it's a riddle to me how you can convey such intensity into so few words Oo
The Reason Why - Page 2
Blogs > Snet |
MisterD
Germany1338 Posts
it's a riddle to me how you can convey such intensity into so few words Oo | ||
QuanticHawk
United States32025 Posts
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GHOSTCLAW
United States17042 Posts
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DarkPlasmaBall
United States43517 Posts
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Akinokaze
Australia326 Posts
Edit: My mind is blown, didn't realise TL had individual RSS feeds | ||
zalz
Netherlands3704 Posts
You have a certain element of honesty in your writing that appeals to people. Think about it, I think there would be serious interest in something like that. | ||
Jedclark
United Kingdom903 Posts
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UmbraaeternuS
Chile476 Posts
On January 31 2012 15:39 Snet wrote: I realize my blogs may portray a negative image of EMS. You all may wonder why I even bother after all the sad blogs I post. I can tell you why. About three years ago I started EMS. I had no clue what to expect. I was an ignorant kid. I went through the training, I passed all the tests. Before I knew it I was out on the streets, rolling around the city in my own ambulance. ***23153 Soldwood Lane, Bartchwood Lane, 21953, for the 49 year old complaining of chest pain.*** I arrived on scene to find a 49yo male in a gym complaining of chest pain. I asked him, "Did the chest pain start before or after you were working out?" After. Has this ever happened to you before when working out? No. Never. Does the pain move, march, or radiate anywhere from your chest? No it's just in my left chest... Are you short of breath or nauseated? No... just a pressure in my chest, nothing else. Ok. Well let me tell you my plan for you sir. My partner is going to get the stretcher and we will get you on our ambulance and take you to the hospital and get you fully checked out. While we drive to the hospital I will do a couple of painless tests on you to see if you are having a heart attack. Does that sound reasonable? Yes sir. Can you write down my friends number and call him later and tell him what is going on? I can certainly do that. I get his number and load the patient on the ambulance During transport I perform a 12-lead EKG. The EKG showed a normal sinus rhythm at a rate of 88. Although due to the patient's description of his pain I proceed to treat him as a potential myocardial infarction (heart attack). I give the patient aspirin. I obtain IV access. I give nitroglycerin. The patient is pain free. "I am feeling so much better, thank you Raud, I feel silly wasting an ambulance for nothing." (Not quite sure where he got the name Raud, but I just went with it.) I said, "You did not waste an ambulance. Everyone is entitled to pain management. And if you are ever concerned of a heart problem, you call 911 immediately. You did the right thing, and calling 911 was totally appropriate." I called his friend to inform him what was happening. We talked for about five minutes, then I hung up. Then shit got real. He was looking at me, taking about some kind of family issue. His eyes locked onto mine. They rolled back and he flexed his chest upward. Then he went limp. I looked on the monitor and the patient was in ventricular fibrillation. He was coding. (dying) I studied this shit in school for two years, but the day you see it in real life.....it is surreal. I cut off his shirt. I applied AED pads. CLEAR. SHOCK The patient went into a sinus tachycardia of 148. He proceeded to vomit several times. Snet: "Sir...SIR can you hear me?" "Y...yes...yes i do" After that he no longer talked due to constant vomiting. I got him to the emergency department I turned him over to the doctor. ~~~~~ I went back to the station ~~~~~ Several days later I received a voicemail. A voicemail I listen to quite often. "Brother Raud, this is ****. I just want you to know I made it out okay. I know you probably forgot who I am by now.. but you saved my life. I was the one with chest pain who croaked in the ambulance. Idk how to thank you brother..but thanks. Bye" Saving a life is a feeling you absolutely can not explain. It is an addiction that you can never quit. It makes the long days and long nights worth it. That, teamliquid, is why I do EMS. You, sir, are a baller. EMS are such a vital part of the survival chain. I'm a doctor attending the ER at a small countryside hospital in Chile and I value your line of work so much. Without you guys, the healthcare system wouldn't exist as it is today; there's nothing more important than what first responders and EMS teams do on scene for the survival of a critical patient. You, sir, are a baller. Big props to ya. | ||
HackBenjamin
Canada1094 Posts
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wbirdy
Singapore335 Posts
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fusefuse
Estonia4644 Posts
this gave me goosebumps tbh O_O so amazing | ||
Divinek
Canada4045 Posts
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Mementoss
Canada2595 Posts
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