Nov
15
A day-to-day account of my life in EMS
Nov
15
Tonight was a public relations shift. Six hours at an amateur boxing tournament, beginning with checking BP’s on all of the contestants, until the end, when we had to chase down the promoter to get paid. The ringside seats, at least, were a good thing.
It was set up like a “Toughman” contest. Three rounds at a minute apiece, with sixteen-ounce gloves and headgear. Amateurs with 16oz gloves is like a pillowfight. There’s not a whole lot of danger of serious injury. The only patient I had to examine was a first-time fighter who drew a gym owner as an opponent. He just got his bell rung a little.
One fighter came up to me and said, “I think I’m confused”.
“YOU’RE confused? I don’t take any great pleasure in hitting people, and I SURE don’t enjoy being hit! I’M the one who’s confused!”
Nov
12
Final score: 1 broken nose, 1 DOS
Not a very eventful shift at General Hospital Southside substation.
We started out the shift with a call to the local warehouse for Big Retail Catalog, for a patient with a possible broken nose. It turns out she had been working on the line, and a plastic tote had fallen from the conveyor, landing pretty much square on her nose. A lot of blood, but she was in good spirits, considering.
We got some dinner after that, then went on a DOS. Nothing exciting.
After work, I had to go straight to Hometown to work until 1730, which is where I am now. I’m going to take a nap.
Nov
11
I was reading some old entries I made on another blog, and I found the post I made after my very first ALS call. It makes for interesting reading:
The baby was on the kitchen counter, and everyone was just looking at it. That’s what I saw when I ran into the apartment. We snatched up the baby and ran, with the mother wailing after us.
A few minutes earlier, the call had come in for a 3 month old, not breathing, and my stomach had turned over. I’m the paramedic, and I’m less than comfortable with pediatrics. Everyone has a weak area, and that’s mine. EMT-Basic, EMT-Intermediate, Paramedic… I’ve always felt weak in peds. I offer up a silent prayer.
In the back of the ambulance… No pulse. No BP. Mom is in the front passenger seat, and my driver is talking soothingly to her. The baby has been down for at least twenty minutes, and probably more. Shit. There’s still a little warmth there, even though the monitor shows asystole.
We’re going to work this kid.
Dave, spike a bag, and I’ll look for a vein in his scalp. Never mind a vein… the IO kit is right behind me. Prep the site with alcohol, betadine, betadine… Insert the needle, push and twist… *pop* and I’m in the marrow. Try to aspirate some marrow fluid… nothing, but that doesn’t mean anything. Try to flush it. It’s difficult, but it flows with no sign of infiltration. Good.
“Mom, what does he weigh?” “Fifteen pounds,” she says. “Is he breathing?” “We’re doing everything we can,” I evade. Mental math… Half 15 minus ten percent is around six and a half kilos. I push 0.6 of epi and flush with about a 50cc bolus. Continue CPR. I have a minute to breathe now. Consider intubation… No, we’re getting good compliance with mouth/mouth, and he’s pinked up a bit, I think. Nobody has bothered with PPE on this call. You make sacrifices. I check the monitor again. Nothing but CPR. I pray for a spark, a blip…
I’m getting ready for atropine, and we’re at the hospital. I grab the baby in one arm, the bag of saline in the other hand, and run. They’re ready for me. They take over, and I’m left holding the bag. Literally, I’m standing there holding up a bag of saline as they take over CPR, and I give my report.
“He’s been down a minimum of 35 minutes at this point. No pulse, no BP. We’ve had good compliance and chest rise with rescue breaths. He’s fifteen pounds, so I make it 6.5 kilos. IO seems slow, but it runs. I’ve got about 50cc’s in. 0.6mg of epi in, about 2 minutes ago.”
The doctor gives another round of epi, then atropine. After a while, he asks if anyone sees any reason to continue. No one does, but no one wants to stop, either. Finally, he calls it. I realize I’ve been clinging to my bag of saline like a life preserver, and I lay it down on the edge of the bed. I take my hat off, and we all cry.
I’ve gone over the call a hundred times in my head since then, trying to think of something I missed; some way I could have forced a spark back into that lifeless little body, but the fact is, I did everything I could. I was afraid of pediatrics, but my training didn’t fail me. He was just too far gone. I didn’t freeze up or freak out. I did my job.
It’s payment, really.
The bad calls are the price we pay for getting to pat each other on the back and congratulate one another when we make a save. One bad call can sour a whole string of saves , and one save can redeem a string of bad calls. It just depends.
I love my job. I love the excitement of the emergency calls, and I love the predictability of the routine transports to and from dialysis. I derive a little bit of joy every time I start an IV or run a 12-lead, and every time I ask a little old lady if she’s warm enough and she says she’s fine. I hurt when my patients hurt, and I’m happy when they get some relief.
Really, I’m a lucky, lucky man. Maybe later I’ll tell you all the reasons.
I’m going to plant a tree for the little boy who died before he got a chance to live.
It’s interesting to look back and see what my perspective was at the time, and see how it’s changed.
Nov
11
Final score for the night: 1 ETOH, 1 MVC, 1 confused person, 1 anxiety attack, 1 rape.
As I said in my first post, I work for three departments. For the sake of anonymity, we’ll call them Hometown, Podunk #1, and General Hospital. Hometown and Podunk #1 both operate a single truck on a paid day shift. General Hospital operates three stations with a total of five trucks at any given time. They share the town with Hospital #2, and the two services alternate substations on a weekly basis. It’s kind of a cooperative competition. Both services deliver patients to both hospitals, at the whim of the patient.
Anyway, last night, I was at Southside substation from 8p – 8a. I got in around twenty minutes early, and I was waiting on my partner and shooting the shit with the outgoing crew, and the tones dropped. I said, “I don’t care which of you goes home, but I’m taking the call.” After a quick debate, Lisa stayed, and Michael went home; he wasn’t feeling well.
The call was to the drunk tank for a male pt c/o chest pain. Eyes rolled, and off we went. The pt was about 50, and denied any chest pain, but was complaining of dyspnea. He was also complaining constantly about the arresting officer.
“He din’t have any righ’ to talk a me like tha! He said I’m wastin the taxpayers’ money! How ’bout the taxpayers is wastin MY money? I got five honabul discharges! World War II veteran! I got a real bad heart!” (The dude is 50, remember?)
We were assisting him to the cart, and he told me to be careful of his elbow. “It’s real tore up!” I took a peek, and was surprised to find a decubitus ulcer about two inches across, right on the point of his left elbow. In an otherwise healthy 50 year old, my mind immediately screamed “NECROTIZING FASCIITIS!!”
We got him to the truck, and took him to Hospital #2. On the way, it was IV, labs, O2, Monitor. By the way, despite his claimed heart problems, his strip looked like a textbook example of NSR.
I was about halfway done with paperwork, and the tones dropped again. “Single vehicle rollover; two patients; minor injuries”. Lisa looked put-upon. I tried to get her to go to the call by way of the station so we could pick up my real partner and she could go home, but she refused. “I knew what the business was like when I got into it.”
We got to the scene and found a car, sideways in the road, propped up on a fence post (…and me without my camera!). There were about thirty firemen, and two dazed-looking kids, sitting on the back bumper of the BRT. Both of their parents were there, neither was hurt, and we got refusals from both sets of parents. The one was more concerned about the welfare of his guitar than his own welfare.
Clear scene and back to the station. We had barely backed in, and toned out again. “69 year old male, confused”. Lisa jumped out and Jamie jumped in, and away we went. We arrived to find an old man in bed, and two concerned neighbors. The patient looked a lot like Santa Claus after a three-day bender.
He couldn’t tell us what was wrong, but he didn’t know what day it was, and the month, he said, was “about medium”. His vitals were all reasonably normal, although he was a bit warm. The skin of his legs suggested diabetes, and his BGL was 148. His lips were dry and cracked. We were thinking it was a BHU call, until we saw the pile of newspapers outside his door. he neighbors said he gets the newspaper every morning, but they hadn’t seen him in about four days, so they came to check on him. He said his last oral intake was breakfast, “With this morning’s paper”.
So. No food for around four days, probable diabetic history, a low fever, and a BGL of 148. Ordinarily, I’m happy to see 148, but when you haven’t eaten in almost a week, 148 is pretty high. Jamie and I agreed that sepsis was likely, and dehydration was obvious, so we ran fluids from the scene back to General Hospital. Santa Claus was admitted, and is currently getting through a course of antibiotics.
The remaining calls were, from a clinical standpoint, nothing special. We were on the sofas by three, and up again at seven-thirty with no interruptions in between. All in all, a decent shift. I’m back again tonight with a different partner, so we’ll see how that goes. Cheers!
Nov
11
It’s been a long time coming!
I never considered going into public service when I was younger. I was more interested in the latest scheme to get me rich without much work, or at least get me comfortable without killing my soul. I worked as a fireworks peddler, a liquor store clerk, a factory worker, a pizza driver, a telemarketer… You name it, I tried it at one time or another. It was all much much less than satisfying.
Then, in 2005, I was thrust into a position I wasn’t prepared for. My parents were in a bad head-on collision, and I was amazed at the First Responders and EMS. There they were in the rain, in the middle of the night, and they knew what to do. I took it all in, and filed it away for later.
A year later, I was approached by the Mayor of my hometown, and asked if I would be willing to take EMT training and volunteer with the local EMS agency. The light bulb went on, and I agreed. I took to it quickly, and finished the class easily. I started running with the volunteer squad, and gained experience. A year after that, the Chief asked me if I’d like to become a Paramedic. I knew it would be challenging, but I jumped at the chance.
Fast-forward to the present, and here I am. I work as a medic with three departments, and I have stories.
Oh, do I have stories…