medic25

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Posts posted by medic25


  1. So new haven als is through amr or FD?

    Both. New Haven FD has 2 Emergency Units staffed by paramedic first responders. AMR New Haven is the transport service for New Haven, so assuming they send an ALS ambulance both services are providing ALS. Depending on the EMD process, they may sometimes just send an ALS ambulance without the FD (such as a health care facility).


  2. Best one I've heard was an APB put out by the State Police for two males: "Last seen at the York Toll Plaza northbound in the company of two large unattractive females". :blink:

    Years ago when I was working upstate, I heard a robbery in one of the worst parts of the city broadcast over the PD frequency "units in the area of XXXXX, armed robbery just occurred, two males, usual description". That probably would result in a firing these days...


  3. Seriously though, thankfully in CT, though we do have a "home rule", the majority of all fire departments and ambulance corps / squads are municipal based in one way shape or form. Many towns / cities that don't have a R-1 (first responder) or R-2 (transport) service will contract out with a commercial service. Plus we do have a good state based Office of Emergency Medical Services and C-MED regions to help run things. Sometimes having that "home rule" status really causes more headaches than anything.

    Actually as a NY transplant, I've found the home rule in CT to be one of the biggest hindrances to a good EMS system here. 169 towns doing things differently with almost no regionalization, multiple PSAP's working on different frequencies, and each department wanting to operate like its own fiefdom because "that's how we do things in our town". It blew my mind that there was no county system, centralized dispatch, etc. Plus OEMS has been decimated by budget cuts, so they have a hard time accomplishing a lot of their goals in a timely manner due to staffing problems.


  4. Looking to move north. Saw an add for a fly car medic position at Middlesex Hospital in Middletow, Ct. Anyone have good, bad or indifferent info?? Thanks for your support.

    From the medics I've spoken to, it sounds like a pretty good position. They are hospital employees, running fly cars for a large, mostly rural region, plus Middletown. They run out of the main hospital, plus their satellite ED's in Essex and Marborough, plus a medic based at Madison Ambulance. The protocols are fairly liberal (including RSI), and most of the medics I've dealt with seemed fairly competent. One thing that may or may not be considered a down side is that the medics work in the ED when not on calls; some people may like this, some may not.


  5. When this was discussed at the state Advisory Board, we were told that it would increase to $150, not $250. Has this been published officially anywhere? We were also told that licensing fees were being raised across the board (my PA license will also be doubling). Of course for that price, you get the privilege of being a paramedic in the only state in the union that requires neither CME or a re-cert exam to stay licensed!

    http://www.nhtsa.gov/people/injury/ems/EMT.../Appendix_A.htm


  6. The whole problem can be summed up in these two quotes..... “I joined the force to battle blazes, not to be an emergency room doctor,” and “Look around,” Mr. Muyleart said. “We have an ambulance and two cop cars here. Do we really need a fire engine and four firefighters as well?”

    I took the same thing away from this story. The crew gets excited over a fire, and groan when dispatched on a medical call. I've worked medic units as busy as this engine (as have many folks on this board I'm sure); the difference is I actually enjoyed providing patient care, and wasn't complaining about running from call to call. The takeaway point of this for me was that EMS call volume will be increasing as more people lose their health insurance. The fact that it was a fire engine was irrelevant; this could have easily been a 3rd service ambulance in Boston or a medic fly car in Spring Valley, and the point would be the same.


  7. Look in the background on a couple of the PD car pictures and you can see The Parting Glass, one of my all-time favorite bars. Big beer selection, dart hall, live Irish music; what else do you need in life!


  8. nyc has 1 pd, 1 fd and 1 ems.....if Westchester had 1 PSAP how could we keep over 100 agencies and all those chiefs

    They do it in Monroe County. When I worked in Rochester we had one PSAP for fire, police and EMS that served the city of Rochester and the surrounding towns in the county. According to their website they currently serve 84 different agencies and take over 1.2 million calls/year. If it could be done upstate over a decade ago, there is no reason why it can't be done in Westchester today.

    http://www.cityofrochester.gov/911/


  9. Why would anybody from NY eat a Pizza from CT?????? Bad enough they call a Wedge a Grinder, and STEAM thier hamburgers.

    Some of us are transplanted NY'ers and have to deal with what we've got; at least the New Haven pizza is 100x better than what passed for pizza when I lived in the Rochester area. You had to dip that cardboard stuff in blue cheese to make it edible!!!

    One of these days I'll bring the kids back to NY and get them some slices from Portofino Pizza in Goldens Bridge; I remember you could feed a family of 4 with two of those slices!!


  10. You are both off-track, Wooster Street is good for long lines, tourists, and attitudes.

    The BEST pizza in New Haven is on State Street at MODERN Pizza!

    Extra well-done pepperoni with Foxon Park Birch, there is nothing better........

    I've got to throw in a vote here for BAR on Crown St. Bacon and mashed potato pizza with a great microbrew made on premises; what else do you need in the world?!


  11. Maybe its my ignorance since my only experience with RSI is my OR rotations as a medic student and my surgery last year, but what about a combative pt with an unstable airway specifically requires RSI? I agree its a great tool to have, but 20mg of Etomidate with a Versed back does a great job of taking the fight out of a patient and keeping them out of the fight.

    Most of the literature on "medication-assisted intubation" without a paralytic shows no improvement/worse outcomes for patients. All too often you give the etomidate/versed and snow them, knock out their respiratory drive, but they still have a clenched jaw. Now you've got a patient not breathing who's jaw you still can't open.

    Most of the literature on prehospital RSI is also not showing patient benefit. Unless you've got a system with a limited number of providers getting frequent intubations and a true CQI and education system, the patients are doing worse. This might be achievable working with a flight service, but doesn't hold true for the majority fo the ground EMS systems in this country.


  12. If they were a certified medic unit then the first part of the C-MED designations would be "5" which they are not permitted at this time to operate as through the New Haven Sponsor Hospital.

    This is actually nothing to do with Sponsor Hospital. The City of New Haven would have to apply to OEMS to add an additional ALS unit, which they have not expressed any desire to do.


  13. I switched to the Iphone last year, and will never switch back. The design is fantastic; easy to use, good to look at, and stable. I've used it in the ED, at crash scenes, and in the back of an ambulance, all without any problems. Between the outstanding OS and the huge selection of Apps, it's really more of a pocket-sized computer than a smartphone. The web browsing blows Blackberry out of the water, and despite the complaints I hear, I've never noticed any worse coverage with AT&T than I did with Verizon, which I had before with my Treo. My only regret is that I can't sell my job on upgrading my 3G to the new 3GS that comes out this week.

    http://www.apple.com/iphone/