Mark wrote:hero shit?
Queso wrote:Mark wrote:hero shit?
If it's nothing more than "shit", then why does it concern you?
ANCFlyer wrote:Our paramedics up here work for the Fire Department.
I think often times people lump them into the same group. When one sees a "Rescue" unit go by in Anchorage it's Red, and has Anchorage Fire Department plastered all over it. Ditto Chugiak, ditto Kenai, ditto Homer, ditto Fairbanks, ditto, ditto, ditto.
I think paramedics are lumped in - incorrectly perhaps - with firefighters.
Lucas wrote:
My main problem is with the potential for degradation of prehospital care do to firecentric takeover and an emphasis away from progressive, practical medical practices.
AndesSMF wrote:EMS don't have strong unions, do they?
BlueLion wrote:For instance, why the do fire departments seem to think they have to respond to every auto accident in there big ass trucks, then have 3 or 4 of them just stand around?
BlueLion wrote:I don't consider cops and firefighters (as well as doctors, nurses, emt's, paramedics teachers etc) heroes. We voluntarily signed up for this line of work, therefore were just "doing our job". Firefighters please..1% of their time is fighting some kind of fire. In the early 1970's many communities were looking at the concept of Public Safety Departments so they could cut down on the number of firemen and police officers would perform the same services as a fireman,needless to say this idea wasn't popular with either side. The bottom line is that fire departments just aren't cost effective. Since the 1970's the fire departments have waged a very effective PR effort to justify their existence. For instance, why the do fire departments seem to think they have to respond to every auto accident in there big ass trucks, then have 3 or 4 of them just stand around?
In conclusion, my idea of a hero, is a civilian that risks his life to save another, or the military member that goes beyond the call of duty.
Mark wrote:BlueLion wrote:For instance, why the do fire departments seem to think they have to respond to every auto accident in there big ass trucks, then have 3 or 4 of them just stand around?
Liability. Besides, the fire department does the actual cutting apart of the vehicles. And anytime you have leaking gas and other fluids, you need a charged line in case a fire breaks out when the medics are working on the patients in the wrecked vehicles.
If you didn't have fire trucks there with their rescue tools and water, then you'd simply have EMS vehicles there doing the same service. You need one ambulance for every critical patient (or every two minimally-injured patients). A rescue truck with the tools and a pumper-type truck with the water and foam at a minimum.
Lucas wrote:
Anyway, you'd know much more about resource utilization with your experience. You've also worked with bigger systems than I have. Although I've worked with Type I Incident Command on wildfires, the biggest service area I've worked for only covered 130,000...of course, when they blacked out our units reducing us down to 2, things got pretty busy. Did you have the funds to staff your agency well? Ah My Ride was pretty notorious for having X number of 911s holding at system status 0.
Mark wrote:... but never paramedics?
[rant]
Why do people diss paramedics when it comes to the hero shit?
[/rant]
I'm an altruist. More people can benefit if Mr. Moneybags stopped being a playboy and contributed more to society, rather than living with a "mine, all mine" money-grubbing philosophy. It's not jealousy. It's bewilderment as to why someone would want to live their life high on the hog while others stuggle just around the corner. Such selfishness is not in my nature.
My income last year was $7200 gross. I still managed to donate $650 to charity and volunteered hundreds of hours helping addicts to make their lives better in treatment facilities. I did it simply because others needed it more than me.
BlueLion wrote:Yea, they can respond after the state trooper, sheriff, or local police advises they are needed, or they can have a rescue team respond in a pickup type vehicle that staffed with the tools needed. Sure would save a gallon or two in fuel, and those damn firetrucks wouldn't be parked blocking traffic.
Boris wrote:
Which is it, hero or altruist?