reaper
Working Bum
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Interesting article that was sent out by our state EMS office.
This is a long letter, but does have an excellent point to it!
BLOGGING? A GOOD IDEA?
My name is Zach Bieghler and I'm a paramedic in the State of Kansas.
I have served with various EMS agencies in South Central Kansas as well
as for an educational institution. I've been a paramedic since
September of 2005 and in EMS since 2002. I've spent the last six years
of my life dedicated to EMS, working as much as I could, between
multiple EMS jobs to gain knowledge and experience. Life was good. I had
recently become established enough to buy my first home in the town of
which I served. I was taking various EMS courses to be a better
instructor for my students of which I taught. Life as it seemed was on
the right track I hoped and dreamed for. Unfortunately, that dream came
to a sudden stop, which came by no one else's fault but my own.
In April of 2007 my EMS partner and I were called out for an
inter-facility transfer. The patient had several medical complications,
in addition to being severely obese. Several hours after the call and
when the report was finished, I sat down at the computer, while on the
clock mind you, and entered Myspace.com. There I started a "blog"
which I wrote about the call I had just ran hours before. Out of respect
for my previous employer, I'm not going to discuss what I had written
in the blog, but to say ashamedly, it was vulgar and offensive and
related to the patient's level of obesity.
I had written the blog for my friends to see only, most of which are in
the EMS profession. I later discovered that I did not have settings
adequate on Myspace.com to prevent the general public from viewing. I
wrote the blog to share my experiences and to make them laugh. As a
healthcare provider, we all must be empathetic and sympathetic towards
all patients regardless of the situation. As I wrote this blog, my
empathy for this patient was absent. I didn't think about the anger,
humility, and mistrust that could have manifested by the patient towards
me, my agency or my profession. Not to mention a legal preceding that
could have been initiated by the patient that could have damaged my
agencies trust and reputation. This will present a tough, but extremely
important lesson to learn as time goes by.
After I had written the blog, time went by as usual. As months went by
I had actually forgot that I had written the blog. I had actually cared
for this patient two more times since the blog for various reasons. As I
continued caring for him I grew to like the patient. I remember one time
as I entered his residence he greeted me by first name with a smile. You
have developed a special bond with a patient when they remember you by
name and you remember them. At this point, I would have deleted the blog
from my site, but as I said, I had forgotten all about it.
In September of 2007, a co-worker reported the blog to my employer.
This initiated a meeting between my Director, hospital Vice President
and my agencies attorney. While participating in a mass casualty drill I
was pulled away and escorted to the Vice President's office. I knew it
had to be a significant matter to pull me away from such a training
exercise. Completely oblivious as to what was going on, I found myself
in the office with the Vice President of Operations and the Director of
EMS. I was immediately confronted with the blog that I had written. I
had a rush of emotions, the most
powering being sorrow for what I had done. I was instructed not to talk
about it, delete all work related blogs immediately and was given a 30
day unpaid suspension. My Director also told me that he would more than
likely be reporting the incident to the Kansas Board of EMS.
In a state of complete devastation I arrived home and immediately
logged onto Myspace.com and deleted every blog I had ever written. I
found out that evening that two of my co-workers had also been suspended
30 days without pay because of my personal blog and their return
comments. I'm the author and they got suspended as well! I had never
lived with such guilt in my life as I felt then. So guilt ridden in
fact, that I lost 10 lbs over the next few days.
See part 2!!!!!
This is a long letter, but does have an excellent point to it!
BLOGGING? A GOOD IDEA?
My name is Zach Bieghler and I'm a paramedic in the State of Kansas.
I have served with various EMS agencies in South Central Kansas as well
as for an educational institution. I've been a paramedic since
September of 2005 and in EMS since 2002. I've spent the last six years
of my life dedicated to EMS, working as much as I could, between
multiple EMS jobs to gain knowledge and experience. Life was good. I had
recently become established enough to buy my first home in the town of
which I served. I was taking various EMS courses to be a better
instructor for my students of which I taught. Life as it seemed was on
the right track I hoped and dreamed for. Unfortunately, that dream came
to a sudden stop, which came by no one else's fault but my own.
In April of 2007 my EMS partner and I were called out for an
inter-facility transfer. The patient had several medical complications,
in addition to being severely obese. Several hours after the call and
when the report was finished, I sat down at the computer, while on the
clock mind you, and entered Myspace.com. There I started a "blog"
which I wrote about the call I had just ran hours before. Out of respect
for my previous employer, I'm not going to discuss what I had written
in the blog, but to say ashamedly, it was vulgar and offensive and
related to the patient's level of obesity.
I had written the blog for my friends to see only, most of which are in
the EMS profession. I later discovered that I did not have settings
adequate on Myspace.com to prevent the general public from viewing. I
wrote the blog to share my experiences and to make them laugh. As a
healthcare provider, we all must be empathetic and sympathetic towards
all patients regardless of the situation. As I wrote this blog, my
empathy for this patient was absent. I didn't think about the anger,
humility, and mistrust that could have manifested by the patient towards
me, my agency or my profession. Not to mention a legal preceding that
could have been initiated by the patient that could have damaged my
agencies trust and reputation. This will present a tough, but extremely
important lesson to learn as time goes by.
After I had written the blog, time went by as usual. As months went by
I had actually forgot that I had written the blog. I had actually cared
for this patient two more times since the blog for various reasons. As I
continued caring for him I grew to like the patient. I remember one time
as I entered his residence he greeted me by first name with a smile. You
have developed a special bond with a patient when they remember you by
name and you remember them. At this point, I would have deleted the blog
from my site, but as I said, I had forgotten all about it.
In September of 2007, a co-worker reported the blog to my employer.
This initiated a meeting between my Director, hospital Vice President
and my agencies attorney. While participating in a mass casualty drill I
was pulled away and escorted to the Vice President's office. I knew it
had to be a significant matter to pull me away from such a training
exercise. Completely oblivious as to what was going on, I found myself
in the office with the Vice President of Operations and the Director of
EMS. I was immediately confronted with the blog that I had written. I
had a rush of emotions, the most
powering being sorrow for what I had done. I was instructed not to talk
about it, delete all work related blogs immediately and was given a 30
day unpaid suspension. My Director also told me that he would more than
likely be reporting the incident to the Kansas Board of EMS.
In a state of complete devastation I arrived home and immediately
logged onto Myspace.com and deleted every blog I had ever written. I
found out that evening that two of my co-workers had also been suspended
30 days without pay because of my personal blog and their return
comments. I'm the author and they got suspended as well! I had never
lived with such guilt in my life as I felt then. So guilt ridden in
fact, that I lost 10 lbs over the next few days.
See part 2!!!!!