year. I work in a targeted service so I end up doing the pre-hospital intubations for an entire zone as opposed to a single unit.

    For those who don't have similar working opportunities, the body of evidence supporting high fidelity simulation practice and its resultant increase in first pass success is becoming quite clear. Practice, either on a manikin or a patient, breeds a higher degree of success.

  7. If the patient is ill enough to require an IO chances are they usually don't have 4-5 minutes spare. Especially if they are conscious and in agony. They want their morphine now not 5 minutes later. We got EZ-IO in 2005 with lido but  had lido removed last year so won't know about leaving it for 5 minutes. I thought it would be quicker onset. When I suture or use a digital nerve block I  find lido works very quickly

    Then do an IM or IN dose of an opiate to start out. An inhaled agent like entonox (50:50 mix of N2O2 and O2) is a bloody good stop gap while waiting for the IO to sit or IM/IN opiate administration to kick in (if it isn't contraindicated). If they're already in agony for whatever reason giving them one more reason to be in agony is far from a kindness. There are always options including the external jugular (assuming of course that's in your allowed SOP which I suspect it is if your doing nerve blocks and sutures).

  8. Here in the UK (in my service, formerly Sussex, now SECAMB)  we got EZ-IO on every vehicle.  We also had lidocaine 1%. Recently it was removed because it was found to make very little difference. I have to admit that I agree. I have used the EZ-IO in conscious pts and even in some unconscious pts their leg will raise up when pushing fluids or meds despite lidocaine.

    The key is patience. Once the slow infiltration of lidocaine is complete you have to wait a solid 4-5 minutes before flushing or doing anything else. 4-5 minutes on an ambulance call seems like an eternity so very few providers wait long enough.

    If the patient is so crook you can't wait the 4-5 minutes you just have to accept you're going to cause significant pain. On the plus side, early administration of an appropriate benzo means the patient is unlikely to remember how much the flush sucked.

  9. I can share my own decision regarding CCP education (the rather lengthy Canadian version of said education). I decided to go for it. The reading has already begun with the main portion of the course starting in January and running over the following 2 years.

     

    In the end it came down to desire for responsibility. My desire to take on that role and the education that goes with it exceeded my nervousness about whether or not it was the right decision. The decision to work in a targeted ALS response capacity was similar. Furthering ones education should be a humbling experience. It certainly has been for me. The more knowledge I acquire the more I feel as though I'm lacking in education.

    • Like 1
  10. Frankly, it seems like a waste of money when a little bit of crew education could perform the same task. If I have a crook patient I make a phone call and notify the receiving facility. If I feel the hospital needs as much notice as possible, that phone call happens before I've even left the scene. The whole concept of sending a partially completed PCR to get the hospital started seems like a waste of time. If a patient's very ill my PCR is blank when I get to the hospital and their health card is in my pocket to hand to admitting.

  11. Students force you to either remain up to date or become a lousy preceptor. For myself I find it re-invigorates my appetite for the job. It's also a wonderfully variable experience figuring out how to best assist any given student in the learning process. Some are academically strong and skill weak while others are the opposite with any combination of the above possible.

  12. Wow thinking back this site and a lot of the people who have posted on this thread have honestly really shaped the Paramedic that I am. I've even worked a bit for someone I met here! 

    I joined my first year on the job, and now at my 6th year I've already taken a step back from EMS to do some traveling and reflection. Actually writing this from a cafe in Malaysia!

    MedicNorth sounds like a good outfit,  but not sure if I'm built for the month in month out rotation that they do. 

    Rock shoes, when do you start your CCP program? I looked into doing either that or the PA program in Toronto for the future. 

    As of January 2 all of us will belong to provincial programs with class beginning on the 4th. It should be the most rewarding period of education in my career so far with an incredible amount of ICU time and a guaranteed 3:1 student:instructor ratio. Semester 1 is primarily about equipment management in the non attending role (pumps, vents, etc.) while semesters 2 and 3 really get into the medicine. The majority of the didactic portion of semesters 2 and 3 will actually be taught in hospital by ICU docs which will allow for immediate reinforcement of the concepts during ICU rounds.

    If it's an option for you I highly recommend applying. That calibre of educational experience, especially in a paid education format, is nearly unheard of for paramedics. Even if you were to decide on PA school after, the experience would be valuable without costing you anything financially.

    • Like 1
  13. At first I noticed this thread and thought to myself nope, not me. Then I looked at my profile and realized it's been over 8 years since my first post.

    A lot has changed since then. I joined as an EMR (think EMT-Basic) looking for work. Now I'm an ACP (think EMT-P) working targeted ALS and about to start another 2 years education to become a CCP (any number of variations on the theme exist. In Canada it amounts to about 5 years post secondary education). As my education has steadily increased I would like to think my opinions have re-shaped themselves appropriately. I can certainly say that characters like Dustdevil and Tnuiqs helped shape what I've become.

  14. Hey guys!

    I wanted to introduce myself before I started commenting on streams, helping on or asking questions and before I started sharing or commenting on shared stories and experiences. I am introducing myself because I would love to be a part of this site and to get full advantage from it. 

    I am a relatively new medic - EMR for 1 year and an EMT student shortly and new to this site. Love to learn from other peoples experiences and to apply their knowledge to my own. I am technically a new medic but have been in the field as a volunteer since I was 12 and grew up with Doctors and other EMS. Would love to exchange stories, experiences and questions! 

    Don't be afraid to reach out. 

    Let's have those conversations that we are dying to tell to our friends but don't because it would either terrify, disgust, or freak them out! 

     

    Those are not the conversations that will benefit you the most in your chosen career. Knowledge, leadership, procedural competence and professionalism will forever be the cornerstones of sound practice at any level. The conversations that enrich any or all of those factors will be of the greatest benefit throughout your career. 

    Arctickat said it well. Eventually those one-up-manship stories will be your nightmares. Not because they grossed you out, but because as you age you realize there are human lives attached to said stories.

    Oh and welcome to the city. Hopefully our crusty selves haven't deflated your enthusiasm. Most of us really do still love our jobs.

  15. Let's bump up the FiO2 to 1.0 if it isn't already. Paralyze. Nebulize Ventolin/Atrovent into the vent circuit. Dial her rate back to 12. Looks like she's probably hyper-inflated. Continue with some fluids at this point. Titrate in norepinephrine to a MAP of 70 if necessary. Methylprednisolone 125mg IV.

    What does her EtCO2 waveform look like? Surely they've done some labs on this girl. The chest tubes are in position but are they kinked or otherwise blocked off preventing relief of a pneumo?

  16. ABC's

    Has the tube buggered up? Are the chest tubes bubbling away like they should or have they gone awry and she's tensioning out? What are the vent settings?

    Short term a fluid challenge and a push pressor while we start getting things sorted would seem reasonable. The only infusing medications you've mentioned are the Fentanyl/Versed. What are they set at?

    Allergies? Meds? PMHx.? History of the precipitating event? Any recent lab values available?

  17. Was the patient taking his insulin correctly? I know of several IDDM patients who would use the wrong length needle and end up depositing insulin between layers instead of into the subcutaneous layer. As a result the insulin would sit in pockets instead of being properly absorbed at the time of injection. The patient would take increasing amounts of insulin to control their BGL not realizing what was happening. Seemingly at random these "pockets" of insulin would absorb and the patient would end up having profound and sudden drops in BGL.

  18. How frequently do these violent tendencies occur? Can you find any statistics?

    Anecdotally I can say I've only ever had to sedate one overdose patient after administering naloxone in the last 7 1/2 years. As we later discovered this particular patient had a long standing history of violent/aggressive behaviour directed toward LEOs and Paramedics.

    In my own experience the key to preventing violence and aggression with these patients is to correct hypoxia prior to bringing them up. This however does beg the question as to whether or not a lay person should be administering naloxone. Lay people won't be providing ventilation or oxygen prior to administration.

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