We're getting a nice break from the stifling heat and humidity, but the calls for difficulty breathing are still up. Was able to get some cleaning and stuff done around the house before getting going for the day. Started with a diff. breathing. An elderly woman who was alert, but not oriented and non-verbal. According to her caregiver, who was excellent at keeping track of her stats every morning, she hadnt eaten anything all day and had not taken any of her meds yet. Her O2 was 84.. that'll explain a lot. Just a brief 2 min on some O2 and Bam! she was talking, wondering what all these people were doing in her bedroom. Glucose was also only at a whopping 50. An amp of sugar and she was all about, "whats for lunch and how did I miss The Price is Right?" Took her off the O2 to reassess room air and she dropped back down to 84 within 30 seconds. Gave her a breathing treatment enroute which by the time we got her to the ER she was quite chipper.
The next diff. breathing we had was a complete opposite. Frequent flier who utilizes the 911 EMS system as her personal taxi. She was fine in the house... enroute she became a tazmanian devil who didnt want us to touch her, talk to her, ... anything. Once in the ER.. again... as nice and calm as a nun. Weird. If I had told the ER the profanities and irate behavior of this women, they would have looked at me like I had 3 heads. Ugh... oh well.
Ran a call for a postpartum fever, an infant with an insect bite on her face, an intoxicated cry for attention, a "I'm at work and I've developed chest pain, see.. right here.. touch my chest... Ouch!, it hurts when you touch it!... I must be having a cardiac problem", and a couple of fire alarms and smoke showing.
Next shift my kelly day. Just bought a new laptop to work on the website projects I have, so between playing with my new toy and John coming into town, I will be busy enough having the next 6 days off.
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Jelly & GI's
Saturdays are always house day. Today we stripped and waxed the floors in the house. Although I know I'm always saying how I love being busy, it was nice to have a pretty quiet day. Got in a nap or two before dinner. Started off the morning with a guy who laid down his motorcycle on an exit ramp. No major trauma.
Ran a call for a woman with an unknown problem. She was slapping on her phentnyl patches like a 7-yr old girl does with gold star stickers. Mom found her and was unable to wake her. BP was 56/palp. Talk about taking her to the hospital brought her around to tears and she tried to give us the info we wanted that would maybe qualify for a refusal.. but no.. she bought herself a ride. She complained of dry lips on the way out and I told her I'd give her some petroleum jelly when we got in the ambulance. Narcan brought her around a little and while my partner did his thing, I opened up a small packet of lubricating jelly. Squeezeed a little out and gave it to her and told her to apply some to her lips. Before I could get the last word out she put the whole thing in her mouth, she sucked out the jelly and swallowed it! I couldnt even get out "No, wait..." and it was already down the hatch. She looked up at me like, "What, .... what else should I have done with it?" Its a good thing I was standing behind her, I couldn't stop laughing.
Now anyone who is in this field knows that GI bleeds are one of the more nauseous calls that we get. Got called out for a pt vomiting. Walking in.. the filth and the roaches that were all around the pt was enough to make it an accomplishment to not hurl myself. Very thin man with supposedly only a diabetic hx who obviously doesnt care for any of his wounds. I didnt dare set my bag down while trying to assess him. We get ready to roll him onto a sheet to carry him down the stairs and he hurls all over the floor at my feet. It is all I can do to not be a sympathy puker. Nothing like upper GI bleen vomit. We coccoon him into the sheet and start carrying him out side and down the stairs and 2 very large palmetto bugs (flying roaches) come scurrying out of his shirt. "Dont drop him.. Dont drop him.." We get him loaded and on the way. I was very glad I was driving this call.
Ran a call for a woman with an unknown problem. She was slapping on her phentnyl patches like a 7-yr old girl does with gold star stickers. Mom found her and was unable to wake her. BP was 56/palp. Talk about taking her to the hospital brought her around to tears and she tried to give us the info we wanted that would maybe qualify for a refusal.. but no.. she bought herself a ride. She complained of dry lips on the way out and I told her I'd give her some petroleum jelly when we got in the ambulance. Narcan brought her around a little and while my partner did his thing, I opened up a small packet of lubricating jelly. Squeezeed a little out and gave it to her and told her to apply some to her lips. Before I could get the last word out she put the whole thing in her mouth, she sucked out the jelly and swallowed it! I couldnt even get out "No, wait..." and it was already down the hatch. She looked up at me like, "What, .... what else should I have done with it?" Its a good thing I was standing behind her, I couldn't stop laughing.
Now anyone who is in this field knows that GI bleeds are one of the more nauseous calls that we get. Got called out for a pt vomiting. Walking in.. the filth and the roaches that were all around the pt was enough to make it an accomplishment to not hurl myself. Very thin man with supposedly only a diabetic hx who obviously doesnt care for any of his wounds. I didnt dare set my bag down while trying to assess him. We get ready to roll him onto a sheet to carry him down the stairs and he hurls all over the floor at my feet. It is all I can do to not be a sympathy puker. Nothing like upper GI bleen vomit. We coccoon him into the sheet and start carrying him out side and down the stairs and 2 very large palmetto bugs (flying roaches) come scurrying out of his shirt. "Dont drop him.. Dont drop him.." We get him loaded and on the way. I was very glad I was driving this call.
Monday, July 17, 2006
Seizures
Busy doesnt even begin to describe yesterday. Started off the morning with a call into ATL's immediate for a person down. It was at their firehouse. A woman on her way to church with a history of CHF was having chest pain and DIB. Hadnt taken her lasix in a couple of days cause she didnt want to be going to the bathroom during her busy social weekend. Gave her some lasix and her 12-lead looked unremarkable. She was getting more anxious than anything by the time we got to the ER.
Considering how freakin hot and humid it was all day I'm surprised we didnt have any heat related calls. Had a few calls for seizure pts.
One kid we got called on had had a witnessed seizure a couple of hours before and was having another and not coming around. 19yr M who is on Dilantin, as far as everyone knew on scene he had taken his meds. Someone gave us a cell phone with his parents in the phone. Dad didnt want us to transport and said he would come and get him and take him in on his own... that he always has these. We loaded him anyway.. I wansnt letting him go like that. We're pulling out of the apt complex and dad pulls in front of the ambulance to block our path. Asked the cop behind us to take care of it so we could get going. He was in between unresponsive to postictal, and very combative. Gave him some narcan to cover the bases. He was still in pretty much the same state as when we picked him up but a few minutes in the ED and he was finally able to tell us some info.
Got a call for someone with back pain after an accident. The call that we had last shift with the four people from Africa? It was them. All four. All four wanted to go back to the hospital becaue they hurt. They were lucky they werent killed, of course they're gonna hurt. But... they had the same complaints as the other night so we collared and boarded them and sent them off with a basic unit. The paperwork alone sucked. Wait, what am I talking about... we dont use paper, we use those silly tablet notebooks. Ugh! Tap, tap, tap... an 80% accurate handwriting recognition... I would kill for paper on runs like these.
Got back to the station and started dinner... fixed a fairly good dinner for the crew and got toned out 10 min before it was ready. We didnt get back til 0230. Running all over the county and covering other territories... I was a tired puppy. Back up at 0500 for a a couple of calls. Nothing worth writing about. Tomorrow is another day.
Considering how freakin hot and humid it was all day I'm surprised we didnt have any heat related calls. Had a few calls for seizure pts.
One kid we got called on had had a witnessed seizure a couple of hours before and was having another and not coming around. 19yr M who is on Dilantin, as far as everyone knew on scene he had taken his meds. Someone gave us a cell phone with his parents in the phone. Dad didnt want us to transport and said he would come and get him and take him in on his own... that he always has these. We loaded him anyway.. I wansnt letting him go like that. We're pulling out of the apt complex and dad pulls in front of the ambulance to block our path. Asked the cop behind us to take care of it so we could get going. He was in between unresponsive to postictal, and very combative. Gave him some narcan to cover the bases. He was still in pretty much the same state as when we picked him up but a few minutes in the ED and he was finally able to tell us some info.
Got a call for someone with back pain after an accident. The call that we had last shift with the four people from Africa? It was them. All four. All four wanted to go back to the hospital becaue they hurt. They were lucky they werent killed, of course they're gonna hurt. But... they had the same complaints as the other night so we collared and boarded them and sent them off with a basic unit. The paperwork alone sucked. Wait, what am I talking about... we dont use paper, we use those silly tablet notebooks. Ugh! Tap, tap, tap... an 80% accurate handwriting recognition... I would kill for paper on runs like these.
Got back to the station and started dinner... fixed a fairly good dinner for the crew and got toned out 10 min before it was ready. We didnt get back til 0230. Running all over the county and covering other territories... I was a tired puppy. Back up at 0500 for a a couple of calls. Nothing worth writing about. Tomorrow is another day.
Friday, July 14, 2006
Catching up
I havent posted in almost 2 weeks... just a crazy busy schedule but I've run some pretty good calls. 2 shifts on the engine and back to the box. Picked up a car fire with some extension to a structure, by no means a real fire but it was nice to be pulling a little bit of hose again.
Last shift my friend Mike rode with us since he was down to test for a neighboring dept. I think he had a good time. The engine ended the shift with 18 calls. A semi vs a car on the highway with some entrapment and a few others but mostly EMS responses.
Was running so late yesterday morning... was literally flying down the highway. Not to much of an issue til I found out my cell phone was dead while I'm trying to call the station to advise. I hate Nextel sometimes. Service was cut off for no reason and I couldnt even call THEM to find out why. So I'm literally running into the station at 0659 and hearing us getting toned out for a structure fire. Got cancelled. 3 min after being back @ the station we get a full arrest. Getting the day started already behind the 8-ball puts me into a foul mood.
After cleaning up and got my coffee I was a bit better. Ran a call which we handed over to a BLS unit and then was sent over to another station for the afternoon to cover. Got back in time to make dinner...
Ran a call for an MVA right after clearing another MVA only 200 yrds up the street. The first one was a refusal, the 2nd... not so much. 5 unrestrained pax rear-ended by a tow truck at a respectable speed. No one spoke English except for the small words of a 2-yr old in the back. He was the easiest and considering the loud noises and tons of people working around the car to get everyone extricated, he just watched everyone with a look of amazement and conentment at the situation. Speed of response from the other companies was great. My partner and I started on the 2 adults in the back seat and he called for an entrapment response and within literally a minute we had 2 engines, a heavy, 3 rescues, a squad and a battalion there. Everyone for the most part was fairly stable, but with only having a pt's first name and literally nothing else because they cant speak a lick of English and I cant speak a lick of French, well... you do what you can do.
Last call was for a GSW to the leg. Apparently some partying went bad and a woman fired a gun at him. He was fleeing over the balcony off the 2nd floor. We werent sure if the open break was due to a bullet of jumping off the balcony. Ended up being the bullet. I really like our medical director. He is very personable and enjoys talking with medics when they bring patients in. Unlike my past MD who treated the medics like they were ambulance drivers.
I know there was more to the last few shifts but I'm exhausted and I have company coming in for the next couple of days. Sleep and cleaning of my house I must do....
Last shift my friend Mike rode with us since he was down to test for a neighboring dept. I think he had a good time. The engine ended the shift with 18 calls. A semi vs a car on the highway with some entrapment and a few others but mostly EMS responses.
Was running so late yesterday morning... was literally flying down the highway. Not to much of an issue til I found out my cell phone was dead while I'm trying to call the station to advise. I hate Nextel sometimes. Service was cut off for no reason and I couldnt even call THEM to find out why. So I'm literally running into the station at 0659 and hearing us getting toned out for a structure fire. Got cancelled. 3 min after being back @ the station we get a full arrest. Getting the day started already behind the 8-ball puts me into a foul mood.
After cleaning up and got my coffee I was a bit better. Ran a call which we handed over to a BLS unit and then was sent over to another station for the afternoon to cover. Got back in time to make dinner...
Ran a call for an MVA right after clearing another MVA only 200 yrds up the street. The first one was a refusal, the 2nd... not so much. 5 unrestrained pax rear-ended by a tow truck at a respectable speed. No one spoke English except for the small words of a 2-yr old in the back. He was the easiest and considering the loud noises and tons of people working around the car to get everyone extricated, he just watched everyone with a look of amazement and conentment at the situation. Speed of response from the other companies was great. My partner and I started on the 2 adults in the back seat and he called for an entrapment response and within literally a minute we had 2 engines, a heavy, 3 rescues, a squad and a battalion there. Everyone for the most part was fairly stable, but with only having a pt's first name and literally nothing else because they cant speak a lick of English and I cant speak a lick of French, well... you do what you can do.
Last call was for a GSW to the leg. Apparently some partying went bad and a woman fired a gun at him. He was fleeing over the balcony off the 2nd floor. We werent sure if the open break was due to a bullet of jumping off the balcony. Ended up being the bullet. I really like our medical director. He is very personable and enjoys talking with medics when they bring patients in. Unlike my past MD who treated the medics like they were ambulance drivers.
I know there was more to the last few shifts but I'm exhausted and I have company coming in for the next couple of days. Sleep and cleaning of my house I must do....
Monday, July 03, 2006
Brotherhood no matter where ya go
My kelly day is this weekend and rather than bum around the house decided to head to Fl to visit my parents and help them with the closing on the house. They are retiring to north GA and bringing along my grandparents. The house was bought back in 1960 when my maternal grandparents moved the family from Buffalo. While I really dont like Tampa, its sad to see the house finally being sold. I was born and raised in this house. So many changes... what used to be the carport is now a den/computer room. My old bedroom which turned into Grandpa's office when WE moved back to NY is now the living room in the mother-in-law suite. And on it goes.
So anyways... I saw that the Suncoast FOOLS was hosting Chief Lasky who I've always heard a lot about but hadnt met yet. Since I had a free day I headed down. Had a blast meeting some cool guys and Chief Lasky was awesome. Wish more people could hear how he puts things in perspective, and gives you ideas and motivation to keep the traditions, pride, honor & integrity in the fire service.
Had a good time as we always do when you put family together for a few drinks. KO... you still owe me that beer man.
The rest of the weekend was great! Met up with my brother.. my long lost brother and had the moment that I've been playing in my head for the past 20 years. It was awesome. Lots of questions answered and feelings laid out on the table. I am so excited! ... words on a screen just dont do them justice, as to the relationship that I've been hoping for and dreaming of for the past 20 years. He is such a great kid with SO much potential and talent. I truly cant wait to watch him fulfill his dreams and be his loudest cheerleader when he succeeds.
So anyways... I saw that the Suncoast FOOLS was hosting Chief Lasky who I've always heard a lot about but hadnt met yet. Since I had a free day I headed down. Had a blast meeting some cool guys and Chief Lasky was awesome. Wish more people could hear how he puts things in perspective, and gives you ideas and motivation to keep the traditions, pride, honor & integrity in the fire service.
Had a good time as we always do when you put family together for a few drinks. KO... you still owe me that beer man.
The rest of the weekend was great! Met up with my brother.. my long lost brother and had the moment that I've been playing in my head for the past 20 years. It was awesome. Lots of questions answered and feelings laid out on the table. I am so excited! ... words on a screen just dont do them justice, as to the relationship that I've been hoping for and dreaming of for the past 20 years. He is such a great kid with SO much potential and talent. I truly cant wait to watch him fulfill his dreams and be his loudest cheerleader when he succeeds.
Thursday, June 29, 2006
The concept of triage
Didnt even get through drug checks before getting a call for a difficulty breathing. Enroute was upgraded to airway obstruction, then to CPR in progress. Arrive to find a naked guy blue, and I mean dark blue, nipple line up. There was no CPR in progress and the people staying in the house couldn't even give us his name. Started working him on a filthy floor with no room to work. But that's not unusual. Worked the code.. cops found drugs in the living room... was preparing to call him and Bam! What do ya know... V-Fib. Had a rhythm for about 2 minutes. Lost it, got v-fib again and got a good perfusing rhythm back. Neurologically its a good bet to say that he wont be joining us for dinner anytime soon... but .. you just never know. I've seen worse patients make liars out of all of us. He maintained a good pressure all the way in.
Partner and I swapped throughout the tour. We ran a 9yr old with a deformed arm after crashing at the roller rink. He took the needle like a champ and the morphine knocked him out.
Did a call for a chest pain but turned into bladder pain when we got there. No basic squads were available so we took him in. He wanted to go to one of the furthest hospitals away, but, its his choice. He says his belly hurts, has been able to urinate fine and is just an all around cranky elderly man. "Just take me in or leave me alone, stop asking me all these questions!" Its my turn to drive and I'm laughing listening to this guy giving my partner all kinds of grief. We get to the ER and they send him to triage. He will have none of this. Demands that we take him somewhere else or take him home, neither of which we're doing. So my partner doesn't stroke out, I play buffer and lay it out for the guy. Choice 1: you can sit here in triage like everyone else who also has an emergency that is not life threatening or Choice 2: you can walk out of this hospital and walk to a pay phone and call 911 again. He was furious over the audacity of an ER to implement triage when he called 911 and since when did they start this triage stuff! We let him be and he eventually walked out on his own into the night. It the abuse of the EMS system and mentalities like that that burnout so many great medics.
Speaking of burnout... we had finally gotten back to the station around 3a and got called out @ 0400 for ab pain. When we get there.. the guy is rambling about losing $20 in the couch, would we help him find it and no... his belly didn't really hurt.
Normally it wouldn't have annoyed me as much, it just that at 0700 when I was getting off, I was hitting the road to drive to FL for 7 hours. Yeah I know, my choice, but still.... ugh. Handed over the drugs and radios to the crew, showered and hit the road. Florida for a week to visit my parents and relax. I am a happy camper.
Partner and I swapped throughout the tour. We ran a 9yr old with a deformed arm after crashing at the roller rink. He took the needle like a champ and the morphine knocked him out.
Did a call for a chest pain but turned into bladder pain when we got there. No basic squads were available so we took him in. He wanted to go to one of the furthest hospitals away, but, its his choice. He says his belly hurts, has been able to urinate fine and is just an all around cranky elderly man. "Just take me in or leave me alone, stop asking me all these questions!" Its my turn to drive and I'm laughing listening to this guy giving my partner all kinds of grief. We get to the ER and they send him to triage. He will have none of this. Demands that we take him somewhere else or take him home, neither of which we're doing. So my partner doesn't stroke out, I play buffer and lay it out for the guy. Choice 1: you can sit here in triage like everyone else who also has an emergency that is not life threatening or Choice 2: you can walk out of this hospital and walk to a pay phone and call 911 again. He was furious over the audacity of an ER to implement triage when he called 911 and since when did they start this triage stuff! We let him be and he eventually walked out on his own into the night. It the abuse of the EMS system and mentalities like that that burnout so many great medics.
Speaking of burnout... we had finally gotten back to the station around 3a and got called out @ 0400 for ab pain. When we get there.. the guy is rambling about losing $20 in the couch, would we help him find it and no... his belly didn't really hurt.
Normally it wouldn't have annoyed me as much, it just that at 0700 when I was getting off, I was hitting the road to drive to FL for 7 hours. Yeah I know, my choice, but still.... ugh. Handed over the drugs and radios to the crew, showered and hit the road. Florida for a week to visit my parents and relax. I am a happy camper.
Monday, June 26, 2006
Rollover
Started off the morning with a 6-month pregnant homeless woman who hadn't had anything to eat in 24 hours. She called 911 from a payphone in a Pizza Hut parking lot. She says that she sleeps in a vacant house across the street. Complaining of ab pain but not having contractions. She looked just so exhausted. I don't know if she was truly having ab pain for not, but it appeared that just being able to lay down in a clean environment and close her eyes was a great relief. I spoke with the nurse in L&D about trying to discharge her to a women's shelter. The nurse who took report was pissed that we brought her in. They would have been pissed had we brought ANYONE in... we interrupted their Sunday morning coffee and sitting on their butts. After I got her signature, I apologized for ruining her day and told her to perk up... she could be homeless and jobless too. If anything has been a shock to get used to its the attitudes of the ER to EMS.
Thunderstorms moved into the area and the next 5 hours were rollover after rollover after rollover. We had 8 or 9 but I could hear all the other stations too having them all day. None of ours were terribly serious. All self-extricated. First one, both folks restrained with no airbag deployment. Pax had no complaints, just shook up. Assessed her and BP was 168/100. She was refusing transport, and after she signed off and was heading out the back of the squad said her chest wasn't feeling right. Put her on the monitor and at first looked ok.. a little tachy with crazy tall R waves. Nothing terribly alarming. No past hx of cardiac. Another minute or so and she starts throwing trigeminal PVC's. She says her chest hurt and it was going straight into her back. She was pointing more to the Angle of Louis... I was thinking possible aortic bruise or tear.
So the refusal was out the window and we took her in. Kept watching the monitor as it would oscillate between trigeminal and bigeminal PVC's. 12-lead looked perfect. Am glad she didn't leave on the refusal.
Didnt see much of the station throughout the day. Got a little sleep and was called for a chest pain around 2:30am. It was really a post-delivery epidural wear off. She looked miserable... but the baby was adorable.
But it was that call that I almost blew the house up. We're pulling back into the station around 3am and there is a very strong smell of natural gas in the bays. I hop out of the drivers seat and notice part of the plug from the shore line is still in the ambulance port. My old dept had auto-ejectors for the shore lines. We do not. I say a little oops and we start opening the bay doors and investigating where its coming from. Walking around the bays I walk over to the shoreline cord and am looking it over.. three exposed wires.. wow.. I did a doozy on that one... I drop it and sparks fly everywhere! I'm realizing that I sure am glad there isnt a huge concentration of gas in the bays or that I started playing with the wires! I follow the cord up the wall to the ceiling, along the ceiling, along the top of the bay doors and back down to the wall plug and unplug it. It's about now that I'm looking again and the shoreline cord had been wrapped around the gas line on the ceiling that goes to the bay heaters. Yep, I broke the gas line when I pulled out on the earlier call.
"in the news today.. a firehouse was blown to smithereens in the middle of the night..."
We woke Cap up and he had to call the Bat.Chief to make a report. Good one rook... good one.
In the grand scheme of things not a big deal.. everyone forgets to pull the shorelines. I've seen engines flying down the road with 25' of cable following them. Bad part is.. "B" shift now cant cook or have hot water til the line is fixed. Oops.
Went back to bed after we aired out the place and woke up to the bell.... thank goodness for crews that come in a little early and take that call. God luv ya. I'm going back to bed.
Thunderstorms moved into the area and the next 5 hours were rollover after rollover after rollover. We had 8 or 9 but I could hear all the other stations too having them all day. None of ours were terribly serious. All self-extricated. First one, both folks restrained with no airbag deployment. Pax had no complaints, just shook up. Assessed her and BP was 168/100. She was refusing transport, and after she signed off and was heading out the back of the squad said her chest wasn't feeling right. Put her on the monitor and at first looked ok.. a little tachy with crazy tall R waves. Nothing terribly alarming. No past hx of cardiac. Another minute or so and she starts throwing trigeminal PVC's. She says her chest hurt and it was going straight into her back. She was pointing more to the Angle of Louis... I was thinking possible aortic bruise or tear.
So the refusal was out the window and we took her in. Kept watching the monitor as it would oscillate between trigeminal and bigeminal PVC's. 12-lead looked perfect. Am glad she didn't leave on the refusal.
Didnt see much of the station throughout the day. Got a little sleep and was called for a chest pain around 2:30am. It was really a post-delivery epidural wear off. She looked miserable... but the baby was adorable.
But it was that call that I almost blew the house up. We're pulling back into the station around 3am and there is a very strong smell of natural gas in the bays. I hop out of the drivers seat and notice part of the plug from the shore line is still in the ambulance port. My old dept had auto-ejectors for the shore lines. We do not. I say a little oops and we start opening the bay doors and investigating where its coming from. Walking around the bays I walk over to the shoreline cord and am looking it over.. three exposed wires.. wow.. I did a doozy on that one... I drop it and sparks fly everywhere! I'm realizing that I sure am glad there isnt a huge concentration of gas in the bays or that I started playing with the wires! I follow the cord up the wall to the ceiling, along the ceiling, along the top of the bay doors and back down to the wall plug and unplug it. It's about now that I'm looking again and the shoreline cord had been wrapped around the gas line on the ceiling that goes to the bay heaters. Yep, I broke the gas line when I pulled out on the earlier call.
"in the news today.. a firehouse was blown to smithereens in the middle of the night..."
We woke Cap up and he had to call the Bat.Chief to make a report. Good one rook... good one.
In the grand scheme of things not a big deal.. everyone forgets to pull the shorelines. I've seen engines flying down the road with 25' of cable following them. Bad part is.. "B" shift now cant cook or have hot water til the line is fixed. Oops.
Went back to bed after we aired out the place and woke up to the bell.... thank goodness for crews that come in a little early and take that call. God luv ya. I'm going back to bed.
Friday, June 23, 2006
Meds.... what meds....
With the horrendous heat here for the last few days, lots of heat-related calls, seizures and respiratory calls. Did a call for a 400+lb guy with difficulty breathing. My partner had him a few shifts ago for the same thing. 30yrs old, on O2 at home... and hasnt gotten any of his prescriptions filled from the last hospital visit. SpO2 said his pulse was 78 but thats not what I felt. Put him on the monitor and he was taching away at 162 with occasional PAC's and PJC's. 12-lead showed some ischemia and a possible infarct. He denied any pain... just couldnt catch his breath. His lungs were so full of junk. BP wasnt to high. Gave him a couple of breathing treatments and some solu-medrol while we waited for the bariatric squad. Signed him over and left thinking that he ever arrests, that'll be a MASH call.
The majority of our calls today were BLS which we sign over to AMR if they have a unit available. Several folks with just flu like symptoms who were perfectly able to walk out to their squad... right past their vehicle sitting in the driveway. It doesnt make me mad... just baffles me. Now I'm not really from po-dunkville, I've lived in several decent sized cities, but compared to where I have lived and worked... I feel like a small town girl from Iowa coming to the big city for the first time. Nationwide I know there is a horrible abuse of the EMS system on many different levels... we had our frequent fliers from where I came from. But I'm multiplying that by thousands here.
Did a call for a 90yr old woman in the middle of the night who woke up with respiratory distress. Again.. had been at the hospital about 2 months ago.. was prescribed Albuterol, Atrovent, and a bunch of others but has never gotten them filled. Hx of asthma and emphysema. Engine crew on scene had a pressure of 142/92. Partner got a pressure of 160/110. Gave her a couple of breathing treatments enroute and started to feel better. Temporary fix for a sweet woman living with minimal care... I know there is no easy fix, but the need for social services for the elderly living alone is overwhelming.
On my way out, the guy from above was in the room next to her getting ready to be discharged. Sounded like a brand new man who could actually complete a sentence.
Did a call for a seizure in the Wal-Mart parking lot... postictal all the way in. A chest pain with a known 90% blockage. A diabetic/syncopal episode.
We use the computer tablets here and thats usually what takes most new folks the most time to get used to. It would be so much faster if I could just write out the reports... the constant poking around with the pointer.. ugh! I do admit it makes you be as thorough as can be. It wont let you finish until you have everything accounted for. It has its pro's/con's. It can help you work the call while you sort out the complaints vs the pertinent negatives.. but its so time consuming it can be distracting. Another day... another dollar. I'm going to deposit my paycheck.
The majority of our calls today were BLS which we sign over to AMR if they have a unit available. Several folks with just flu like symptoms who were perfectly able to walk out to their squad... right past their vehicle sitting in the driveway. It doesnt make me mad... just baffles me. Now I'm not really from po-dunkville, I've lived in several decent sized cities, but compared to where I have lived and worked... I feel like a small town girl from Iowa coming to the big city for the first time. Nationwide I know there is a horrible abuse of the EMS system on many different levels... we had our frequent fliers from where I came from. But I'm multiplying that by thousands here.
Did a call for a 90yr old woman in the middle of the night who woke up with respiratory distress. Again.. had been at the hospital about 2 months ago.. was prescribed Albuterol, Atrovent, and a bunch of others but has never gotten them filled. Hx of asthma and emphysema. Engine crew on scene had a pressure of 142/92. Partner got a pressure of 160/110. Gave her a couple of breathing treatments enroute and started to feel better. Temporary fix for a sweet woman living with minimal care... I know there is no easy fix, but the need for social services for the elderly living alone is overwhelming.
On my way out, the guy from above was in the room next to her getting ready to be discharged. Sounded like a brand new man who could actually complete a sentence.
Did a call for a seizure in the Wal-Mart parking lot... postictal all the way in. A chest pain with a known 90% blockage. A diabetic/syncopal episode.
We use the computer tablets here and thats usually what takes most new folks the most time to get used to. It would be so much faster if I could just write out the reports... the constant poking around with the pointer.. ugh! I do admit it makes you be as thorough as can be. It wont let you finish until you have everything accounted for. It has its pro's/con's. It can help you work the call while you sort out the complaints vs the pertinent negatives.. but its so time consuming it can be distracting. Another day... another dollar. I'm going to deposit my paycheck.
Tuesday, June 20, 2006
"Are you lost?"
Arrived at my new house with a "Are you lost?" LOL... Have heard all sorts of stories about just how busy the station is and figured we'd be hitting the ground going. Nope. My wheel chock cloud followed me through most of the morning. Everyone is great and I'm sure I'll create some nicknames suitable for the characters on my shift. It's gonna be fun.
Started off the day just before lunch with a chest pain at a dialysis center. He had enough Heparin in him to bypass the ASA, but a couple shots of NTG and into triage and he was a happy camper.
Ran an MVA, a structure fire, and a few others before dinner.
The night time.. well now that is another story. We ran and ran.. I think I got maybe 45 min of sleep. A shooting, in the leg, through and through... an infant with a high fever with unexplainable seizures. Apparently he has had them everyday since he was born, diagnosed not as epilepsy, but something else. He seized while we transported and it only lasted maybe 20 seconds with zero postictal time. Less than a year old, but mom says that he can be playing and just pass out. I am intrigued. He is as cute as a button and regardless of being sick, feverish and 0130 he is surprisingly alert and happy.
Ended the shift with a guy @ 0430 feeling weak and disoriented and some chest pain. Hx of HTN but his pressure on scene never got higher than 96/58 with a pulse never higher than 58. I felt bad asking to guy to crawl to the door since he said he couldnt walk, but he was a pretty big fellow and any help he could give us would surely help. Main hospital of choice was on full diversion enroute so we switched over to another one. Poor guy's wife never knew we switched and when I called the 1st hospital to adv that she was coming and to redirect her to the new one... they acted like they were being asked to raise the titanic.
Anyways... got back to the house and had a half hour before shift change. I still crashed for a while. I needed a little sleep for the hour and half drive home.
So... day one is down. Even though it is not the house I had really hoped for, I am really happy where I am at. The cross-section of people stretches across all socio-economic ranges and the territory covers a good range of different kinds of buildings. I am estatic to finally see the last two years come full circle. I drive down the highway with this big cheesy grin on my face.
No sir........ I am not lost.
Started off the day just before lunch with a chest pain at a dialysis center. He had enough Heparin in him to bypass the ASA, but a couple shots of NTG and into triage and he was a happy camper.
Ran an MVA, a structure fire, and a few others before dinner.
The night time.. well now that is another story. We ran and ran.. I think I got maybe 45 min of sleep. A shooting, in the leg, through and through... an infant with a high fever with unexplainable seizures. Apparently he has had them everyday since he was born, diagnosed not as epilepsy, but something else. He seized while we transported and it only lasted maybe 20 seconds with zero postictal time. Less than a year old, but mom says that he can be playing and just pass out. I am intrigued. He is as cute as a button and regardless of being sick, feverish and 0130 he is surprisingly alert and happy.
Ended the shift with a guy @ 0430 feeling weak and disoriented and some chest pain. Hx of HTN but his pressure on scene never got higher than 96/58 with a pulse never higher than 58. I felt bad asking to guy to crawl to the door since he said he couldnt walk, but he was a pretty big fellow and any help he could give us would surely help. Main hospital of choice was on full diversion enroute so we switched over to another one. Poor guy's wife never knew we switched and when I called the 1st hospital to adv that she was coming and to redirect her to the new one... they acted like they were being asked to raise the titanic.
Anyways... got back to the house and had a half hour before shift change. I still crashed for a while. I needed a little sleep for the hour and half drive home.
So... day one is down. Even though it is not the house I had really hoped for, I am really happy where I am at. The cross-section of people stretches across all socio-economic ranges and the territory covers a good range of different kinds of buildings. I am estatic to finally see the last two years come full circle. I drive down the highway with this big cheesy grin on my face.
No sir........ I am not lost.
Friday, June 16, 2006
Bill Craddock
Bill Craddock died from doing what he loved most: fighting a fire.Mr. Craddock, a rescue specialist with the DeKalb County Fire and Rescue Department, had a heart attack May 4 while fighting a house fire in south DeKalb County. Two strokes followed, and he died Tuesday at Emory University Hospital.
Bill Craddock loved fighting fires and teaching other firefighters how to stay safe.
"Bill was what every fireman aspires to be what we call a jake, a fireman's fireman," said Christopher W. Holcombe of Buford, a firefighter who worked with him at DeKalb County Fire Station 24.
"Every time the fire department asked for volunteers, Bill was out in front. He not only was a dedicated fireman but an instructor on the local, state and national level known throughout the country for his teaching of technical rescue and firefighter survival. When they teach us to be firemen, they teach us to put fires out. But things can go bad in a fire. Bill taught the best way to save ourselves in emergencies and get other firefighters out."
As a rescue specialist, Mr. Craddock could do it all, said Mr. Holcombe. He was adept at high angle rope rescue from tall buildings, confined space rescue from places like sewer pipes, trench rescue from construction sites, scuba diving rescue, swift water rescue and extrication from vehicles. "Firefighting was Bill's passion," said his wife, Shainti Craddock of Jasper. "He called it his first love."
The funeral for William Leroy Craddock II, 37, of Jasper, is 2 p.m. Saturday at First Redeemer Church in Cumming. McDonald & Son Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
The Florida native served five years in the U.S. Marine Corps as a helicopter mechanic, Mr. Holcombe said. After moving to metro Atlanta in 1996, he worked as a car mechanic and began volunteering with the Hickory Flat Volunteer Fire Department in Cherokee County.
In 1997 Mr. Craddock joined the DeKalb fire department and soon was going through the arduous training to become a rescue specialist. Besides his extensive teaching, Mr. Craddock worked part-time for the Forsyth County Fire Department and was an assistant chief with the Bethany-Salem Volunteer Fire Department Station 8 in Jasper.
To help unite Georgia firefighters, Mr. Craddock joined with several other firefighters in 2001 to establish the fraternity Georgia FOOLS, a branch of FOOLS International. FOOLS stands for Fraternal Order of Leatherheads Society.

"It is an organization that promotes brotherhood and the traditions and lifestyle of firefighters," Mr. Holcombe said. A major part of the Georgia FOOLS agenda is teaching firemen across the state how to save people and get out safely, Mr. Holcombe added. The program has grown to numerous chapters, said co-founder Brian Gary of Forsyth County, a lieutenant with the Forsyth County Fire Department.
For fun, Mr. Craddock rode bulls in rodeos, went horseback riding with his wife and played hide-and-seek with his 4-year-old son Colby Craddock, who loved to come to his father's fire stations.
A fund for Mr. Craddock's widow and son has been set up by the DeKalb County Fire and Rescue Department. Donations to the William L. Craddock Fund can be made at any Bank of America branch. Other survivors include his mother, Gail Schueren and his stepfather, Bob Schueren, both of Epworth.
-Courtesy of AJC.com
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
It is finished
In more ways than one....
First off.. I said goodbye to a good friend yesterday. A brother in the fire service, Bill Craddock, an incredibly smart and funny man went home to be with all the other firefighters that have gone before him. 40 days ago, May 4th, 2006, Bill was fighting a house fire and went down from a massive heart attack. Since that day he has fought the battle in ICU. It was a roller-coaster of good news/bad news.
Compared to 99% of everyone else who knew him, I only knew him for a short time. But in the short time he taught me lessons that I will take with me for the rest of my career. Craddock was a gruff, no holds barred kind of guy who through tough words but a gentle spirit only wanted everyone to be able to go home the same way they got on the truck on the way to the call. He was... he is.. the poster child of firefighter training and safety. Full of mischief and piss & vinegar he stood out as a guy who loved this job so passionately and only wanted to share the knowledge he had with all his brothers and sisters.
Craddock is known throughout the nation as a hardcore firefighter who loved to train. Both himself and others to, quite simply, always be the best. There was no excuse for not giving 110%.
And just as much as he amazed me, his wife has amazed me. Throughout this whole ordeal she has been so kind, so thoughtful... in a time of utter heartache, she has so often thought of others before herself. I hope she always remembers that we will always be here for her and her family. We are all a family.
It so sucks that it is times like these that it is when we get to see long lost friends. But it will be a time to celebrate Craddock's life. To celebrate and acknowledge all his accomplishments and the advancements he has made. I came to this dept after riding with Craddock at his station. I was so looking forward to working jobs with him. To training with him. I can only work towards being the best.. to hopefully making him proud. Everybody wanted to live up to his expectations. I will miss him so much.
And... on a lighter note. Today was the last official day at the fire academy. I did it. Cav and I have to go back and complete a class tomorrow since we were at the hospital all day yesterday, but that is fine. The thee of us have our station assignments and all our stuff to hit the field. Finally! My excitement is anti-climatic... I still cant believe that I am here. .doing this... and they're paying me. The last two years have finally paid off!
I have been assigned to one of the busiest boxes in the county. It's a single company house so the amount of time I am going to get on the engine will remain to be seen. I will put my time in on the box, but I will definitely be looking to get as many fire rotations as I can. The call volume for my station is huge. In the first 5 months of this year one engine and one box have about 3700 responses. LOL... woo-hoo.. am I in for a treat. I think I might have said that I came to this dept was because I wanted to busy... maybe a little too much.
So.. needless to say.. this blog will have lots of interesting stories. Stay tuned....
First off.. I said goodbye to a good friend yesterday. A brother in the fire service, Bill Craddock, an incredibly smart and funny man went home to be with all the other firefighters that have gone before him. 40 days ago, May 4th, 2006, Bill was fighting a house fire and went down from a massive heart attack. Since that day he has fought the battle in ICU. It was a roller-coaster of good news/bad news.
Compared to 99% of everyone else who knew him, I only knew him for a short time. But in the short time he taught me lessons that I will take with me for the rest of my career. Craddock was a gruff, no holds barred kind of guy who through tough words but a gentle spirit only wanted everyone to be able to go home the same way they got on the truck on the way to the call. He was... he is.. the poster child of firefighter training and safety. Full of mischief and piss & vinegar he stood out as a guy who loved this job so passionately and only wanted to share the knowledge he had with all his brothers and sisters.
Craddock is known throughout the nation as a hardcore firefighter who loved to train. Both himself and others to, quite simply, always be the best. There was no excuse for not giving 110%.
And just as much as he amazed me, his wife has amazed me. Throughout this whole ordeal she has been so kind, so thoughtful... in a time of utter heartache, she has so often thought of others before herself. I hope she always remembers that we will always be here for her and her family. We are all a family.
It so sucks that it is times like these that it is when we get to see long lost friends. But it will be a time to celebrate Craddock's life. To celebrate and acknowledge all his accomplishments and the advancements he has made. I came to this dept after riding with Craddock at his station. I was so looking forward to working jobs with him. To training with him. I can only work towards being the best.. to hopefully making him proud. Everybody wanted to live up to his expectations. I will miss him so much.
And... on a lighter note. Today was the last official day at the fire academy. I did it. Cav and I have to go back and complete a class tomorrow since we were at the hospital all day yesterday, but that is fine. The thee of us have our station assignments and all our stuff to hit the field. Finally! My excitement is anti-climatic... I still cant believe that I am here. .doing this... and they're paying me. The last two years have finally paid off!
I have been assigned to one of the busiest boxes in the county. It's a single company house so the amount of time I am going to get on the engine will remain to be seen. I will put my time in on the box, but I will definitely be looking to get as many fire rotations as I can. The call volume for my station is huge. In the first 5 months of this year one engine and one box have about 3700 responses. LOL... woo-hoo.. am I in for a treat. I think I might have said that I came to this dept was because I wanted to busy... maybe a little too much.
So.. needless to say.. this blog will have lots of interesting stories. Stay tuned....
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
2 down...
Today was a good day... PT aside, it was a good hard physical day. Hooked up with another class doing interior search and rescue and today was like being back home doing drills with Darin.
Our instructor switched it up this morning.. so the fact that I had my brain straight for what to expect flew out the window. But I had a brief moment of personal pride. As with most women in the fire service, we tend to lack on the upper body strength. I've never made excuses for that, and dont tolerate other women who do. If you want the job, then get into the gym and pump iron til you can. For all the CPAT's I've taken.. it is usually the hose hoist that eats my time. When I took the test for Dekalb it was like the others in that it really ate into my time.
In the middle of running the tower with the hose roll, Instructor S. had us stop off at the 5th floor and pull the hose. I pulled it without pausing and without that much difficulty. It was just a brief moment of "yea!" for me.
Did 3 evolutions with the group... the maze, disoriented ff, and a team search. I truly miss being all hot and sweaty in my gear, pushing myself...
I had a brain fart during one of the evolutions... LOL.. my old LT would have bopped my on the head. In the middle of the maze I was being hollered at to disconnect my regulator. I pulled off my one glove since my hood was over the regulator. Yeah.. I know. Just a brain fart. Had to re-do the maze.
Took a couple layers of skin off my knees but it's all good. I'm not sure what we're doing tomorrow... something in the burn building.
I am so looking forward to being back out in the field. 10 more days.
Our instructor switched it up this morning.. so the fact that I had my brain straight for what to expect flew out the window. But I had a brief moment of personal pride. As with most women in the fire service, we tend to lack on the upper body strength. I've never made excuses for that, and dont tolerate other women who do. If you want the job, then get into the gym and pump iron til you can. For all the CPAT's I've taken.. it is usually the hose hoist that eats my time. When I took the test for Dekalb it was like the others in that it really ate into my time.
In the middle of running the tower with the hose roll, Instructor S. had us stop off at the 5th floor and pull the hose. I pulled it without pausing and without that much difficulty. It was just a brief moment of "yea!" for me.
Did 3 evolutions with the group... the maze, disoriented ff, and a team search. I truly miss being all hot and sweaty in my gear, pushing myself...
I had a brain fart during one of the evolutions... LOL.. my old LT would have bopped my on the head. In the middle of the maze I was being hollered at to disconnect my regulator. I pulled off my one glove since my hood was over the regulator. Yeah.. I know. Just a brain fart. Had to re-do the maze.
Took a couple layers of skin off my knees but it's all good. I'm not sure what we're doing tomorrow... something in the burn building.
I am so looking forward to being back out in the field. 10 more days.
Monday, June 05, 2006
back into the groove....
Well if anyone actually reads this... I'm back. The past few months have been spent packing up, and realizing one of my life's goals. I have taken a job with Dekalb County Fire Rescue in Atlanta. After a year of traveling around testing for departments, I've picked them. My uncle lives in north Atlanta and he is so incredibly generous to let me shack up for a while. The things I wanted in my career dept was big, busy and progressive. Dekalb fits all of those. 268 square miles, 700K people, and about 105,000 calls a year. So anyway, I've been down here for about 7 weeks. The past 6 weeks have been all county and medic orientation. A long.. 6 weeks. We are the anomily at the academy.
Normally classes range 25-35 people. We have 3. Yep... 3 people. A guy from Dallas, TX a reinstate who used to work for the dept a couple of years ago and me. Its been a good time but we're all itching to get back out into the field. Even if they put me on the box for a long time.. I dont care... I'm tired of being in a classroom.
So.... we finished all that up last Friday. Today started accelerated fire training. All of us (all whopping 3 of us) are already FF II certified in some aspect, just not GA. So basically they're running us through all the skills and getting us ready physically for the academy's exit combat challenge.
Yeah... today was hard. But it was a good hard. Morning callestetics followed by running of the tower a couple of times with a roll of 3", followed by an uphill march (with the hose) for a couple of miles.
I'm hitting the sack early. We were advised before we left that it gets much worse.... right after we got done reloading 1500 ft of 5" supply line. But like I said.. I'm not complaining... it was a good hard physical day. But a 60 min body massage also sounds utterly divine.
Ok... enough writing for now... the light from the screen is killing my head.. I know... gripe, gripe, gripe... hell, its my blog I can do whatever I want.
Nite....
Normally classes range 25-35 people. We have 3. Yep... 3 people. A guy from Dallas, TX a reinstate who used to work for the dept a couple of years ago and me. Its been a good time but we're all itching to get back out into the field. Even if they put me on the box for a long time.. I dont care... I'm tired of being in a classroom.
So.... we finished all that up last Friday. Today started accelerated fire training. All of us (all whopping 3 of us) are already FF II certified in some aspect, just not GA. So basically they're running us through all the skills and getting us ready physically for the academy's exit combat challenge.
Yeah... today was hard. But it was a good hard. Morning callestetics followed by running of the tower a couple of times with a roll of 3", followed by an uphill march (with the hose) for a couple of miles.
I'm hitting the sack early. We were advised before we left that it gets much worse.... right after we got done reloading 1500 ft of 5" supply line. But like I said.. I'm not complaining... it was a good hard physical day. But a 60 min body massage also sounds utterly divine.
Ok... enough writing for now... the light from the screen is killing my head.. I know... gripe, gripe, gripe... hell, its my blog I can do whatever I want.
Nite....
Friday, April 07, 2006
Gillien Barre
Did a call for a guy who had developed Gullien Barre Syndrome. 31 yrs old, he went from a healthy strapping guy to losing almost all his strength in his legs, starting to lose strength in his arms. Looked it up after getting back to the station. Most people eventually recover but still have residual effects. A lots of victims are put onto vents because of the rapid degredation of the the nervous system. I havent added anything in such a long time I canty remember anything else that happened. Oh well. They say the mind goes first.
Sunday, April 02, 2006
Moving
Well.. it's official. I got the call I've been waiting for so I'm heading to Atlanta. Everything is falling into place quite nicely. Already have a place to stay, have met some cool folks down here, and my family will soon also be living a short distance away. The department that I got on with is very busy, and my time between the engine/ladder will be balanced well between the rescue.
I'm in the process of changing everything over to GaFFmedic so some links on other pages may take a little while to get all updated.
I start the department's academy on a fast-track in 3 weeks. Will be down here permanently in 2 weeks. I'm excited for all the challenges that I'm gonna have down here. Well, I'm heading back to Cincinnati... gotta get on the road before it gets to late. I hate rain.
I'm in the process of changing everything over to GaFFmedic so some links on other pages may take a little while to get all updated.
I start the department's academy on a fast-track in 3 weeks. Will be down here permanently in 2 weeks. I'm excited for all the challenges that I'm gonna have down here. Well, I'm heading back to Cincinnati... gotta get on the road before it gets to late. I hate rain.
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Standard
Had a few days off due to my hockey schedule, picked up some overtime on the BLS transport... did a call for a 9 yr old heading home from Children's. The transport was across state lines so they needed to make sure that the whole crew was Ohio certified. Child was non-verbal with mental retardation due to trauma received at 5 weeks old. Apparently she was picked up by her legs and thrown several times. She now has daily multiple seizures and has had numerous hip surgeries.... now the enlightening part of all this was her caregiver who rode home with us up front with my partner. The main road off her street was under construction and she had no idea how to tell us to get to her house. What should have taken an hour took us 2 hours. I can hear my partner up front asking this woman, "Are you SURE this is the right road?"... "yes... yep, this looks familiar".... 10 minutes later I hear my partner, "Nope, this isnt the right road... its a dead end!" I think we might have passes the Clampets house somewhere along the way. I get paid by the hour, not the run... I didnt care.
Did a call for a drunky-poo who fell down and go boom. Call came in as a man being drug down the highway. We happened to be calling county for something else and they were asking us if we had seen anything since the area we were at was where this call was coming from. We hadnt. But 2 mins later we were dispatched to head back to the area, the PD had someone. Guy has only been in the country for a week.. no visible signs of trauma, and the only english he can mutter is "Drink Tequila". Apparently him being "drug"... was his buddy who also spoke very little English was the one dragging him OFF the highway. LOL
Did a call for chest pain. Guy self-administered 2 Bayer so he was a step ahead of me.
Did a call for a drunky-poo who fell down and go boom. Call came in as a man being drug down the highway. We happened to be calling county for something else and they were asking us if we had seen anything since the area we were at was where this call was coming from. We hadnt. But 2 mins later we were dispatched to head back to the area, the PD had someone. Guy has only been in the country for a week.. no visible signs of trauma, and the only english he can mutter is "Drink Tequila". Apparently him being "drug"... was his buddy who also spoke very little English was the one dragging him OFF the highway. LOL
Did a call for chest pain. Guy self-administered 2 Bayer so he was a step ahead of me.
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Tubing
Did a call for a 3yr old on a vent to go to his weekly chemo treatment. Also took him and mom back home a couple of calls later. I would venture to say that most EMS folks would agree that peds patients make us the most apphensive. And its just a matter of exposure. We dont get peds patients a lot so when we do get them, its a really new scenario each time it seems.
Did a call for a stat transfer from one hospital to another due to location of his cardiologist. He was on Heparin and Nitro drips, stable with chest pain still at a 3/10 after multi-doses of morpheine. My partner and I got him loaded and the trip was fine. We talked, yada yada yada... We're pulling into the place, and I'm disconnecting him from my monitor and I notice that his tubing is filled with blood. Not a completely unusal site except for the fact that both of his drips were on pumps. I happen to look down and sure as shit notice about 30cc all over the floor. My partner opens the back doors with this priceless "What'd you DO?" expression on his face. Apparently the tubing had gotten crimped in between the pump and the frame of the cot and had gotten sheared in half. What a mess. There was no way to avoid the wheels of the cot going through the mess.
Later on, my partner was in the back and almost the same thing happened. It was just a saline drip but this time the tubing got all wound up in the wheels and was spliced in half. Jeesh.
Helped another crew with a lift assist. Guy post-mva a week earlier still complaining of neck pain going from TCU to MRI. We see a c-collar just sitting on his bed. No one can tell us if his neck has or has not been cleared. The guy took it off himself because it was uncomfortable. We put it back on him. He wasnt a happy camper to begin with and my partners' "its my way or you're not going with me" presentation was enough to make him sulk. Funny.
Hockey practice went well. I only did drills, didnt stay for the scrimmage. Ankle was killing me and its been tight all day today. We have 3 games this weekend. One Friday and 2 back-to-back on Saturday. Hope we have a good end to the season and stay alive through the play-offs.
Did a call for a stat transfer from one hospital to another due to location of his cardiologist. He was on Heparin and Nitro drips, stable with chest pain still at a 3/10 after multi-doses of morpheine. My partner and I got him loaded and the trip was fine. We talked, yada yada yada... We're pulling into the place, and I'm disconnecting him from my monitor and I notice that his tubing is filled with blood. Not a completely unusal site except for the fact that both of his drips were on pumps. I happen to look down and sure as shit notice about 30cc all over the floor. My partner opens the back doors with this priceless "What'd you DO?" expression on his face. Apparently the tubing had gotten crimped in between the pump and the frame of the cot and had gotten sheared in half. What a mess. There was no way to avoid the wheels of the cot going through the mess.
Later on, my partner was in the back and almost the same thing happened. It was just a saline drip but this time the tubing got all wound up in the wheels and was spliced in half. Jeesh.
Helped another crew with a lift assist. Guy post-mva a week earlier still complaining of neck pain going from TCU to MRI. We see a c-collar just sitting on his bed. No one can tell us if his neck has or has not been cleared. The guy took it off himself because it was uncomfortable. We put it back on him. He wasnt a happy camper to begin with and my partners' "its my way or you're not going with me" presentation was enough to make him sulk. Funny.
Hockey practice went well. I only did drills, didnt stay for the scrimmage. Ankle was killing me and its been tight all day today. We have 3 games this weekend. One Friday and 2 back-to-back on Saturday. Hope we have a good end to the season and stay alive through the play-offs.
Sunday, March 19, 2006
Everything's... possible
Got dispatched for a possible full arrest.. enroute are advised CPR is in progress. BLS squad is on scene and disregards us and calls the coroner in. Found out later that the patient had been gone for a good hour or so... I'm guessing chest compresisons might not have been to compliant.
Later we got called out for a CO overdose / possible suicide. We met the squad enroute to the hospital. The only working hyperbaric chamber is across the river so off we go. I seem to be having a run of brain-farts today. Jaws clenched - nope, not doing an ET. Started the Neo and dilating the nares for a NT and WHOA... patient is awake. No oriented.. but not uncon anymore. The word combative just doesn't do her justice. Her first sugar was 38. We had the EMT stick her again.. the other medic I was with had heard something about hypoglycemia coinciding with a CO OD. I had already drawn up the Glucagon and the Narcan was already on board. Her 2nd sugar, not more than 45 seconds later was 199. I need to do some of my own looking into this.
Still have another 15 hours or so before I am off. Have hockey practice tomorrow and while I shouldnt be playing, I miss it way to much to not go... It'll be good to test the ankle out.
In the middle of our ritual poker game on this shift we get called out for an MVA with multiple injuries on the highway. Remember passing by an SUV that looked like it had lost the war but everyone had self-extricated themselves. One refusal, one minor and one kinda of an iffy. Other squad took the minor, I took the other guy. Couldnt remember if he was restrained or not and found out enroute that it was a multi-rollover. He got the full work-up. He had a nice doozy of an abrasion on his shoulder which after putting everything together his shoulder was a contact point with the asphalt mid-rollover. Lucky his head didnt follow.
After tagging him with 2 large bore IV's.. I told him the real medics would be on board soon... we just stayed at a Holiday Inn the night before. He would probably be out of the trauma center within a few hours but with his mechanism, but who knows what's possible these days.
Later we got called out for a CO overdose / possible suicide. We met the squad enroute to the hospital. The only working hyperbaric chamber is across the river so off we go. I seem to be having a run of brain-farts today. Jaws clenched - nope, not doing an ET. Started the Neo and dilating the nares for a NT and WHOA... patient is awake. No oriented.. but not uncon anymore. The word combative just doesn't do her justice. Her first sugar was 38. We had the EMT stick her again.. the other medic I was with had heard something about hypoglycemia coinciding with a CO OD. I had already drawn up the Glucagon and the Narcan was already on board. Her 2nd sugar, not more than 45 seconds later was 199. I need to do some of my own looking into this.
Still have another 15 hours or so before I am off. Have hockey practice tomorrow and while I shouldnt be playing, I miss it way to much to not go... It'll be good to test the ankle out.
In the middle of our ritual poker game on this shift we get called out for an MVA with multiple injuries on the highway. Remember passing by an SUV that looked like it had lost the war but everyone had self-extricated themselves. One refusal, one minor and one kinda of an iffy. Other squad took the minor, I took the other guy. Couldnt remember if he was restrained or not and found out enroute that it was a multi-rollover. He got the full work-up. He had a nice doozy of an abrasion on his shoulder which after putting everything together his shoulder was a contact point with the asphalt mid-rollover. Lucky his head didnt follow.
After tagging him with 2 large bore IV's.. I told him the real medics would be on board soon... we just stayed at a Holiday Inn the night before. He would probably be out of the trauma center within a few hours but with his mechanism, but who knows what's possible these days.
Saturday, March 18, 2006
stand-still
Well once again I have managaed to bring one of the busiest medic units on the street to a screeching halt. Had one call all day and it wasnt even until 2am that we got the call. Ran a bunch of errands and got a decent poker game going with some of the other crews. Got called out for a possible allergic reaction but ended up being the flu. Woman was tach-ing away at 160, vomiting like no tomorrow... she had woken up with chills and uncontrollable shaking.. husband put her in a hot bath... I dont like treating wet patients who you cant tell if they're warm because they're feverish or because they just got out of a hot bath. After we got her into the ER, she was the 20th patient that night who came on with sudden flu-like symptoms.
Am working at the firehouse today and we've been pretty quiet here too... just a few of the standard.. WalMart sheered off a couple of sprinkler heads this afternoon.. a couple of MVA's... nothing noteworthy.
Doing another 24 tomorrow...
Am working at the firehouse today and we've been pretty quiet here too... just a few of the standard.. WalMart sheered off a couple of sprinkler heads this afternoon.. a couple of MVA's... nothing noteworthy.
Doing another 24 tomorrow...
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Such is life....
Its been a little while since I've posted. And a lot has happened. Had to take care of some issues in Florida so I was gone for a week. Stopped off in Atlanta on my way back since just getting through downtown took and hour and half. aahhh... ATL traffic. Uncle Don was as sweet and generous as ever letting me crash at hisplace with short notice. Meet up with some friends for a couple of drinks and had a good time. The next morning rushed home to try and make my hockey game... seems I'm always racing home from Atlant to make a hockey game. LOL. Peels Palace burned to the ground Friday night and had a several good alarms going on in the area all at once.
Worked a 36 starting on Sunday and finished off with breaking my ankle last night right before getting off shift. Such is life. I am hoping the ortho looks at the xrays and sees something else as I really cant afford to be off work for 2 weeks. Not to mention just sitting around doing nothing will drive me insane. I'm saying my prayers that the ortho will see it my way. I can hobble for a bit... According to the ER doc I fractured my calcaneous.. right in the core of the ankle where the tib-fib meets your heel. Its only unbearable when I'm sleeping for some reason. Am hoping I can go back to work SOON.
On Sunday all of runs were noting extraordinary. All of them were out in boo-foo, so transport times were up there, but just basic ALS assessment type of runs. Did a woman with general weakness who had a diabetic hx, a fall that turned into a witnessed seizure, another fall with diff breathing... OT shift on the last part of my 36 was steady but again nothing challenging.
So now begins my time off until otherwise notified. At least tomorrow we have a mandatory protocol review class and Thursday is a UC Air Care Conference.
Worked a 36 starting on Sunday and finished off with breaking my ankle last night right before getting off shift. Such is life. I am hoping the ortho looks at the xrays and sees something else as I really cant afford to be off work for 2 weeks. Not to mention just sitting around doing nothing will drive me insane. I'm saying my prayers that the ortho will see it my way. I can hobble for a bit... According to the ER doc I fractured my calcaneous.. right in the core of the ankle where the tib-fib meets your heel. Its only unbearable when I'm sleeping for some reason. Am hoping I can go back to work SOON.
On Sunday all of runs were noting extraordinary. All of them were out in boo-foo, so transport times were up there, but just basic ALS assessment type of runs. Did a woman with general weakness who had a diabetic hx, a fall that turned into a witnessed seizure, another fall with diff breathing... OT shift on the last part of my 36 was steady but again nothing challenging.
So now begins my time off until otherwise notified. At least tomorrow we have a mandatory protocol review class and Thursday is a UC Air Care Conference.
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