than you haven't been in this field very long.
knowing when ALS is needed or not needed is part of being a good provider.
bring proud of never calling for ALS, or always cancelling ALS, on sick person calls or those borderline cases is a sign that you are a poor provider.
I've called ALS for borderline stuff. I've called for sick patients. and sometimes we both arrive at the same time, and I will say "since you are here, why don't you check them out and throw them on the monitor?" which I only do to medics who treat BLS providers poorly.
and on one borderline call, I had a 40 year old with chest pain, and when the paramedic arrived, her first words were "why are we here???" I told her "because I have a 40 year old man with chest pain, I don't know why. I've ruled out anything I can think of, maybe you want to take a look? " and while he isn't acutely dying, I don't know what the underlying cause is. they assessed and M+T to the hospital with us. and if they released to us oh well, I wanted to make sure there was nothing else going on that I couldn't detect.
for those paramedics that :censored::censored::censored::censored::censored: about getting called for BS, who cares??? you are paid by the hour right? show up, do an assessment, find the patient stable, write a chart and release the patient to BLS to take to the hospital, and go back to your couch or TV.