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Asysin2leads

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Posts posted by Asysin2leads

  1. While I swore off political and religious discussions, watching the Republican debate tonight left me wondering about something. The question about what to do with the 30 year old previously healthy person who has no health insurance and gets a catastrophic illness. Michelle Bachmann's response was "Hurrrk.... Obamacare...bad...hurrrkkk..." but Ron Paul said that it should be about choice, and if you choose to not buy health insurance, and you cannot pay for it when you need it, then you should have service denied. Fair enough. You don't plan ahead, you don't pay the price, you don't enjoy the benefits. But my question is, "So what do you do when that person calls 911?" This is a particularly valid question in that when the uninsured and underinsured stop getting healthcare, it falls on EMS to treat them. Now I fully believe health care in the States is in crisis, and I do agree that a government mandate to purchase a product is unconstitutional, though not without precedent, but the thing is, in a system that denies treatment and care to a population, the roles of primary care shifts to emergency medical services, and I can tell you that paramedics providing primary care is a heck a lot more expensive than providing primary care in just about any other capacity. Add to that the cost of treating a disease before it reaches the catastrophic level where EMS is actually needed, and you're really setting up a recipe for financial disaster. So my question is, if the Tea Party plans on denying service to the uninsured, do they also plan on cutting reimbursements to EMS services? No more Medicare or Medicaid checks to those nice people in billing? I mean, my suggestion is, they'd better, or government floated healthcare costs are going to go through the roof. If they do cut Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement, how would that sit with their supporters with names like AMR, Rural/Metro, Transcare, and the IAFF? This is really just a thought experiment. No ethical discussions. I am just talking dollars and cents.

    • Like 1
  2. Hi guys, I have a few questions that I can't seem to find the answers to anywhere. What is an FDNY paramedics salary with overtime? (Ballpark estimate) On the nyc.gov it does not reflect salary with overtime and mandation. Does FDNY ride double Medic? What is the starting hourly rate?

    I'm already a paramedic in NYS just looking into some info on FDNY

    I can't tell you the starting yearly salary, but I can tell you that starting out without overtime you'll take home about $1k every two weeks. Yep. Garbage collectors, on the other hand...

  3. Dwayne, let me say there I don't think there has been or ever will be an award or citation or medal or pin I could ever get that would be more meaningful than what you said. Thank you. Thats going to boost my ego nicely for a couple of weeks.

    Lone, when you're first learning these rhythms, its sometimes useful to take one giant step back and focus on the basics. Cardiology is like an onion, you can keep pulling back layer after layer until the point you start crying. At this point, just try to focus on complex and pattern recognition and don't worry so much about things like arrhythmias arising from PE's or aberrancies, so long as you know they exist at this point and what causes them, don't worry too much about it.

    By AHA algorithm standards, this person was in an unstable wide complex tachycardia to begin with, the chest pain and SOB was enough and they recommend beginning synchronized cardioversion for such an unstable patient. I have my own views that someone with chest pain and SOB with an arrhythmia is more symptomatic and less invasive procedures should be tried prior to cardioversion, but again, don't complicate things. The man is unstable. He needs to be cardioverted. When he deteriorated to AMS, he was definitely, definitely unstable. For unstable patients, strictly by the AHA standards, it doesn't matter if its a ventricular rhythm or an SVT (including a-fib) with an aberrancy, the treatment is the same, cardiovert and be merry.

    Unstable tachycardias are easy, its cardioversion, cardioversion, cardioversion. My recommendation would be to know the standards for an unstable patient like you know your own name so that when they pop up in a scenario they jump out at you like a giant red flag, but it seems you're pretty much there already. Then you can boil a scenario down to blah blah blah blah blah chest pain blah blah blah blah wide complex tachycardia, game set and match. Probably what your instructor was getting at with this scenario is that normotensive BP should not be taken into consideration when determining the unstable vs. stable. Probably some not so bright paramedic student will say "Hey, he's not unstable, his BP is okay" and then your instructor can smugly explain the criteria for an unstable patient.

  4. The NREMT has decided to kick things up a notch and redo everyone's certification levels. Basically, the new levels will be as such: Current Level New Level NREMT First Responder Emergency Medical Responder (NREMR) NREMT-Basic (NREMT-B) Emergency Medical Technician (NREMT) NREMT-Intermediate/85 (NREMT-I/85) Advanced Emergency Medical Technician (NRAEMT) NREMT-Intermediate/99 (NREMT-I/99)

    Paramedic (NRP)

    NREMT-Paramedic (NREMT-P)

    What I think is interesting is that basically, now, the levels of certification are nearly identical to the ones in British Columbia and other parts of Canada, FR (NREMR), EMR (NREMT), PCP (NRAMET), and ACP (NRP). I think some conservative pundits will be unamused.

    What it means is I'll have to scrape together some dough to do a 48 hour transition course to keep my paramedic certification. I'm not sure what this means for Intermediate-99's, though.

    Actually, I think these changes are a step in the right direction. Even though it may only be semantic, the changes to the paramedic level look like a step away from technician and towards recognized health care provider. Plus I can now shut those annoying BLS before ALS guys up who use to say stuff about the EMT being the most part of EMT-P. Not any more!

    I'm interested to see what they have planned for the transition course.

  5. I understand that kiwi, but I can't see a that BP being low enough to cause AMS, even in a hypertensive patient. I can't quote you the exact pathophysiology, but I assume that AMS secondary to hypotension has to do with decreased cerebral perfusion pressure, which is simply the difference between the MAP and the ICP. Before the drop, the MAP was 140 mm Hg, and afterwards it was 92.7 mm hg. Yes its a significant drop but still well above the ranges where I believe you'd start to see deficiencies in end organ perfusion. I've seen 70 mm Hg as the level where you start to get into ischemic brain damage, but actually I'm curious as to what pressure will lead to the beginnings of a decrease in mental status. Any physicians on the board want to weigh in?

  6. I'm not sure how in depth this scenario wants you to get, but I would say the biggest concern would be if the wide complex tachycardia was atrial fibrillation with aberrancy. Post surgical patients can be at risk for hypercoagulability, which while I don't think would increase the risk of atrial fibrillation does raise the risk of clot formation. I'm also not sure if they are trying to throw you with the BP and the patient's mental state... I would think something other than a cardiac cause for the decrease in mental status if he is maintaining a normotensive pressure. While by ACLS guidelines this patient is unstable because of his decrease in mental status, I would still suggest starting an antidysrhythmic and hunting for an alternate cause for the decrease in mental status rather than going to synchronized cardioversion because of the increased risk of blood clot formation if the rhythm turns out to be a-fib with aberrancy. That's my real life answer. As for textbook answers, I would say thus:

    1. Primary assessment concerns are what they always are. Airway, breathing, circulation, make sure he has an airway and a good O2 flow and SPO2.

    2. Questions to ask the patient: Are you allergic and/or hypersensitive to amiodarone? Is he on a Beta-blocker, Calcium Channel Blocker, or Digoxin, who's effects may be enhanced by the drug? Does he have Wolf-Parkinson-White Syndrome?

    3. The most important step? I don't know... history? I guess?

    4. See my above answer for real life. Textbook answer is probably to regurgitate the ACLS algorithm for an unstable patient with a wide complex tachycardia, and move to synchronized cardioversion at 100 J, although the algorithm for the stable patient does mention moving to a calcium channel or beta blocker if you suspect atrial fibrillation with aberrancy, unless, of course he does have WPW and A-fib and then you don't want to use diltiazem. So to wrap it up, if the decrease in mental status is caused by the arrhythmia, then move to synchronized cardioversion, unless it isn't, in which case, move to amiodarone, unless its actually atrial fibrillation with aberrancy, in which you should move to a calcium channel blocker, unless he also has WPW, in which case you shouldn't. That should clear things up.

  7. BoCat, It sounds like you performed in an exemplary fashion for your first lone cardiac arrest. When it comes to diagnostics, if something doesn't fit, sometimes its best just to throw it out. If this patient hadn't been stung by a wasp, and you found him as presented, it would be a pretty clear case of cardiogenic shock secondary to bradycardia. If as the previous posters have mentioned, there were no signs of anaphylaxis, then the wasp sting probably has little or nothing to do with the case. A 55 year old overweight male going into cardiac arrest is almost without a doubt suffering a cardiac event. I wouldn't be surprised if on autopsy it would show a significant occlusion of the right coronary artery which let to infarction of the sinoatrial node. In other words he had a heart attack and died. It happens. A lot. Especially to overweight 55 year old males. You did fine.

  8. I think we're viewing this from different angles. The question as I understood it was if a BLS level ambulance (EMR in Canada, EMT-B in the states) in a system that does not allow off the ambulance MDI's or Nebs who has responded to a 911 call. I'm talking one with full transport capabilities and somewhere in the range of a maximum of 45 minutes to an hour of a definitive care or at least an ALS intercept. I'm not talking about being on a aircraft, or a ferry, or if you're hiking or in some other similar circumstance. In these circumstances, anything can become the proper course of action. That guy who had to saw his own arm off to extricate himself from under the rock did the proper course of action in his situation, but I don't think anyone would argue that in day to day operations, a field amputation for a person with a simple pinned extremity is the proper course of action. And yes I'm aware that field amputations do occasionally occur, but again, they are exception, not the rule. In the normal course of day to day operations, you should not be administering pharmaceuticals not prescribed by a physician to the patient unless you have the appropriate knowledge of their indications, contraindications, actions, and a general understanding of pharmacology. You further complicate issues when you start using bystander medications. This has nothing to do with litigation, that's my view of good clinical practice.

    In addition, the point that think is most important is that an asthmatic who is in danger of serious deterioration needs more than an MDI. I have seen far more situations where people spend time searching for an MDI as the definitive cure all for a serious asthmatic rather than calling 911, or in the case of a BLS crew, reaching for the BVM and initiating transport. I once brought an asthmatic out of a bradycardic PEA only using a BVM and an OPA. While I was doing this the family and bystanders were still trying to squirt an MDI into her mouth.

    Lastly, where I worked, the department of anesthesiology had the heavy hitters for the difficult crash airway in the ER. They were the ones the residents didn't want to call while insisting they knew what they were doing. That's what I was getting at.

  9. Yup the CRASH2 study .... I believe a link was provided earlier and a you tube of Dr. Ian Roberts for that.

    Hey zilla .. what ever happened to Hypertonic Saline in TBI ? ... I know that one study was stopped in the poly trauma due to efficacy "not proven". I will say I was a bit sceptical from the onset as after doing ABGs and STAT lytes (up the ying yang) and sodium going it critical ranges with large doses of N/S alone and pitiful coags (making kool-aid but at least it didn't clot in the abg syringe, dark humour there.) so question is are there any other positive findings coming out of the sandbox in that reguard ? My reason for asking is my next deployment is kinda remote (no blood) and any advice appreciated.

    https://secure.muhea...A_291_p1350.pdf

    Yeah I really should try reading the last line of articles sometime, lol.

  10. Good luck on your test :beer:

    Welcome to BC and you never know once you pass your exam and start working for BCAS I might see you on car when I go full time in Vancouver in a couple years!

    I work for BCAS out of Nanaimo right now along with a few ALS paramedics but I don't think any of them are on this site. I will ask next time I am at work and talk to a couple of friends that work on the ALS cars in Victoria and see if I can get any tips for you.

    Brian

    Thanks Brian! If you're ever in the Lower Mainland area let me know.

  11. I think you're missing the point. An MDI will prevent further exacerbation. I'm not talking about a person with a fully equipped ALS bus. In that case, a nebulizer is the correct course of action. This isn't the situation that is being described. What is being debated is whether a non-prescribed MDI should be used in the absence of a prescribed MDI. In that case, the answer is no, the MDI is not going to have an immediate life saving effect. It will not be the difference between life and death. Now for any circumstance, you could create a scenario that would fit your needs. I'm sure if you stop an asthmatic from using an MDI, on a long enough time line, they will get into trouble. But exactly what situation are we talking about? Exactly where are you that you have many people ready to hand you an inhaler, but your transport time to the hospital is in such excess that a person experiencing asthma symptoms that at upon your arrival can be relieved with a simple MDI, but will degenerate enroute to the point of being critical? If the person is at a point where there is a real and present danger of decompensation secondary to status asthmaticus during your transport, they are going to need much more than a simple MDI, even with a spacer, to save their life. In the movies someone is in danger of dying because they can't get to their MDI. In real life its more complicated. In fact, by definition, status asthmaticus, that thing that actually kills you, is a prolonged asthma attack that does not respond to bronchodilators. Now I suppose an asthmatic could have been in an asthma attack for long enough that they have merely tired out their diaphragm and accessories, but will still respond to a bronchodilator, but again, in that case, a simple MDI is not going to make much of a difference. They're still exhausted.

    Now ER doc, I'm not sure what situation you're talking about where someone who need a nebulizer didn't get one because of the absence of wheezing, but if you're referring to silent chest, aren't they pretty much past the point of using a simple nebulizer? Isn't that usually when someone is making a call to anesthesia to pop down to the ER with their tools?

  12. This discussion seems to be based on the ever popular "How far would you go to save a life" principle, i.e. would you bend or break the rules if it was to save a life. This is a philosophical discussion that involves ethical dilemmas that transcend medical, legal, and political philosophy. Its a sticky situation, along the lines of jailing a man for stealing a loaf bread to feed his family etc. etc. etc.

    Luckily, in this case, it is not at all relevant. At all. The reason being is because as my post mentioned before, MDI's are NOT a life saving intervention, but rather for therapeutic relief of mild asthma symptoms. In other words, if you have an asthmatic who is wheezing and improves on oxygen, they don't need an MDI immediately. On the other hand, if you have an asthmatic who is not improving on oxygen and is barely moving air, they don't need an MDI, they need a BVM and immediate transport. This should render the entire premise of this argument null and void.

    Unless someone can provide literature detailing the deterioration of an asthmatic on a timeline that reasonably exceeds standard transport times with only an MDI as the mediator, again, I say, this is a non-argument.

  13. Actually tniugs I'm an international applicant and had to go through a pretty lenghty process just to get my training recognized. I'm happy to take the tests though, preparing for them has given me a great introduction into how things are done North of the border.

  14. I'm not going to arm chair quarterback, but it is rarely right nor ethical to perform a pain or anxiety producing procedure on an alert or conscious patient without an anxiolytic or analgesic. Obviously a life saving intervention would be one of these, but synchronized cardioversion isn't in that category. The fact she was under the influence of Ativan already may have been why medication was no given pre-synchronization. If someone needs to be cardioverted, give them the meds, give it time to work, and do it humanely. That would be my advice.

    • Like 1
  15. If you want to pass the practical exam and its been a while since you certified, I would recommend taking the time and effort take a trip out to Sacramento and use a place called NCTI. For an extra fee, you can take a practice run the day before through all the stations and correct whatever mistakes you may make. Trust me when I say that given the expense of the NREMT exam and the difficulty in finding the practicals, its worth a flight and a day and night in Sacramento, California. Which is a really nice place, too. Hope that helps.

    PS I am not paid nor endorsed by the NCTI of Sacramento, although maybe they should, lol.

  16. Hey all, long time no see. I'm happy to report I finally made the move and I'm here in beautiful British Columbia, and was able to get my paperwork through to sit for the Advance Care Paramedic exam. I've been hunkered down and studying pretty much everything for a while, and I even took an EMR course to get a feel for how things are done, but I'd really like to know from someone who's taken it fairly recently what kind of questions will be on it and what I can expect. I hope everyone is doing well, I see some regulars are still around.

  17. MY GAWD CB, that's SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO racist, spoken like a true hood wearing whitey.

    At first I read this article and thought "Hmmm, good, a decision showing racism in any form won't be tolerated." Then I go and read comments like CB's, and whoever it was who basically said "Yeah, there's black firefighters because of the games they played, etc. etc." Hmmm, now why could minorities possibly feel discriminated against when attitudes like that abound? Gee, I wonder.

    Then on the other side of the equation, you have crochitymedic doing his blame the man routine. I read "Its because of the white owned banks" and all I can think is "Well, at least he didn't say Jew owned banks..." But you know what, its just as bad. At the end of the day, the only person you can blame for the position you are in is yourself. Anyway, this entire thread has really turned my stomach.

  18. Nonsense. I have never in my life found a deer lying dead of starvation in the woods, and you haven't either. It's one of those BS myths like MAST, HEMS, and abandonment.

    That's because you generally don't find deer lying dead in the forest of anything, any animal in the forest that is that weak will generally have been found, hunted down, and torn to smithereens like Mylie Cyrus in a pack of R. Kelly clones. Even if hunters don't have any effect on any population at all, even if there is no reason to hunt except for sport, doesn't mean hunters are doing any thing any worse than what happens every second of every minute of every day.

    I actively donate to the ASPCA but I think PETA is a bunch of loons. And I don't mean the sad sounding duck things.

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