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Kilted to Kick Cancer: The Prize Packages Get Even Sweeter!

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For those of you participating in the Kilted to Kick Cancer fundraising challenge, the prizes just got a little sweeter:

Top Fundraiser:

Second Place Fundraiser

  • A $250 gift certificate from Hornady Ammunition.
  • Free registration to one of Todd Louis Green's handgun classes. Todd is one of the most highly regarded handgun trainers around, and he teaches all over the country. Check his site for upcoming classes in your area!
  • A $150 voucher off of a new kilt ($300) from Kilt This, choice of one of their standard designs in your color choice, and one kilt chain. *NEW!*

Third Place Fundraiser

  • A free pair of Magnum Stealth Force 8.0 SZ WPI tactical boots, a $155 value. Magnum Boots USA is one of the official sponsors of Kilted to Kick Cancer, and they make the most rugged and comfortable tactical or work boots you'll ever own.
  • A $100 gift certificate from our other Kilted to Kick Cancer sponsor, AltKilt! Put it towards one of their great-looking Classic Buid kilts, or check out the schweeeeet Steampunk Kilts here!

 

And if you haven't entered, why not?

EMS World Expo, Baby!

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For you EMS types attending EMS World Expo in Las Vegas, here's where I'll be.

  • Tuesday, August 30: The Zoll EMS/Fire Blogger Bash at Las Vegas Hard Rock Cafe, starting at 8:30.
  • Wednesday, August 31:
    • Confessions of an EMS Newbie with Ron Davis at 3:30 from the Promed Podcast Studio in the exhibit hall. We'll have our EMS Newbie Essay Contest winner Mary Caitlin Kelly on, as well as 3rd place finisher Jennifer Martin, and EMS legend Lou Jordan. Come by and watch us live!
    • Live streaming micro-session of EMS Newbie from the Physio Control Social Media Lounge at 5:30.
  • Thursday, September 1:
    • Session 702: Unraveling Tachycardias from 11:00 – 12:15, which really sucks because I really want to see Tim Holman's lecture, "Is it Time We Armed EMT's?" If any of you 2nd Amendment/RKBA advocates manage to catch that lecture, take notes for me and ask good questions, mmmkay?
    • Confessions of an EMS Newbie from 12:00 – 12:50, so if you want to visit after my tachycardia lecture, you'll have to sprint with me to the podcast studio and chat on the way.
    • Session 907: Thinking at Light Speed, from 4:30 – 5:45.
    • The Hollywood Nights party at Planet Hollywood in the Caesar's Forum Shops, from 6:30 until whenever my girlfriend drags me out of there.
  • Friday, September 1:
    • Session 1004: The Airway Continuum, from 8:00 – 9:15.
    • Meet The Speakers, at the EMS World Booth (#3602) from 12:00 – 1:00.

 

Aside from that, you can probably find me wandering the exhibit hall, drooling avaraciously at all the firearms on display at Enforcement Expo, or just schmoozing with the EMS tribe. Y'all make sure to say hello!

Wheels-Up For Las Vegas!

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In five minutes, I'll be boarding my flight for Las Vegas and EMS World Expo.

Y'all watch Casa de Ambulance Driver while I'm gone. Beer's in the fridge, and be sure my dog has food and water.

When I land, I'll put up a longer post with my itinerary and appearance schedule (my, don't *I* sound pompous?) so any of you with a mind to share adult beverages and war stories will know where to find me.

In the meantime, have you signed up for the Kilted to Kick Cancer fundraising challenge? You could win a Ruger .22/45 and hundred of $$ worth of other prizes!

Blogroll Additions

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Added a few new blogs to the reciprocal blogroll today, ya'll feel free to check 'em out. And as always, if you have me on your blogroll, and I haven't reciprocated the link, let me know and I'll correct the oversight.

Among the new additions is Musings of a Dad, a brother from another mother from way up in Canuckistan. He's a flight medic in Canada, and along with guys like JB On The Rocks and TOTWTYTR, one of my best friends. When my Dad died, he was one of the first ones to call. When The Ex left me, same thing. He's been a friend through thick and thin.

And as it turns out, he writes pretty well, too. Y'all go pay him a visit and welcome him to the EMS blogsophere, and encourage him to keep posting.

It’s a Veritable Kiltapalooza Up In Here!

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Finished, two kilts for two very large men, with enough material left over for a kid's kilt. Total cost for 2.5 kilts, including decorative leather work and hardware… less than $150.

WIN!

The Ex is considering orders, people. For a first-time kilt seamstress, I think she did an outstanding job.

Bloggers, are you signed up for the Kilted to Kick Cancer fundraising challenge? If not, why not?

All you have to do is visit the Kilted to Kick Cancer page right here on my blog, read the contest rules, and click the email link either for Prostate Cancer Foundation or Livestrong, and I will email you the special donation links for your blogs. If you don't enter through these links, you won't get any credit for the donations you've solicited!

A relative few bloggers have signed up, folks, and there are some pretty sweet prizes up for grabs for the top three fundraisers. 

It would look awful fishy if I were to win the top prize in a fundraising challenge I organized, but hey, if none of you want to give me any competition, I'll be happy to shoot that Ruger .22/45 and buy a few goodies from Brownell's. And I need a custom holster and gun belt anyway…

 

For You EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 60 is upon Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron and I talk about how absurdly easy ACLS has gotten and how it was in the bad old days, how cardiology was anticlimactic, and answer a few questions about CPAP and how our perception of EMS has changed since we entered the profession.

The next time you listen to an episode of Confessions of an EMS Newbie, we'll be doing it from the podcast studio in Vegas, baby!

It’s Almost, Like, I’m An Apache Or Something…

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Bringing a patient to the ED just now, I noticed a trail of detritus and blood drops leading out the doors to the ambulance bay. Out of curiosity, I followed the blood drops and bloody footprints back to a room. In the hallway just outside the room, there was a half empty banana bag (a standard bag of saline with multivitamins added, making it look yellow), still attached to a 14 gauge IV catheter. Lots of blood drops on the floor in that spot.

When I rolled past the nurse's station with my patient, I casually mentioned, "Y'all know you just had an elopement, right?"

"Huh?" Four heads turned my way, including the ED doc.

"An elopment. Your obnoxious drunk from Room 6 left without permission, I'm betting. He was probably pissed, but not as pissed as y'all were at him."

"Go check," the doctor ordered, and the charge nurse scrambled that way. I chuckled and wheeled my patient to her assigned room, moved her over to the ED stretcher, and gave handoff report to her nurse.

"You saw the guy leave?" the charge nurse asked me as I rolled my stretcher back past the nurse's station.

"Never laid eyes on him," I grinned. "So, did he elope?"

"Long gone," he confirmed. "So how did you know he was an obnoxious drunk?"

"Not just an obnoxious drunk, but an obnoxious drunk that managed to piss y'all off," I corrected.

"That he did," the charge nurse chuckled. "But I'm just curious as to how you knew all that."

"Well," I answered, "Let's just say I've learned how to read the signs."

For You EMS Types…

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… there's a new Clinical Tip on EMS1.com.

You old hands have probably used this trick a few times, but I'll bet most of the newbies have never heard of it. I know my partners usually look at me like I've grown a second head whenever I have them help me do it…

Calling All EMS and Gun Bloggers: WIN A FREE GUN!

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The Kilted to Kick Cancer Fundraising Challenge

  • Get yourself a kilt, and wear it as often as possible for the month of September. If you don't have a kilt, get a kilt. And if you neither have nor want a kilt, don't let that stop you. Not everyone is manly enough to wear a kilt. Seriously, we won't judge you because you're not secure in your own masculinity. Wimp.
  • If you choose to wear a kilt, post a picture of yourself wearing it on the sidebar of your blog, along with a link to the official Kilted to Kick Cancer page. Throughout the month of September, I'm going to be posting photos of myself wearing a kilt in public. Kilted at the grocery store. Kilted at the movie theater. Kilted at the gun range. Kilted at the elementary school picking up my daughter. Sweaty, naked-from-the-waist-up kilted, while mowing my lawn… okay, maybe not that last one, but you get the picture. If you are too insecure in your own masculinity choose not to go kilted, or if you're female, instead post one of the official Kilted to Kick Cancer badges on your blog:

 

 

  • Go visit the Kilted to Kick Cancer fundraising page on my blog, and read the contest rules and details. Sign-up links are on that page. The way it works is, you click the email link on that page, I send you a unique URL that you can post on your blog that allows us to track your donations. You can donate to the Prostate Cancer Foundation or join the Kilted to Kick Cancer grassroots event at LiveStrong, or solicit donations for both. All donations are tax deductible, and 100% of the donations go straight to those organizations. There are no administrative costs and overhead on this end, and all prizes have been graciously donated by people and companies in the shooting community.
  • What do you win for raising the most funds? Well, I'm glad you asked!

TOP FUNDRAISER

Subject to applicable firearms laws, of course, shipped to the FFL of your choice. You pay transfer fees.

A custom gun belt/ holster combo, made to your specifications, from Michael's Custom Holsters. Mike does premium leather work, and he'll also be making me a coyote-faced sporran with integrated 1911 holster for me to wear with my kilt. We'll also be auctioning off a twin to that sporran, with 50% of proceeds going to the winner's designated charity.

 

A $250 gift card to Brownell's, courtesy of Larry Weeks. Every gunnie's heart goes pitter pat when the Big Brown Truck of Happiness pulls up with a package from Brownell's!

 

SECOND PLACE FUNDRAISER

A $250 gift certificate from Hornady Ammunition

 

Free registration to a pistol training class from Todd Louis Green. Carry a handgun for personal defense? Aspiring competitive shooter? Consider yourself a competent shooter, but just want to polish your skills? Then you could benefit from professional training, and Todd is one of the best in the business.

 

THIRD PLACE FUNDRAISER

A $100 gift certificate from official Kilted to Kick Cancer sponsor, Alt.Kilt. Put it toward one of their Steampunk-inspired kilts shown here, or any of their other awesome custom kilts!

 

A free pair of Magnum Stealth Force 8.0 SZ CT WPI tactical boots, from Magnum Boots USA. Sorry, the Magnum boots are for U.S. residents only, folks.

 

The Kilted to Kick Cancer Fundraising Challenge kicks off September 1, so get ready, and spread the word to your fellow EMS and gun bloggers!
 

And in the meantime, get yourself checked!

 

305

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Actually, it was 302.4, but I'm allowing for the fact that I wasn't in uniform when I weighed in, and had no cell phone camera to capture the scale readout.

That's 55.2 pounds lost since February 1. Hopefully, I can put up a sub-300 post by the time I get back from EMS World Expo!

Be Fruitful and Multiply

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Just had a patient, a two-week-old little girl. Cute as a button, not a thing wrong with her. Granddad was very concerned because she had choked on some formula. Insisted on taking her to the hospital, in fact.

Except, he was not her grandfather but her father, an assumption he quickly corrected when I said, "I think she's gonna be okay, Pawpaw. Nothing to worry about."

Dude is 68 years old, and this is his thirteenth child, with multiple women. I was tempted to tell him they know what causes that now, but I didn't.

So yeah, turns out there's an XY counterpart to chronic polybabydaddia.

Just An Observation

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Has anyone else noticed that brown recluse spiders seem to have abandoned their traditional habitat of dry, dusty woodpiles and dark closets for the sweaty ass cracks and armpits of people with limited soap and toilet paper budgets?

It's a conundrum…

But, But… It’s For Your Own Good!

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Nicotine tests could cost Volusia County medics their jobs.

Volusia County is taking over ambulance services and the anti-smoking policy of county employees could cost some ambulance crew members and paramedics their jobs.

Ambulance employees are currently allowed to smoke if they were hired before the anti-smoking policy took effect earlier this year, but now that those employees will become county workers, all of them will have to pass nicotine tests to keep their jobs.

Volusia County's administration said the policy is a health issue and they do not want taxpayers to pay for expensive health care costs of county employees who smoke. County officials said they also believe they are not invading anyone's privacy.

"When you work for a public agency there really is no such thing as invasion of privacy. They work for the public you know and that's part of the price," Dave Byron of Volusia County said.

(bold emphasis mine)

"Just dial up the heat under the kettle boys, looks like these frogs still think it's a hot tub!"

Ah, the petty tyrannies of local governments and the creep of incrementalism. I think what's good for the goose is good for the gander. Statistically, you're much more likely to contract HIV if you have unprotected anal sex with gay Haitian IV heroin abusers. So why don't we require ol' Dave Byron to submit to HIV and STD testing, monthly drug testing, and tap his phones to see if knows any gays or Haitians? After all, he's a public servant, too. Why should he have any expectation of privacy?

I could say a lot of things here, but someone else said it best:

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.  ~ C.S. Lewis

How about something more sensible and less Big Brotherish, like requiring their employees who smoke to contribute a higher percentage to their health insurance premiums?

Naaaaah, that'd never work!

 

To Jennifer…

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… I have little comfort to offer, Ma'am.

You saw something no person should never have to see, something you never signed up for.

I did sign up for it, but I'm not sure I considered the implications when I enrolled in EMT school. All my scenarios had happy endings. I was always the heroic rescuer, and all my patients lived. And looking back, not once did I envision being the person left behind to pick up the pieces. The aftermath never entered my mind.

And never, ever did I envision my patient dying because I failed him. Yet it happened, and his ghost visited me for years afterward. It took a lot of perspective, and the love and support of a good woman to get me to the point where I could make friends with that ghost, and not dread seeing his face in my dreams.

You say you're emotionally tough, and you're wondering why you can't stop crying, and why your toughness has abandoned you now.

It didn't abandon you at all. You were a layperson on the scene of a horrific accident, and you did what you had to do. You didn't freeze, you didn't fall apart, and you offered what little aid your training and equipment would allow. A trained rescuer could have done little more.

Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgement that something else is more important than fear. ~ Ambrose Redmoon

Falling apart after the fact is not weakness, and it happens to us all. Any professional EMT who tells you otherwise is either lying, or the type of person you don't want taking care of you and your loved ones. The way you're feeling now is the price you pay for your humanity. And believe me, not feeling is far worse. 

It was hard not having a soul, most especially when you could remember having had one. ~ Tom Clancy in Without Remorse

Right now, you're wondering if this feeling is going to last forever, if you'll ever be able to forget the sound of that child calling for his mother.

I wish I could say you will. If only that were true.

But it's not.

But believe me, it will get easier. You'll think about it less as time passes, and the memories will fade, until one day you'll realize that you haven't thought about him for quite some time. And yes, there will be things that make you think of him, and the pain will come flooding back so quick and hard that it will take your breath away, and the sobs will catch in your throat. That is how grief works, and there is no avoiding it or hastening the process.

But those moments will pass more quickly, and they'll become fewer and farther between. That's how healing works, too. If you believe in God, ask Him for peace and understanding. That's what I do. If you don't believe in God, then find your peace and understanding from the company of friends and loved ones. Go live your life, hon. It may be hard at first, but eventually you realize that it's not something you have to force yourself to do any more.

And if you need that Xanax to get you through the occasional rough spots, then so be it. But I beg this of you – if you find yourself at the point you need to refill that prescription, it is time to seek the help of a mental health professional.

And there is no shame in that, either.

Until that time comes, I want you to consider this; if those children's mother had survived the accident, what would she have done?

Exactly what you did.

She'd have put herself between her children and the horrible scene around them. She'd have held their hands, and whispered soothing words to them, and sought to quiet their fears. She'd have tended their wounds until the rescuers arrived. She'd have swallowed her own grief and terror, and borne that of her children. She'd have done whatever she could to spare them that pain.

She wasn't able to do that for them, but through fate, or happenstance, or God's own providence, someone was there in her stead – you.

And that's something.

Let’s Talk About What’s Under My Kilt

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September is Prostate Cancer Awareness Month.

Last year, in response to a challenge from Epijunky, a bunch of us EMS bloggers changed our blog background pink for the month of October in support of breast cancer awareness. Typically, Happy Medic was one of the first to lend his support to a good cause.

And just as typically, TOWTYTR was quick to point out something we hadn't considered; that prostate cancer kills as many men as breast cancer kills women, yet none of us EMS bloggers were raising awareness for that, and why not? Just how prevalent is prostate cancer? Well, here are the facts:

  • Approximately 241,000 men will be diagnosed in 2011
  • Prostate cancer affects 1 in 6 men
  • Over 33,000 of us will die this year from prostate cancer.
  • It is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in men, second only to lung cancer

Fast forward a year, a friend and fellow EMS blogger Hybridmedic is diagnosed with testicular cancer and chronicles his treatment on his blog, and Happy and his compatriot Motorcop announced their awareness campaign for male-specific cancers, Kilted to Kick Cancer.

I must admit, the name has a certain ring to it, though I'm disappointed they didn't choose my ideas, "Operation Dangle" or "Hey Doc, you usin' the whole hand?"

Besides practicing good prostate health, participants in Kilted to Kick Cancer are going to wear kilts for the entire month of September. Every moment we're not on duty and required to be in uniform, we're going to be wearing kilts, and use the inevitable questions to segue into talking about male-specific cancers. So, starting September 1, it's all kilted, all the time.

Yes, that also means that I'll be delivering my lectures at EMS World Expo wearing a kilt. Shopping in a kilt. Picking up KatyBeth from school in a kilt. Eating at restaurants in a kilt. Going to the Hollywood Nights party in Vegas in a kilt. Fishing in a kilt. Going to the gun range with Husband In Law in a kilt (and browbeating HIL to go kilted, too). Recording the EMS Newbie podcast live from EMS World Expo in a kilt…

… although that's more clothing than I usually wear when I record EMS Newbie. For those of you who shudder at that mental image, I offer you this:

 

And along the way, I'll be snapping pics and postng them here on the blog. If it only convinces a few men to stop putting off their prostate cancer screening exams, it'll be worth it, but I plan to do more than that.

I'm going to raise money AND awareness.

I'm issuing a challenge to any and all EMS and gun bloggers who read my semi-amusing little scribblings here on this blog. Participate in Kilted to Kick Cancer, post photos of yourself wearing a kilt on your blog, and raise money for testicular and prostate cancer research. The blogger who raises the most money between September 1 and October 1 wins a nice prize package of shooting and outdoor gear.

Keep an eye on the Kilted To Kick Cancer page here on this blog for the contest rules to be posted in the coming week, and how to get your unqiue badges to track donations through your blogs. The designated charities are the Prostate Cancer Foundation and LiveStrong, and 100% of donations go directly to those organizations. As prizes are donated, I'll post those, too. Currently, we've got roughly $500 worth of services and merchandise committed, with more on the way.

So get your kilts, and get ready. September 1 is barely two weeks away!

In the meantime, I need to find a sporran that can accomodate a pistol holster…

 

It’s Like American Idol for EMS Geeks!

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Except that Simon Cowell is much shorter and much nicer, Randy Jackson is white, and whoever they have playing Paula Abdul is sober.

Okay, so maybe not like American Idol at all, but if it's anything like America's Got Talent, I get to be David Hasselhoff.

If any of you medics or EMTs out there have dreamed of your shot at fame notoriety infamy having your own EMS podcast, Chris Montera of EMS Garage is holding an open casting call for the Next EMS Radio Star..

Charismatic? Opinionated? Well-versed in your profession and not afraid to share your viewpoint?

Check out the contest rules and fill out your application!

For You EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 59 is up on Confessions of An EMS Newbie.

Ron learns the basics of infarct recognition using a 12-lead ECG, and I make the point that infarct recognition is only a small facet of 12 lead interpretation. We talk about inhaled corticosteroids in asthma, the value of mean arterial pressure, and how to buff your resume and sanitize your social media presence before looking for a job. Somewhere in there, Ron crosses over to the Littmann Dark Side and abandons the One True Stethoscope.

You Newbies these days and your 12-lead ECG and your CPAP and your fancy schmancy cardiology stethoscopes. In my day, we made do with a LifePak 5 and a non-rebreather, and when we wanted to hear heart or lung sounds, we put our ear to the patient's chest and listened. And when we finally did get a cheap Sprague-Rappaport stethoscope, by God, we were grateful.

Too Little, Too Late

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The National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians has just released its position paper on a proposed lead Federal agency for EMS.

The money quote:

NAEMT believes that a lead agency or administration within a cabinet-level department should be established to lead EMS efforts at the federal level, including development and implementation of a national EMS framework and coordination of all EMS programs and activities undertaken throughout the federal government. NAEMT believes that, as the core function of EMS is the provision of medical care to patients outside of the hospital, this lead agency should be located within the Department of Health and Human Services.

(bold emphasis mine)

Nice job, NAEMT. I've said the same thing myself.

Five months ago.

I'm glad that NAEMT is out there diligently representing my interests, a full three months after the May 15 deadline that FICEMS imposed for stakeholers to offer their input.

I appreciate the sentiment, really, but that does about as much good as plastering a Ron Paul bumper sticker on your car six months after Obama took the oath of office.

For You Gun Nuts…

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… this is the coolest story you will read all week.

 

A historic Colt .45-caliber, semi-automatic pistol stolen more than 30 years ago from a Medal of Honor winner in South Carolina has been returned to its rightful owner.

The gun and owner were reunited after a history buff in Medford, who bought the old handgun in an online auction last month, tracked down the retired Marine whose name is engraved on it.

"I knew if I found him and it was his gun, I couldn't keep it," said George Berry, 71, who knew little about the history of the gun when he purchased it from an auction house in Pennsylvania.

Read the whole thing. I love stories like this. They demonstrate that there are still men of honor in this world.

I LOL’ed

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Joe Packowski on how EMS providers view each other.

Chuck Norris would be the perfect medical director, too. 

Evidence-based medicine? Pshaw.

Chuck Norris decides what is evidence, and science follows suit, baby.

For you EMS Newbies…

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… Episode 58 is up on Confessions of an EMS Newbie.

Ron and I discuss CHF treatment and why Lasix is better left in the drug box unused, how the training focus is different for nurses vs paramedics and how that difference manifests itself in a resuscitation, and we wax rhapsodic about Harris County Emergency Corps' medical director, Dr. George Kiss.

It's Confessions of an EMS Newbie. If this episode were Blazing Saddles, Ron and I would be Mongo, and Dr. Kiss would be Sheriff Bart.

And Mongo have deep feelings of respect and affection for Sheriff Bart.

Recorded For Posterity

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Got a call from the medical records department at the hospital where I brought in the woman in labor a couple of weeks back.

Seems that since I'm the one who delivered the baby. I'm the one who signs the birth certificate.

That's a new one on me, but I kind of like the idea that long after I'm dead, this family will have a document attesting to my part in their joyous occasion.

Beats getting another stork pin, that's for sure.

I Condemn The Cops When They Do It…

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… so it's only fair that I condemn the same behavior in my fellow EMT's.

YouTube Preview Image

Let me spell this out real clearly for you, young lady: You have no expectation of privacy on a public street. Shut up, do your job, and try to project a professional image of your agency to the nice cameraman.

At best, this incident demonstrates weapons-grade stupidity on the part of the EMT, both in her lack of knowledge regarding freedom of the press, and in resorting to physical force for something so trivial as filming a house fire. At worst, it's a symptom of deeper character issues that make her wholly unsuited for EMS. If her agency is smart, they'll subject her to some pretty harsh discipline, apologize profusely to the reporter, and disavow such behavior from any of their other crews.

As for the EMT, she's lucky the reporter was more professional than she was. I know plenty of otherwise chivalrous men who are totally gender-blind when it comes to defending themselves. That Star of Life and a double dose of X chromosomes doesn't earn you a Mulligan when you strike the first blow, Miss. Strike an unprovoked blow on a man, don't be surprised if you earn a man's ass-whipping.

 

For You EMS Types…

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… there's a new column on management and leadership on EMS1.com.

A snippet for you:

As one former EMT and current law enforcement officer was told when he was commissioned as an Army lieutenant, "Rank hath its privileges, rank hath its responsibilities, and rank hath its obligations. The responsibilities and obligations always outnumber the privileges."

Too many supervisors forget that.

Enjoy.

Overheard On The Bolance

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Dispatch Drone: "Head quarters to Borg Cube 69."

Ambulance Driver: "Go for 69."

DD: "69, we need you to respond to Fydallo Ho Expressway eastbound near the Chili's, red Chevy Silverado pickup pulled over in the emergency lane with his hazard lights on. 38-year-old male with a spider bite."

[sounds of AD banging his head against the dash]

AD: "Aaahhh, Dispatch, could you repeat your traffic? That came through kinda garbled."

DD: "Fydallo Ho Expressway, eastbound,  at mile marker 29. Red Chevy Silverado pickup, driver says he's – "

AD: "Um, yeah, Dispatch. Guess you weren't garbled after all. 69 responding to the emergent spider bite pulled over one mile from the hospital."

[more sounds of AD banging his head against the dash, whimpering in despair for the human species]

*** five minutes later ***

DD: "69, you can cancel your call. Patient says he's gonna try to make it on to the hospital himself."

AD: "I'm sure it'll be an ordeal, but here's hoping he makes it alive, Dispatch. Godspeed to you, Spider Bite Man, Godspeed…"


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