Really? Do you just scoop and run? Is that how you think EMS is supposed to work? :unsure: OmG hE's gOnNa DiE!!! DrIvE fAsT!!!!!!!!
I agree there's a difference between IFT and 911 but saying a 911 medic is better than an IFT medic is absolutely asinine.
Apparently you've never taken a vented patient with bilateral chest tubes that got homeboy life support to the bandaid station after getting shot in the chest and now needs an emergent transfer to the Trauma Center on the other side of town to meet the trauma surgeon and their team...yup did that one alone in the box...but it was an IFT so it wasn't stressful at all since they stabilized him... -_-
Unstable patients are never transferred out my ***. You can fix numbers all you want but until they receive the necessary definitive care nothing any facility is going to do will "stabilize" them completely.
What about the guy I took from the cath lab at a small PCI capable facility to the "big house" for a CABG who was intubated, on a IABP and multiple pressors? Was he stable? Not one bit. Granted I got a nurse for that one since we can't attend a patient on an IABP here but still not an easy transfer for me and that nurse to handle with the two of us in the back.
How about the guy with a TBI and massive IC bleed who's circling the drain and being emergently transferred to a facility capable of neurosurgery? Yup did that one with only me in the back.
How about the intubated post-arrest pedi transfer I took from the satellite hospital to the PICU at the main campus? Did that alone to.
IFT patients are never sick my ***. You apparently weren't paying too close of attention when you worked on that CCT rig or were just to ignorant to realize the gravity of the situations you and your team were being put in.
One day per week during my internship we were the ALS transfer car. I learned so much on those days, a lot more than sitting on a street corner on a slow day in the 911 system.
Before you start bantering at me I work primarily 911 but we do BLS-CCT IFTs as well seeing as we're the only ambulance service in the county.
Sure lots of IFT calls are routine but to say that you can't get good experience or learn from working IFT is ridiculous and frankly very conceited to say. Ever take time to read the H&P of the IFT patient you're taking? Lots of those patients are extremely sick.
Best thing I was ever told by a 20 year 911 Paramedic the first day after clearing my FTO time as an Intermediate was "This job is 99% bull:censored::censored::censored::censored:, 1% oh :censored::censored::censored::censored:."
Just because you work 911 doesn't make you god. Ever heard the term "Paragod"? It's not a label you want attached to you.
I highly doubt your average 1 "critical" patient per shift you talked about are truly as critical as you really think they are, judging from some of your other posts.