Things I've learned as Paramedic
I think I am going to start a small multi-part series about the things I have learned in life so far. Obviously, I have to start with my paramedic beeing. :)
- People Lie I know that sounds like something you should know anyway, but as a paramedic, I have to rely on the pieces of information the patient or his relatives tell us. I know it might sound strange when I say people don’t always tell the truth about their health, but sadly it is the truth. And with false information or information that isn’t passed onto us, accidents and problems arise really quickly.
- People need to be told what to do One of the things we learn while in training is to tell people what to do. I am not talking about the patient themselves now, but relatives and curious onlookers. I was at a car accident a while back. People stood around the car and watched. Nobody did anything to help the injured people in the car. The first thing to do, take your index finger and point at people and tell them what to do. “You, call the emergency!”, “You over there, help me with this.”. People are really afraid to make mistakes and because they could potentially make a mistake, they do nothing at all. As soon as someone takes over and makes clear what needs to be done, people will follow the orders. I think that has something to do with responsibility, if someone tells me to do something, I could always say that he told me to do so, even if it was wrong. People hate to take responsibility.
- Don’t tell patients or relatives everything is going to be good Sounds harsh, but it is one of the worst things you could do to a patient or his relatives. A car accident victim with some serious injuries has large chance of survival because of the security mechanisms implemented in today’s cars. But with both legs or hands, broken nothing is going to be good anytime soon. A heart attack or stroke? Sure those things can be treated today, but life normally changes totally after such incident.
- Especially for accidents: Tell them what happened and about their injuries, but don’t say anything about other peoples in the car or in other cars. We can only work on one patient at a time (“Treat first what kills first”). Sometimes at accidents, with more than one car it is easily to lose focus if you try to get the state of all patients. In a perfect world, every patient is treated immediately. It is good for people to know their health state to keep them awake and keep them focused on your voice, so they don’t think about their pain. Obviously it doesn’t help the patient if I am telling him that she probably killed the people in the other car, where one might be a child. It’s just going to make the situation worse. The only exception to this is when nothing really bad happened and all get off lightly.
To be continued…