Not many what? Automatons?
Regardless of your level of care, thinking is completely required in this job.
Some more than others, I think, is the sentiment.
Maybe somebody hit him? Maybe he hit his head puking in the toilet?
Patient was too comatose to vomit.
You think boarding caused the patient harm? In adding extra extrication time? The paramedics didn't seem concerned; they were code 1, anyhow.If he fell or not is not my issue, the question is does he have a significant enough potential to reasonably cause a catastrophic injury and was there any physical exam finding that supported it?
Ask yourself:
What do you consider a critical patient?
What do I consider a critical patient?
I'll bet they are not even close to matching.
Not directed at you , but sometimes I wonder if it is even possible EMTs can think anymore. I remember when they capable providers.
I know what you were taught.
I know why you were taught that way.
I know you are considered an adult learner and the instruction of your original teacher in your mind is the highest credible source and I am just some moron in typing on the internet telling you something diametrically opposed to brainwashing you got in EMT class.
I also know you are new, and probably haven't seen all that many patients, much less critical ones.
So in your mind any patient that scares you or otherwise causes stress is critical.
But I would like you to reread my post in response to Corkey, I don't recall the number, but it is the one above JPs football picture. Then think about it.
If you harm a patient, you are wrong. Nevermind the lawsuit, you might harm many and never get sued. But if you cause somebody injury or exaserbate their illness for that little piece of mental security or to satisfy a standing order that cannot possibly account for every circumstance, you are worse than no help at all.
You seem to elevate the position of doctors, of which I know one or two, Some I like and hold the highest respect for I disagree with on occasion. But I don't know any that would actually have you carry out a treatment without regard as to what that treatment would do to a given patient.
"It's a do no harm" thing.
Now I don't honestly care if your protocol says stick as a pole in the patient's a$$ and spin them around on it, you are called to and trusted to do what is in the best interest of your patient by the highest medical authority. The patient. You have a responsibility to them and that trust to think about what you are advising them and doing to them.
It is not a bonus.
I think you should go demand your money back from an instructor who did not actually teach you, but instead made you memorize the fears and anxieties they projected upon you.
You may find your career much longer and more rewarding with the calm that knowledge brings.
Honestly, if you are in medicine to simply do as you are told, you may find better pay in a factory.
I can argue treatment with just about anyone.
But that is not the point.
Did you know that spinal precautions in a hospital consist of a c-collar and a soft matress?
In fact, I cannot recall one instance of a spineboard being used in any medical environment outside of EMS. Do you think the principles of medicine change when you leave the ivory tower called a hospital?
I am truly sorry your State thinks you are too stupid to make a decision. It is not the only one and a disservice to you as a person.
But ask yourself, you just told me thinking was optional. So are they really at fault if a majority of the people providing care think that way?
Wouldn't that make you part of the problem?
I'm not saying that all unreliable patients who fall should get back boarded. I'm saying that I'm going to backboard them because I don't want to lose my license. Really pretty straightforward.
I am new, and appreciate your viewpoints.