Some of the BLS providers (who have the ambulances that we ALS folks have to ride in) scare the bejabbers out of me.
This. Everytime I tell BLS to head to the hospital without L&S, it's like a little part of them dies inside lol
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Some of the BLS providers (who have the ambulances that we ALS folks have to ride in) scare the bejabbers out of me.
Peds all the way. I don't even feel comfortable around them in normal life, let alone them being the patient (I like how I am referring to peds as if they are an alien, which I mean come on when they are first born they do look like one).
Is it bad that I laughed like a maniacal person when I read that?
My fear? Freezing on scene. Been a Paramedic for 2 years, EMS for 3, and it still worries me.
Go large and get a job at a PEDs transport, ER, or ICU.
After a few months, you will make peds look easy.
(anytime you are really good at something it looks so effortless anyone can do it.)
This is pretty much mine. I am completely OCD when It comes to giving a med. I'll check the vial multiple times to make sure I have the right med and dose. But at the same time I think this is a fear I never want to losePeds doesn't actually scare me, what really scares me is administering a med and the patient having that one obscure contraindication that I forgot exists and makes them go into irreversible arrest.
A, B, C homey. When in doubt just ensure they have an adequate airway, are breathing (or have you breathing for them), and start addressing circulatory issues.
My biggest fear is always that late night transfer or of course getting a call right before shift change when i have somewhere to be.