And that is a personal choice that you nor anyone else should be judged for as long as you did not breach your duty to act.
At the end of the day we all go to bed with the choices we have made that affect our lives and the lives of others.
Seems like you're doing an awful lot of judging...
They appear to be using the excuse of "I'm just an EMT or a Paramedic, there is no way I could ever be expected to or actually safely carry out a rescue". Almost as if they are better than that which is really sad.
Who said they're better than that. From what I've read, people are saying that they won't put themselves in an unsafe situation, especially since they don't have the training to be in that situation, safely.
And yes, EMS does have responsibility to access patients and provide care in rescue situations. The patient may not have time to wait to be brought to you.
I don't have the training to do so safely. I'll wait the 4-7 minutes it takes for a suburban department to get on scene (and since our response time is longer than theirs, I'd venture to say that they'll be there before us).
Put yourself in that patients position and think what you would want and expect from that EMT or Paramedic on the scene to assist you. Would you want delayed care by 20,30,40mins all because of a crappy attitude?
I wouldn't want someone else getting killed because they were trying to help me, no. What good does a dead paramedic do?
If you don't want to work in the field and be exposed to hazards of rescue situations maybe the hospital ED is a better place to work.
Or, I could let those training in extrication, extricate...
(cough)SashaI'llridewithyouanytime(cough)
This
I don't believe anyone actually said that. what they said was "I'm just an EMT/Paramedic, if there is an unsafe scene, let those who are trained and equipped to mitigate said unsafe scene do so, before I let my untrained and unequipped attempt to get involved, where I have a high likelihood of not helping or even worse adding to the incident when I get hurt."
I don't want any of my coworkers get hurt because they tried to enter an unsafe scene and got burned. I also don't want to be the *** who does something equally stupid and tries to help said coworker get out of said unsafe situation (although I probably would).
I don't care if a dozen babies die, the nuns perish, the school kids don't make it, I know it sounds harsh to some people, but if you try to be a hero and do something stupid and end up getting hurt, you have not helped anyone, you have made the situation worse. You want to try to save everyone, more power to you.
if it's an unsafe scene (building collapse, active shooting, MVA with overturn and entrapment, electrocution, assault in progress, hazmat scene, you name it), I am going to let those who are trained and equipped to mitigate the situation do there job, and if it's still unsafe, bring the sick and injured out of the unsafe scene and to me, because I want to go home at the end of my shift.
This.
Not even the FD? They should never enter burning buildings? Never enter confined spaces with who knows what kind of atmosphere? Never enter rushing water? It is the FD's job to train and practice for these hazards. It is why they take the job and is their obligation!
They're trained to do so, I'm not.
Not even the PD? They should never pursue or approach an armed gunman? They should never engage in a firefight? Never taken down an assailant? They should turn and run?
They're trained to do so, I'm not.
Not even our armed forces? They should not do all that they do? They should not patrol roads with potential IEDs? Engage the enemy? All because they may get killed? They do what they do because it is part of the job!
Where in my employment contract does it state: "I am prepared to give my life..." (taken from Article I of the US Armed Forces Code of Conduct)? It doesn't, and it doesn't say it in yours.
There is an obligation and duty to act. It has absolutely nothing to do with fantasy, playing hero, or romanticizing. Fire/Rescue/EMS/Law Enforcement are dangerous jobs and you never know what situation you may find yourself in. That's why we train to be able to handle the situation and work through it.
I must have missed the day that we trained to remove someone from a collapsed building.
A firefighter does not fight fire or search an apartment building engulfed in flames to be a hero. They do it because it is their job and obligation.
A cop doesn't pull his side arm and fire shots to be a hero. It is his/her job.
This seems like further babbling (I can think of no better word) continued from above, which I've answered.
A Paramedic does not attempt to rescue a person entrapped in an auto or attempt to pull someone from a house fire to be a hero. They do it because it's their job and obligation.
What EMS-only departments do you know that go into burning buildings?
A Marine does not engage the enemy to be a hero. They do it because it is their duty and their job.
And because they'll be killed if the enemy engages them first, and lands some rounds on target. How am I going to die if I don't enter a house fire?
RISKING YOUR SELF IS AN OBLIGATION AND PART OF THE JOB.
No, it's not.
YOU DO IT SAFELY, NOT BLINDLY AND IGNORANTLY. SOMETIMES WE DON'T ALL MAKE IT HOME AND THAT PART SUCKS. BUT WE SACRIFICE BECAUSE OF OUR LOVE FOR OUR FELLOW MAN AND STRIVE SO THAT THEY CAN LIVE AND CONTINUE WITH A FUTURE.
Rambling...
JUST AS WE WOULD EXPECT THE SAME IN RETURN. IF YOUR IN A SITUATION WHERE YOUR GONNA DIE UNLESS SOMEONE ELSE PUTS THEMSELVES IN EQUAL DANGER, ARE YOU OKAY WITH THEM STANDING BY WATCHING YOU DIE? OR ARE YOU GONNA BE HOPING THEY HAVE THE TRAINING TO GET YOU OUT OF WHATEVER SITUATION YOUR IN?
If they have the training, and equipment, how is that equal danger?
If I'm laying in a pool of water, with a downed power line in it, do I expect the paramedic to jump in and pull me out? No...
ITS NOT ABOUT BEING A HERO. ITS ABOUT TAKING THE TRAINING AND SKILLS YOU WORKED YOUR *** OFF TO ACHIEVE AND PUTTING THEM TO USE TO SAVE ANOTHER'S LIFE.
Rule #1: I go home at the end of the night.
Rule #2: Nothing interferes with Rule #1.
I would reccomend anyone to attend some sort of extracation class if you are a 911 EMS provider. Even if you never plan to use it you never know what you might emcounter. I refresh yearly with the local FD eventhough I am not a fire fighter. It helps.
Get the local community college to put me through their course, free of charge, and I'll be glad to learn...