Surely it's not the fantastic pay of EMS that attracted you, right?
My journey through public safety and later medicine has been ever evolving. At no point has it been the money.
I recently read an article about tourniquet use, pre-hospital, and it featured a gentleman who was at a rifle range when he caught a .30 caliber bullet through both thighs, severing the popliteal artery in one leg and the femoral in the other. A tactical medic present said that it was the most blood loss he's ever seen. Two responders that happened to be at the range applied tourniquets, improvised, and most likely saved this man's life.?
I think you may be superimposing what I said onto a very abnormal situation, which would call for measures beyond the commonplace situations I was thinking when I replied. I am quite clever, and I really don't need a bunch of commerical equipment to render aid. I would be willing to bet I could stop esophageal hemorrhage with a party baloon. But it doesn't mean I keep a stash of them for just such an event.
Surely you're not suggesting that you'd just ignore the dying person simply because you're not "on the clock"? I find that to be ignoble and not keeping faith with the profession.
I never suggested I would not help a person in a particularly unforseen event where I thought it could be done safely. Because of the innumerable events possible or even imaginable, I could not hope to detail all of my potential responses. What I consider "safe" is both situation dependent and probably not what most would.
We HELP people, we're trained to HELP people. I'm not saying you've got to stop at every car accident and spend four hours on scene, I'm not saying you've got to carry your trauma bag, AED and O2 bottle everywhere you go "just in case", but to think that you'd sit there and watch someone bleed to death, especially knowing that you could easily remedy the situation.....
I don't usually find myself in the position where my aid is needed. I have rendered aid in the past and have no problem with offering assistance in the future. But I reserve the right to decide what is "safe" intervention based on the circumstances.
perhaps that mentality would work at McDonalds but I don't see it being applicable in the EMS field.
I think you may be superimposing my thoughts of not needing to carry equipment with me to not providing aid. I mentioned about direct pressure because it does stop most bleeding. If I were to make that attempt and it did not, I would review the situation and act accordingly.
I also don't consider a tq, an invasive measure. It was a basic skill when I went to EMT class. (it is also just focal pressure) But if somebody had a simple laceration, I would probably instruct them on how to clean and dress it so they could go to get it properly taken care of if it required suturing. No I am not going to suture it when not acting in some official capacity either paid or volunteer.
I'm just a basic EMT myself, but I try to be the most educated basic I can be. I pay for classes out of my own pocket, I miss good shifts at my paying job to travel hours out of my way to take these classes,
I am no longer a basic EMT, my education will go on as long as I live, I have also paid dearly for it both is dollars (in the sum of hundreds of thousands) and in time.(a little over 2 decades) I have traveled to 4 countries outside of North America to provide care, 3 at my own expense and volunteering months of time. If you read the aircraft thread, I do offer to help when the need arises. I also do not accept reward for it. I do not see the need to purchase or carry personal gear.
I purchase quality aid implements to carry in my "go-bag" and I feel that if I were present when "something bad happened", I'd be a bit more concerned than "Well I'm not making my thirteen dollars an hour, :censored::censored::censored::censored: that guy!".
You would work for $13 an hour? just kidding
needed to lighten things up a little. Really though, I love what I do, it is a privilege and I cannot always believe I get paid for it.
Everyone else that supported Vene's mentality; why are you in this career? The ability to earn a few bucks while ****ing around on the internet and not working? Cool lights and sirens? Doesn't "helping people" come into play at some point?
I just thought being a fireman was cool.
Again, the ability to render aid is completely seperate from carrying gear. I stand by the position, I am not rendering invasive aid outside of my work environment. (with exception of a major catostrophic event) I am using the airport, the school's or the mall's AED. The aircraft medical kit, or the materials available on hand. There is more than enough compelling evience of the effectiveness of compression only CPR for me not to find benefit putting my lips on somebody or carrying a pocket mask.
I'm thinking now of the airline jump kit thread and wondering what you folks would do in that situation; simply sit back and let someone die? Are you really that much of an arrogant :censored::censored::censored::censored::censored: that you'd do that simply because you weren't "on the clock"?
Read my post there. Aid was asked for and aid was rendered. Even after it was apparent it was not a life or death emergency. I will be on a transatlantic flight again ths month if somebody asks for help, they will be helped in an appropriate way. But I can tell you, in all of my considerable travels, I have only ever been in the situation once where aid was even asked for on a plane. (I fly across the pond an average of 4 times a year)
Not all of this is directed at Vene, just at that mentality in general. The mindset of "Screw the family in the van that I just saw run off the road, I'm not earning the gargantuan sum that I do when I'm on duty so MF's can just die!" isn't one that I'm able to understand.
Actually I stopped at an accident once as well. Which also turned out to be nothing, but it did look impressive. It is not about work or pay, but honestly I can recall every instance where I was not working and somebody required or even requested aid. In all of those instances I offered. Most of them were not serious and the only one that was, after I performed the heimlich, I sat down and finished my dinner after. (and paid the cheque in full)
That said, I carry a decent trauma kit with me, including a blow-out kit and two tourniquets. If I'm ever shot, hopefully some paramedic will be around, notice what I've got and not have rectal/cranial insertion disorder and actually be able to save my life. I suppose if I were with friends and one of them were bleeding to death and unconscious, I just might throw a band-aid their direction as wll
.
I was never a boy scout. I guess I wouldn't have been very good at it. I don't leave the house expecting to get shot, hit by a car or any other ill form of fate. I also have only 3 or 4 friends who are not physicians, (or very close to becomming one) or emergency workers of some sort. (LE, medics,firefighters, ER nurses, etc) generally they don't need a lot of input or care when we hang out. For my friends (who are equal to my family), you cannot imagine the lengths I would go. I just never need to.
If you're looking for jobs that provide minimal training to minimally functional individuals and never require you to do anything;
http://www.mcdonalds.com/us/en/careers.html
Best of luck!
It is a running joke in my circle to find the job with the least responsibility. I got Mcds beat soundly. I saw on TV a guy in Australia who makes a living sitting on the beach with a wagner powerpainter charging $10 a person to "paint" them with sunscreen.
My rendering aid (both at work and as a volunteer) has also taken the form of some rather unpleasant tasks that most US EMS workers will never experience.
There is no way to feel like a hero when you tell a teenage sex worker at the free clinic you volunteer (as in miss time with friends and family and don't get paid) she tested HIV positive and then procede to form a care plan knowing it is not the best because the economic resources are not there and educating her on her disease. There is no way to magically "save her life."
It is not as glorious as say pulling a BVM out of your pack and ventilating somebody.