Made me remember my first oh :censored::censored::censored::censored: code as a green EMT of 6 months. Was to one of our frequent flyers who had a lot of mental and emotional issues, we go running in, my paramedic calling out the ladies name and we find her in the living room in 3 flannel shirts, two blankets, and she stuffed herself into two sleeping bags then zipped it all up. She had taken a mass dose of all her medication and O.D'd, committing suicide. Course, her body was still warm so we worked her for about 45 minutes, in this time having loaded her up in the rig. While we were bagging her, this green foamy stuff was coming up and it smelled a lot like asparagus, took me about a year and a half to eat the vegetable after that!
Another was a young girl, 18, had just graduated the day before from high school. She apparently was going down a hill at a high rate of speed, talking on her cell phone to, whom we found out later was her dad, with no seatbelt. Something caused her to swerve, she tried to correct it and flipped the explorer she was driving 4 times before it came to rest on its top. We believe, and bystanders back the story up, that on the 3rd revolution of the vehicle, she came out of the window and the vehicle landed on her, slid then flipped one more time. Text book step down of the back, crushed skull, broken femurs, both of them, etc...we helped the coroner roll the body over to take photos and at that point I had to look up and just blank my mind.
Those two are the two really big calls that will stick in my mind. Did it bother me? Hell ya it did but I was also there to do a service to my community and I dealt with it. I keep a journal that I hide rather well and when I have calls that are very bothersome or really leave an impact, I find a quiet place and write them down in pretty graphic detail. It really helps me in that way to let go and find some therapy so to speak.
I also work in the hospital and yes, I have shed tears over a few patients that have really tugged on my heartstrings. It is harder I think when you work with them for several weeks and then when you come back on shift a few days later your told they have passed away or they do go on your shift and you have to do the last bath and bag them up in the body bag, of whatever your hospitals protocol may be. I know my nurse and I almost dropped a woman as I had rolled her over to wash her back before we put the body back under her and her body let out a large pocket of air, so it sounded like she burped, and her body did shudder!! We looked at one another and started to laugh nervously. Other bodies have let out body fluids from the mouth, nose, and sometimes ears, depending on what their condition or diagnosis was.