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For You EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 44 is up on Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron and I discuss abdominal trauma, the return of his White Cloud Syndrome, and whether it's more beneficial to be fat or muscular if you're in hypovolemic shock. We answer a few listener questions about EMTs as ER techs, whether or not to immobilize the C-spine (and I restrained myself admirably, I thought), and what to do when your ears disagree with the NIBP machine.

It's Confessions of an EMS Newbie, the first podcast to break the story that there is a treasure map on the back of Barack Obama's birth certificate. Now if we can just get Benjamin Franklin Gates to steal it!

For My Illinois Readers

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My friend Don Gwinn has a request of his fellow Illinois 2nd Amendment advocates.

Go visit his blog, follow the link, and make your voices heard. Let's see if we can help drag Illinois into free America.

Tell all your friends, too, and tell them to tell their friends…

Once Upon A Time…

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… I was a sparky, idealistic, naive paramedic with grand ideas and strong opinions on how EMS ought to be, and what we  were doing wrong, and how to fix it.

And I used to spar regularly with some asshole on various internet forums who insisted on popping my idealism balloons with a hard jab of reality. I used to think he was bitter and cynical and captured by the system, and that he rejected new ideas because he was an EMS dinosaur who refused to evolve.

That guy was TOTWTYTR.

It took me a few years of losing arguments with him to realize that he was cynical, but not bitter at all, and that he shot down my new ideas because to him they weren't new at all; he'd seen them before, and had seen first hand why they failed.

I'm not sure when it was we had our first battles, but it was probably close to fourteen years ago.

Damn. Fourteen years.

Has it really been that long, brother?

After a while, I came to realize that you don't stay in EMS as long as he has if you don't love it, and possess some measure of skill at the job. He's been providing care in a premier urban EMS system since I was driving ambulances made by Matchbox. Surely, there was something I could learn from this guy.

We became friends, and eventually collaborators on a number of projects. Today, I'm proud to count him among my closest friends. He's a brother-from-another mother, and if at times he seems a little more inscrutable than I am, I know now that it's just because my friend holds his cards closer to the vest, not because he's not every bit as passionate about this job as I am.

At this point in my career, I've found myself doing the same things he did for me, fourteen years ago. Whether it be in podcasts, or in columns I write, or being a wet blanket, or in offering advice to a peer still young in her EMS career, it seems I've become the sage dispenser of wisdom, the wise EMS Jedi master, the Dear Abby of EMS.

And truthfully I have my days when I'm less the sage dispenser of wisdom than I am some guy talking out of his ass; more Cliff Claven than Dear Abby.

But my buddy TOTWTYTR is still out there doing his thing, and he had these words of wisdom to offer as well:

The emergency belongs to the patient, not to the responders. Our job is to do whatever we can to mitigate the emergency and it’s consequences but when all is said and done, what we’ve done is our job.

That's everything you need to know about professional distance, in two easy sentences. Doesn't mean you don't care, just means you don't let it eat you up so you can keep caring for your entire career.

You gotta keep some heart and soul in reserve, in other words, or you'll run out before you reach your destination.

Talk About A Close Call!

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This poor woman almost had to sit through a Lady Gaga concert!

Aside from being a pretty good story on the value of AEDs and post-ROSC therapeutic hypothermia, I'd like to direct your attention to the 7th paragraph:

She was then airlifted to Vanderbilt Medical Center's emergency department, where doctors immediately used therapeutic hypothermia to cool Thornton's body temperature to between 93 and 86 degrees — below the normal body temperature of 98.6 degrees.

(emphasis mine)

I checked the distance: 1.87 miles, according to Mapquest.

For the love of all that is holy, one of my Nashville readers please tell me that Tuesday night traffic around Bridgestone Arena is just one big parking lot, and that a ground ambulance would have taken, like, a half hour to make the trip.

PLEASE.

 

Hat tip to reader Brendan McStay, who evidently thinks it would be entertaining to see my head explode.

Gotta Get Bizzay…

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… because I need to be dropping more than this.

 

I'm 2.7 pounds down since last week, and 37.1 pounds over all. I'm happy with that, but I can and have done better.

Gotta get busy with the exercise. By the time y'all read this, I'll have already walked three miles or so, and hopefully be another couple hundred rounds toward smoothing out that atrocious trigger on my Chiappa.

Best Damned Code 3 Song EVER

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Despite all the advances in ambulance design with forward-facing seats, the better lighting systems and high visibility paint schemes, the tattletale boxes and drive cams and Opticons and Rumbler sirens and engine governors and low-forces driving standards and EVO courses…

… the thing  that will really make emergency driving demonstrably safer is turning off the lights and siren and slowing the hell down. And thankfully, many EMS systems are beginning to recognize that, and are curtailing lights and siren responses for all but the most critical call types.

Despite the lies we've told ourselves over the years and the expectations we've fostered in the public, doing the speed limit and obeying all the traffic signals won't harm 95% of our patients, and an extra 30-45 seconds on an urban response (and that's all the woo woo box and the cherries will save you, on average) ain't gonna have much deleterious effect on the 5% who do have time-critical conditions.

But still, for those times when you absolutely must light it up and play with the siren, there is only one song that must be on the soundtrack.

I give you… the Greatest Code 3 Driving Song Evar:

YouTube Preview Image

I mean, if you don't feel you pulse quicken with that song blasting on the stereo as you wave in and out of traffic like Cole Trickle, your inner adrenaline junkie is well and truly dead.

So how about you guys? If you put together your very own Code 3 mix CD, what other songs would be on it?

A Pep Talk…

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… for my friend, ex-girlfriend, blogchild, and fellow paramedic. You know who you are.

I know you're hurting now. I know you're having a crisis of confidence, and you're questioning whether you can deal with the emotional toll that comes with a career in EMS.

And I know it is in your nature to worry, and to question yourself, and to feel things too deeply, to empathize too closely. That quality has always been been your greatest gift, and your biggest curse. It drives you to be a better paramedic. It's the passion that fuels your patient care, your writing, your mothering, everything you do. It was also the thing that made dating you maddeningly frustrating at times, but make no mistake…

… it is a great, big, towering, incandescent gift.

Not everyone has it. I don't, not in the degree that you do.

And if it doesn't feel much like a gift right now, it's only because you spend too much time listening to the dark whispers of doubt. Take some time to quiet your soul, and you'll be able to hear the ones that whisper thanks and encouragement. One day you'll wake up, and discover that you've made friends with the faces that once haunted you.

Believe me, I know whereof I speak.

You are stronger than you realize, but when you feel as if you're not, know I'm only a text, email or phone call away. I'll be here for advice and counsel, crying shoulder, or the foot in your ass when you need it, just like I've been for the past five years.

I know you've read this before, but it bears repeating now. Here's your pep talk.

**********

I've known you since you were in EMT school. You've been in this profession long enough to know where you rank – 4th from the bottom in the Bureau of Labor Statistics salary rankings. The only people paid less than you are pre-school teachers, dishwashers and meatpackers. The guy riding on the back of the garbage truck, or holding a sign at a highway construction zone, makes more money than your EMT instructor did. Likely, a lot more. And God knows you're worked at some festering scabs masquerading as ambulance companies. Some of those, you'd have been better off as a dishwasher or meatpacker

And none of those people are required to make life-or-death decisions. You are.

It is a profession where the line-of-duty death rate is comparable to firefighters and police officers. You wanted to be a flight medic one day, a career niche that is by far the most dangerous in EMS. Truth be told, it's the most dangerous profession in America, period — ahead of loggers, miners, and Alaska crab fisherman.

It is a profession whose divorce, suicide and substance abuse rates soar far higher than the general population. You're no exception, having already gone through your first ambulance-induced divorce before you even started medic school.

The average career expectancy of an EMT is five years.

Five years.

Many of your classmates will go on to jobs in nursing or other healthcare fields. Those that don't will leave EMS with a career-ending back injury – as you almost did – or leave EMS healthy but not whole; jaded and cynical, their idealism burned away in the furnace-like reality of our profession, faith in the innate goodness of man gone like so much ash and smoke up the chimney.

Yet somehow you made it five years, and you escaped their fate. You overcame the back injury, and despite everything you've seen, somehow you still find it in you to see the good in people.

Do you know how rare that is?

You've been disrespected by patients and bystanders who don't know any better, and belittled by doctors and nurses who should. And if you're still in EMS 20 years from now, there will still be doctors and nurses who belittle you, and patients who think are nothing more than the chick who drives the horizontal taxi. 

You have sifted through broken glass and twisted metal, waded through urine and feces and vomit, weathered heaping torrents of verbal abuse from the people you were trying to help, all for the prospect of a few dollars on payday, and perhaps…just perhaps…a show of gratitude now and again.

You've been doing this long enough to realize that what we were promised in school is a lie, if only a little white one. When you were green and idealistic, the romance and thrill of EMS was powerful. All of us were adrenaline junkies at some point, but there comes a time when even you outgrow your blog persona, and you were always more hand holder than adreanline junkie anyway.  

By now, you've discovered the hidden truth, the one that drives most people out of our profession:

We don't save that many lives.

Lifesaving may be what we train for, but the opportunity to actually save someone comes all too rarely, and when it does present itself, the outcome depends more upon luck and timing than our skills. In my career, I've had my share of code saves. Some of them even made it out of the hospital alive. Others hung on just long enough for their families to tell them goodbye. I've made the critical diagnosis, gotten the tough airway, turned around the crashing asthmatic, and stabilized the shocky gangbanger with multiple unnatural holes in his person. I've needled chests, paced, defibrillated, and cardioverted, and given countless drugs.

You will too, in time.

But, other than a handful of exceptions, I can't state with any certainty that my actions were the difference between life and death. In that handful of exceptions, all but one or two were saved simply by applying the techniques that any John Q. Citizen with a basic first aid course could have done. Ask TOTWTYTR or JB On The Rocks or PJ if you don't believe it's true. They'll tell you the same thing.

The reality of your profession isn't exciting rescues and cardiac arrest resuscitations twice a shift. Your reality is dialysis transfers and people who can't poop. It's toothaches at 3:00 am, and you have to maneuver your stretcher around five parked cars to get to the front door, and weave your way through five able-bodied drivers to get to the patient with a complaint so minor you can't believe they called 911 for it.

And yes, sometimes they will dump a burned little body in your arms, begging you to help when you know in your heart of hearts that nothing can be done. And you'll gamely try to do something anyway, because not to try is not to hope. And hope is what keeps us going.

And the stench of burned flesh will linger in your psyche long after it has left your hair and clothes, and when you hug your kids at night, you will wonder how long it will take for you to stop thinking about the child's mother, who can no longer do the same.

So why do I tell you this now, repeating things you've already figured out for yourself? If you didn't know what you were getting into then, you certainly ought to have your eyes open at this point. I remind you of this because, knowing you as well as I do, I know that these things are all you're seeing right now. What you need right now is to remember all the things that make this job worth doing.

You should bother because EMS is a calling. Even when you leave EMS, it never really leaves you. It's what Henry David Thoreau meant when he said, "Do what you love. Know your own bone; gnaw at it, bury it, unearth it, and gnaw it still."

You should bother because, even if we're not saving lives, what we do matters. It matters in ways unnoticed by us, to people you may not even remember tomorrow.

You should bother, because EMTs are privileged to play in life's great game. Too many unlucky people watch the action thunder by, stuck at a desk, or watching it on television at home.

You should bother, because it's the little things that matter. Most of your patients are ignorant of your skills. Few of them understand the technology you wielded so expertly. But they'll remember the smile you gave them, or the way you tucked the blanket in to ward away winter's chill, or the way you stood in the rain, getting drenched as you held the umbrella over them as your partner loaded them in the rig. They'll remember calm competence, and gentle speech.

And you do that better than most, you know.

They'll remember the joke you made to lighten the tension. They'll remember those things and more, and they'll remember your face long after you've forgotten theirs.

They'll remember you because, even though they were just another call to you, you were a major player in a defining event in their lives. They'll come up to you, years after the fact, and say, "I remember you. You take care of me when I had my heart attack."

And likely all you did was apply oxygen and take them to the hospital. Maybe you helped them with another dose of nitro or encouraged them to take an aspirin — really nothing they couldn't have done themselves. But you're the one they remembered, and you're the one they thanked.

You should bother, because in the tapestry of human existence, you get to contribute your own unique stitch. You get to make your mark in ways that cannot be quantified on a spreadsheet or a profit and loss statement. Not everyone gets to touch the life of another, but EMTs do.

You should bother, because when people are at their most vulnerable, they will invite you into their homes and tell you things they won't even tell their priest. And they'll expect you to make it better somehow. I'm not sure you understand now how profound an honor that is, but hopefully one day you will.

I think you have proven yourself worthy of that honor.

And you make me proud.

 

 

For You EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 43 is up on Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron spent the weekend being a Rescue Ranger, and we talk all about what he learned, and answer a few listener questions along the way.

Give it a listen, and learn why redneck Louisiana flatlanders who can't find a mountain or a building higher than two stories within 100 miles still have a need for High Angle Rescue. It's Confessions of an EMS Newbie, the podcast that comes with a different carabiner in every episode! Collect the whole set!

For You EMS Types…

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… there's a new clinical tip on EMS1.

Some of you may already know it, but I learned at EMS Today that quite a few experienced EMT's still don't.

Enjoy!

Happy Skynet Self-Awareness Day

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Gunnies, time to get your arsenals and head for your bunkers!

And for you non-shooters, don't come running up to my perimeter and begging for shelter from the HK's. If you don't know the password, I'm gonna assume you're a T-800 or T-101 and blow the Claymores.

Just sayin…

Spanglish

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I met a pleasant Hispanic lady a few minutes ago, whom her daughter explained spoke very little English.

"No problem," I smiled. "I can speak enough Spanglish to get by."

I turned to her mother and introduced myself. "Hola, mi nombre es Kelly. Vamos a llevar al hospital."

She seemed surpised and pleased that the big goofy-looking gringo could speak to her in her native tongue, but wasn't really all that talkative.

Which is a good thing, too, because I'd have soon run out of phrases that don't translate to "two beers, please," "take me to the U.S. Embassy," or "how much for an hour, and can your friend join us?"

Care To Guess What Kind of Medical Coverage He Had?

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34 years old.

Insulin dependent diabetic, well-controlled.

Awake, oriented and in no distress.

Met us at the curb, and climbed into the ambulance without assistance.

Chief complaint?

Glad you asked. That would be, "I can't pee."

And for his less than 8 hours of urinary retention and mildly tender belly, he wanted an ambulance to take him seven blocks to the hospital. And that's with an able-bodied girlfriend and a functional minivan parked 10 feet from his front door. He actually had to walk around his ride to get to his ride.

Someone remind me again how adding 20 million people to the Medicaid rolls without first stabilizing the primary care crisis will somehow result in lower costs? The only way that will happen is if no one actually uses their new benefits.

People who are provided free health care have ZERO incentive to use it sparingly or wisely. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either lying, or a politician.

But then, I repeat myself.

 

EMS Squadcast

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For you fans of En Route, I had the opportunity to discuss the book and a few memorable career moments with Tim Perkins on this month's edition of EMS Squadcast.

Thanks, Tim, I enjoyed it!

A Repost For Epijunky

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In response to a recent Twitter conversation between @Epijunky and @JustMyBlog, I happened to mention that I know what it's like to walk in high heels. There ensued rampant speculation, threats to out me, and a bidding war for pictures of me in drag. So, to satisfy their curiosity, here's a repost of my walk on the wild side.

Enjoy:

**********
 

"Excuse me, Miss, where do you keep the king-sized nylons?"

Now there’s a question guaranteed to raise an eyebrow when asked in the women’s clothing section at Wal Mart – particularly when the question is asked by a 6’2″ man who weighs 300 pounds on the hoof – give or take a Taco Bell value meal and a pair of trauma shears.

“Uh, excuse me Miss? The only thing I could find in my size was nude. Do you have anything in taupe? Maybe something in a control top?”

Now all the women over in the pharmacy and cosmetics department already think I’m a deviant because I shop for a lot of my moulage supplies over there. Nothing beats the look on a cashier’s face when you slide a few Maybelline concealer sticks, lipstick tubes in red, purple, black and green, and neutral foundation powder across the counter…and when their eyebrows inch upward, go ahead and slide across a jar of Vaseline, some unflavored Knox gelatin and a box of food coloring… and then wink.

Priceless.

And in my married days, I had already run the Emasculation Gauntlet and been sent on a douche shopping mission to the drugstore. (Here’s a hint, guys – never request a specific “flavor.” Those chicks at Walgreen’s have no sense of humor.)

Suffice it to say I considered myself embarassment-proof. Yet there is something about shopping for Frilly Things that just…does something to the male psyche. Particularly when you’re accompanied by your wife, who passes female judgment on every selection.

“Nope, honey. Not good with your skin tone.”

“Won’t work. Doesn’t go with your shoes or your handbag.”

“You’ll be the biggest woman on the stage, sweetie. We need to find something slimming that emphasizes your best features… like maybe a cardboard box that leaves your feet sticking out.”

“Blue eye shadow is a no-no. Yes, I know your eyes are blue. Just trust me on this. You look like that Mimi chick on the Drew Carey Show. Now go wash that stuff off and let me show you how to do it.”

Honestly, it was enough to damage a guy’s self esteem. I still bear the psychological scars, but then again so do the women who sold me my dress at Lane Bryant.

Now I should explain why I was taking this walk on the Wild Side. Although I have always described myself as a lesbian trapped in a man’s body, my orientation has always been fervently heterosexual. (grabs testicles and spits for masculine emphasis)

Nope, I was doing this for a Good Cause, specifically to raise money for a scholarship fund for widows and children of EMTs killed in the line of duty. One year during EMS Week, the Powers That Be decided that a Womanless Beauty Pageant would be an excellent fundraiser. The call went out for male medics who possessed certain attributes, like beauty… poise… intelligence… charm… talent.

Or failing that, at least find a couple of dozen exceedingly ugly, hairy male medics without absolutely no sense of decorum or self-respect. Naturally, I was one of the first ones approached.

So on the day of the pageant, I submitted myself to several hours of primping, preening, spackling, cinching, spraying and various other indignities at the hands of my wife, who pulled away the drape with a flourish and presented me with a hand mirror so that I could gaze upon the image of myself as…my mother.

Not my mother back in her youth when she was a knockout. Noooo, this version was of Mom after five kids and menopause, only with a five o’clock shadow and hairy legs.

It was a Norman Bates Moment.

Adding to the indignity was the fact that the banquet hall had no room for the boys to do their makeup on site. Nooooo…all we had was a ready room in which to congregate before our turn on the catwalk, necessitating every one of us to make the drive from our hotels to the banquet hall in full drag. I must confess that the drive over was made somewhat more entertaining by blowing kisses to every redneck at every stoplight. The Missus was driving, so I was even able to rub my hooters against the glass.

The ready room was packed with guys in various degrees of drag, each sizing the others up with a critical eye.

Not bad Bob, but my wig is better.

Geez, tweeze those eyebrows Larry!

Love the satin dress, Jason, but the panty line ruins it.

Got a little lipstick on your teeth there, Hank.

Boy these heels are tough to walk in, but DAMN don’t they make my calves look defined!

A concealer stick would cover those circles under your eyes, Frank.

Now whilst we were waiting, it would be fair to say that a fair amount of Liquid Courage was consumed. And while we were re-affirming our own masculinity, let’s just say that the language and the behavior got a little…coarse. At one point, a number of us noticed a rather attractive, statuesque blonde sitting quietly off to one side.

“Oh, sorry Ma’am, we didn’t realize you were sitting there. We didn’t mean to…Myron??? Is that YOU??? Damn, but you look HOT!”

At that point we all knew we were vying for second place.

Knowing that my hopes for winning hinged upon the talent competition, I decided to pull out all the stops. So I gave a lap dance to…this guy.

You EMTs may recognize the face of John Roquemore, former President of the National Association of EMTs. Needless to say he was less than enthused about a 300 pound drag queen gyrating around on his lap while singing Happy Birthday Mister President in the breathiest Marilyn Monroe voice I could muster…

…but he was a good sport about it, and I got First Runner Up. Raised $500 for the scholarship fund, too.

And rumor has it that Rocky spent his own money to buy up all the photo negatives taken during that event, so there is little chance any photos of my sexy self will make it onto the internet. Thank God.

Until next time…

 

Steady As She Goes

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Today's weight, 325.8 pounds, down 0.8 pounds from last week, and 34.4 pounds lost overall.

 

Not as much as I'd hoped for, but as long as the downward trend continues, I'm okay with it. Got some pretty strenuous work and play planned for the next week, so hopefully next Friday will see me nudging the 320 pound mark.

Ursula the Sea Witch Can’t Catch a Jet Ski…

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… unless Ariel makes a radical evasive maneuver without warning King Triton first, and throws him off the back of the jet ski at 45 mph.

I'm gonna have to teach my mermaid to use the throttle a little more judiciously.

For You EMS Newbies…

1 comment

… Episode 42 is up at Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron and I talk all things thoracic, from pericardiocentesis to managing flail chest, and answer a few listener questions. Be sure to check out the EMS Expo essay contest page while you're there, and learn how you can win an all-expenses-paid trip to EMS World Expo in Las Vegas.

It's Confessions of an EMS Newbie, the official podcast of Narcoleptics Anonymous. Give us a listen, and see if you don't sleep better!

Attention EMS Newbies! Wanna Win a Trip to Vegas?

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Confessions of an EMS Newbie is holding an essay contest, first prize of which is an all-expenses-paid trip to EMS World Expo in Las Vegas!

If you're an EMT student or an EMT with less than two years of experience, here's your chance to do what few newbies get the opportunity to do – attend a national EMS conference like EMS World Expo, and a shift shadowing Dr. Bryan Bledsoe at University Medical Center ED in Las Vegas!

All you need do is submit a 400-600 word essay on the following topic:

EMS and the Social Media Revolution: How has blogging, Twitter, Facebook and podcasting affected your EMS experience, and how do you see it shaping you in the future? As an EMT student or newbie, has social media changed the way you study or learn, or the way you approach your profession? Has social media been a positive influence, or a negative one?

The contest runs from May 1 through June 1, and essays will be judged by a panel of celebrity EMS bloggers, educators and publishers, many of whom you read every day. In addition to the trip to EMS World Expo, our first place winner also gets a 1-year subscription to EMS World Magazine, and an appearance on one of the live Confessions of an EMS Newbie podcasts from the Promed Network podcast studio in Las Vegas.

2nd and 3rd place winners get some cool Newbie schwag, too, like stocked trauma bags, signed copies of my book, and subscriptions to EMS World Magazine.

If you're an EMT student, spread the word to your classmates! Instructors, challenge your students to submit an essay! If you know an EMS newbie with potential, blog it, Tweet it and share it on Facebook!

Check out the contest page at Confessions of an EMS Newbie for rules and requirements, and get to writing!

Chiappa 1911 .22: A Review

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I've long wanted .22 conversion kits for my Glock 17 and my 1911 pistols. Let's face it, while 9mm and .45 ACP ain't as expensive as it was a couple of years ago, it still doesn't approach the affordability of .22 LR. With a conversion kit, I could get a lot more trigger time with my favorite guns.

Fast forward to the gun show a couple of weeks ago, where I found this baby for little more than I'd pay for a .22 conversion kit:

First, the vital statistics:

Caliber: .22 LR
Action Type: Blowback, SA semi-auto
Frame: Cast and machined Chiapalloy (apparently a proprietary term meaning "pot metal")
Barrel: Fixed 5", alloy shroud with steel liner
Rifling: Six-groove, 1:16" RH twist
Magazine: Polymer, 10-round mags (ships with 2)
Sights: Ramped front post; fixed rear, drift-adjustable for windage
Trigger: Single-action, 10-lb.,1-oz. pull, fitted with overtravel adjustment scew
Grips: Stippled hardwood
Overall Length: 83⁄8"
Width: 13⁄8"
Height: 57⁄16"
Weight: 33.5 ozs.
Accessories: Hard case, cleaning brush, gun lock tool, owner’s manual, extra magazine

It was a week before I got to take it out to the range and try it out, but here are my impressions:

Appearance: A. I wanted a dedicated 1911 trainer. It looks like a 1911, and with the exception of the grip safety (of which it has none), duplicates the weight and balance of a 1911.

Fit and finish: C. The pistol looks good out of the box. Machining marks on the slide and frame are faintly visible if you squint real hard at the pistol in the right light. The company says that their pot metal Chiappalloy frame and slide are finished with an electrolysis coating that is much more durable than the black paint used to finish other zinc alloys. That may be true, but the finish started chipping off the muzzle crown of my pistol before I had shot 100 rounds through it.

Reliability: B. With the caveat that I find it a bit silly to assign a reliability grade to a firearm before it's properly broken in, I experienced no malfunctions with the Chiappa through the 200 rounds fired through it. I was using a mixed lot of CCI Stingers and Mini Mags, and will likely continue to do so for the next 1000 rounds or so, before I try using any of the cheap bulk plated ammo. There were no failures to feed, fire or eject, even when I tried to limp-wrist the pistol.

The polymer magazines do, however, leave much to be desired. Oh, I had no issues with their feeding, and they seem fairly robust, but neither mag drops reliably from the pistol when the magazine release button is depressed. One mag drops right out with the slide locked back, while the other must be plucked out with the fingers. I could find no visible burrs or bulges on the offending magazine, and neither mag seems to want to drop out with the slide in battery.

Accuracy: No Grade. The various on-line reviews of the Chiappa 1911 .22 report groups roughly approaching 1" at 25 yards, no doubt achieved through slow fire, using a Ransom rest. I had no such critter available to me, and my shooting was done using my normal shooting stance, slow fire at 30 feet. This is the best group I could do:

 

Now, there are a couple of fliers in there, but it shames me no end to post a target like that. I mean, I'm no Todd Jarrett, but I'm no Jay "Minute of Berm" G., either. However, that's the best I could do with this pistol at 30 feet. I am reasonably sure the pistol is capable of greater accuracy, with the greatest hindrances being the sights and the trigger. The sights are drift adjustible for windage, but that's about the best that can be said for them. If I keep the pistol, they'll be replaced with a set of decent aftermarket sights in short order.

The reason I said "if I keep the pistol" lies with the greatest barrier to accuracy and shootability of the Chiappa 1911 .22, and that is the:

Trigger: F. Now, why would I assign the trigger an F grade, you ask?

Because they don't have a G, that's why.

The Chiappa trigger (at least on my weapon) is fitted with an overtravel adjustment screw. What it should come with is a written apology from Chiappa Firearms, and a $100 gift certificate to a reputable gunsmith.

The various on-line reviews of the Chiappa describe the trigger pull as "stiff." I beg to differ. Engaging the safety on a Mosin Nagant 91/30 is "stiff." The trigger on a Chiappa 1911 .22 is in an entirely different realm.

The trigger pull is heavy, but so is the DA pull on an out-of-the-box S&W revolver. In the Chiappa, it's at least 10 pounds -and feels like considerably more – with more creep than a singles bar. It's so heavy, in fact, that I am forced to alter my finger position on the trigger to shoot it, which makes it absolutely useless for me.

A good trigger, even with a heavy pull, should break crisply, like a glass rod. The Chiappa breaks like a green stick.

The pot metal Chiappalloy trigger components supposedly "work harden" with repeated use, eventually yielding a trigger pull in the neighborhood of 5 pounds after 2000-3000 rounds. Sorry, Chiappa, but I can't afford to practice bad habits for another 2000 rounds while I wait for your sucktastic trigger to magically transform into an adequate one. And while all that "work hardening" is going on, what's happening to the slide, which is made from the same alloy?

Either this thing gets a trigger job that won't double the price of the firearm, or it becomes trade bait at the next gun show.

With this trigger, I can't in good conscience recommend this firearm to anyone else. It's that bad. If you happen to see one in the case at your local gun shop, and are sorely tempted to buy one, just think of it like a supermodel with an STD: nice to look at, but not so much to play with.

Made Of Win, Smothered In Awesomesauce

2 comments

I give you George Washington, zombie killer!

Shamelessly stolen from Wyatt Earp via deviantart.com. Wyatt is doing a caption contest on it, and his site has a bigger version that shows all the awesome little details.

And The Cycle Begins Anew

3 comments

My current partner, Doug E. Fresh, got his paramedic card from the state last week. The past two days on the rig were his initial two paramedic clearance shifts. Unless he really steps on his weenie, sometime in mid-May, he should be officially cleared to practice on his own.

Then he'll get his own truck and shift, and I'll be breaking in another rookie, this time a brand-new EMT-B.

*sigh*

My quest for world domination is gonna get tiresome if I have to individually train all of my disciples. I may have to start teaching some EMT classes again.

I Feel Like a Jockey…

9 comments

… provided the horse I'm riding is the size of an elephant.

326.6 pounds, down 2.4 pounds since last week, and 33.6 since February 1.

Go Team Me!

Small Talk

6 comments

She looks rather frail, lying there on the hospital bed, a fresh gastrostomy tube in her abdomen. The dispatch notes merely said, "chronicaly bedbound due to quadriparesis" as the justification for stretcher transport. That's not enough information.

"Mrs. Richard, can you tell me a bit about your health problems?" I inquire gently as we make our way back to the nursing home.

I'm beginning to think she hadn't heard me, when after a long moment, she answers, "What do you want to know?"

"Just the general stuff," I smile. "Have you ever had a  stroke, for example?" My smile goes unnoticed because she has her back to me, staring dully at her reflection in the plexiglass cabinet doors.

"Never had a stroke."

"Okay," I allow, wondering if I'm going to be forced to pull her history out of her, one nugget of information at a time. "Well, what has you confined to the bed?"

She waits a long moment, then shrugs. "Nothing, really. Just can't get out of bed."

"Was it a gradual weakening, or was it a sudden event?"

"Something sudden," comes the flat, listless reply.

"What, exactly?" I prompt.

"My husband died."

We pass the rest of the trip in silence, nothing left to say.

 

For You EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 41 is up on Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron and I talk discuss protocol-directed torture spinal motion restriction, rural EMS, swift water rescue, and providing EMS at large events. We also answer a few reader questions, including hooking up a listener from Connecticut with a job lead.

We also make our big announcement: Confessions of an EMS Newbie is holding an essay contest to send an EMS newbie on an all-expenses-paid trip to EMS World Expo in Las Vegas!

It's Confessions of an EMS Newbie, the full-service podcast, employment bureau and travel agency. Enter the contest, and you might be the one to win!

Expectations of Perfection

28 comments

My daughter lives in fear of Tuesdays.

Why Tuesdays, you ask? Well, that is the day her teacher sends home her test papers from the previous week for myself and The Ex to read and sign. KatyBeth lives in mortal terror that she's going to get a bad grade, and that her mother and I will somehow be disappointed in her.

Doesn't matter that she's a straight A student. Doesn't matter that she's the only second grader in the entire school on the high honor roll. Doesn't matter that her mother and I have told her ceaselessly, "Less than perfect grades are okay, as long as they didn't result from less than perfect effort." She knows that we love her, and she knows that what we expect of her is to try hard in school, period. As long as she tries, we're satisfied, because we know we've got a good kid, and a smart one. She can do anything she puts her mind do. Maybe some of the physical stuff she doesn't do as well as the other kids her age, but academically, she's head and shoulders above her peers.

None of that matters to KatyBeth, because to her, one bad grade makes her a bad kid. In her mind, a B is a cause for disappointment, and God forbid she get a C or lower, because her parents will drive her into the street to live amongst the wolves. The child worries herself into a sobbing mess every. single. Tuesday.

I just don't get it. I was a straight A student myself, but I never put that much pressure on myself. On the rare occasion I made a bad grade, I got over it quickly. Perhaps she gets it from her mother, who has been known to be a bit of a worrier, but The Ex makes it a point not to project those things onto KatyBeth. It's our job as parents to worry, not our daughter's.

Take yesterday's test packet, for example. KatyBeth's aide handed her off to me after school, smiling and rolling her eyes, and mouthed to me, "She's worried about her test papers. Again."

Turns out the conduct summary on the front of the packet had three "no" checks marked; one for listening in class, one for following directions, and one for finishing her work on time. KatyBeth was mortified, dead certain that I was going to shove bamboo splinters under her fingernails or beat her with a lead pipe or waterboard her, or even worse, express disappointment. And as usual, KatyBeth chose to focus on the three areas where her teacher felt she needed improvement, instead of the conduct grade at the bottom of the sheet that read "A minus."

A quick perusal of the test packet revealed the source of the bad marks in conduct. Amidst nine 100's, a 94, and a 95, there was one lonely 69 on a math test. Turns out Katybeth added on a few problems when she should have subtracted, wrote the incorrect answer on one and didn't erase it thoroughly before she penciled in the correct one, and in one problem where she was asked to plot a point on a graph, missed it by one point in the Y plane.

So, of five questions marked incorrect, haste and following directions poorly explained four of them. Had she taken her time and listened to the instructions carefully, she'd have only missed one question, and made another A.

Yep, sounds like my daughter all right. The poor kid apparently inherited my math work ethic (or lack thereof). But dammit, she's still a straight A student, even in math, and she's got her mother the calculus queen to help her avoid ending up like her daddy, who had to give up on medical school because he doesn't have the patience for math.

So why the snot works every Tuesday? I'm truly at a loss here.  I tell my daughter I'm proud of her. I tell her at every opportunity that failure is okay, but failure to try is not. I don't punisher her for bad grades, because they truly are aberrencies, and I make sure she corrects her mistakes.

I manage my expectations, so why can't Katybeth manage hers?

I suppose there are far worse things than having a daughter for whom an A minus is not good enough, but the lip trembling, quavering voice, on-the-edge-of-tears thing every week is ripping me up, and I'd like to spare my daughter the angst.

So, parents and teachers, help me out here. What the hell am I doing wrong? What do I need to do differently?


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