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stcommodore

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Posts posted by stcommodore

  1. You arrive on scene for a dispatch, what equipment do you bring in?

    Do you have calls (ex toe injury) where you or you have seen providers walk in without equipment?

    Do you go by the "long and deep" rule where the patient is in a nursing home or high rise for example and you take everything with you (Moniter, 1st in bag/drugs, 02)?

    Does your specific squad/department have a rule for this type of situation?

    A paramedic I consider a mentor of mine has a phrase that goes something like "without your equipment your nothing but a trained observer" which you can figure obviously means he and I are for bringing anything and everything the dispatch/location calls for.

  2. So you have completed your paramedic testing and have the brand new patch/uniform to go with your experence level. You begin to ride calls "precept" with a skilled provider and after a few weeks see a few BLS and a few acute patients. At what point in your Paramedic time did you feel you were ready to be the sole ALS provider on a call? Did you get the chance to "precept" or were you thrown the keys and a partner and told "don't kill anyone" regardless...

  3. The squad I work at serves a suburban area with first due on the Pa turnpike. It has three stations and a call volume around 5,000 a year. It recently created to "phantom" posts in an effort to create a dynamic deployment when necessary. Typical staffing is three transporting medic units, and five day shifts a week a "floating" BLS units is staffed as a fourth unit.

    The "float" unit responds to all calls and when possible will take a BLS patient to allow the medic unit to remain availible. If a patient is being transported ALS then the "float" unit covers that units area, or may elect to assist the medic unit on a critical patient(s).

    The phantom posts are set at the midpoint between two set stations and are relocated to when the two set station units are in service on calls. If for example all three units are comitted then the last unit is to relocate to the northern phantom post that sits in the most central location for the entire local. The system is rather new to our county, but for the most part has been very effective. Units aren't required to relocate unless the county dispatch or officer orders them to from 2300-0500 hours.

  4. SSM does not work. It never has, and likely never will. There is no proven way to predict which areas are going to need emergency service with any accuracy. Yet another myth to do away with.

    studys or documents to back your comments?

    One of the first lectures of EMS Managment I, says that the peak peroid of EMS follows the demand of electricity. (8a-5p) So having more resources ready to respond during that time is the most basic aspect of SSM. Fluid Deployment being the most advanced way to use SSM.

  5. Not the topic at hand, but if we asume the average of 80% BLS/20% ALS in an high call volume area then your statment is just silly. A solid and non-tampered with BLS level can handle a majority of the calls in an urban/suburban system.

  6. I have no issue with there being a BLS and ALS level. My only issue is when they try and play around with some level(s) in the middle. There is always some laundry list of reasons why BLS can't do it, needs to do it, they can't get medics, there aren't enough medics, etc. Simply on the topic I'll say over and over BLS does not equal BGL.

  7. So the national (draft or whatever status) considers treatment with Dextrose/assessment of a BGL to be an ALS skill and we are still debating the point? The problem here is that people at the BLS level have had the definition of BASIC care blurred with medication, intubation, IV, etc and forgot the purpose of there care. Stabilization of immediate life threats, and rapid transport to hospital or with advanced care if circustances allow.

  8. The way I see it my job is to look after those residents and the EMS job is to take them to the hospital w

    I hope your just trying to be breif but thats a really poor view of what EMS jobs are when you call 911 for a transport from an LTC. I would expect the same professional treatment you would give anybody else in the field and this has been talked about plenty here.

  9. In my ideal world the paramedic education would be a 2-4 year college based education. You would be taught your A&P, your physology, your disease process right along with medical students and be taught more then what a basic paramedic education requires. After and or along with the standard program of lecture/clinical you would have further education in college english, college math (nursing pharm/math). In addition to that you would have EMS/Fire Managment, grant writing, etc classes that would prepare you for a future when you didn't want to, couldn't work or were needed in an aspect different then working the bus.

    Does everyone want a degree? No, in fact most just want a quick education so that they can do more. But the progression of the provider we produce and the progression of the field comes with a more indepth education.

  10. Name: Smith, Christopher

    Level: Paramedic

    Status: Registered

    Description: Currently registered with the NREMT.

    Obtaining NREMT registration does not afford the right to practice. All EMTs must apply for and obtain a state EMT license, unless practicing within a federal government context or solely on federal property.

    Written Exam Date: 1/23/2008

    Written Exam Scored: 1/24/2008 Passed

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