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EMS Week, Nothing Has Changed

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A repeat encore of last year’s lament. Since not one thing has changed, I see no reason to change the post.

As predictable as seasonal allergies, ants in the pantry, or pot holes in New England, once again EMS Week is here.

Our overseers partners at the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) have a fun filled week of activities planned out for us. The ubiquitous and painful “blood pressure” clinics, demonstrations of equipment and what we do for the kiddies, and other activities for us to do on our “down time”. As opposed to relaxing on our down time, because we can’t have that.

Oh, and outreach to the elderly community, because none of them are familiar with EMS, right? Except that they are our best customers, and generally the most appreciative.

Here’s a radical idea. How about thanking the EMS crews for their hard work? Maybe take a week off from sending nag-a-grams about billing, documentation, response times, and all the other administrivia that consumes your brains.

Hospital Emergency Departments will join in the fun by offering food at, or more often just outside, the ambulance bay. Nothing says “we value you” more than stale bagels, donuts, and coffee on a cheap folding table. Unless it’s lunch time in which case it’s cold, greasy pizza on a cheap folding table. So much for heart healthy meals. Along with the cheesey gifts.

Of course since EMS is a Twenty-Four hour a day profession, these delightful morsels are only available for the day shift crews, with a little bit left over for the evening crews. If you happen to work the overnight shift, you don’t even exist, so forget it. Unless you consider cleaning up the wrappings and assorted trash left over from the day shift’s good times a celebration.

The folks over at the American Nurses Association are better at this, although there are no doubt nurses who feel differently. They minimize additional (non compensated) work for nurses and instead focus on celebrating nurses and nursing.

Just one more way in which the nursing profession outdoes the EMS trade in taking care of their interests.

EMS Week has as certain “Look at me, look at me, I’m important.” feel to it, an air of desperately seeking attention, if you will. The other 51 weeks of the year, we’re necessary, but not really important. Except of course to the small percentage of people who really do need an ambulance. Then, for a time, we’re the most important people in the world. Or at least in their world. They expect us to be there because that’s our job. I’m not sure that we should make a big deal about it, but it seems someone thinks we should.

EMS Week, meh. Give me Festivus any day.

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I'm a retired paramedic who formerly worked in a largish city in the Northeast corner of the U.S. In my post EMS life I provide Quality Improvement instruction and consulting under contract. I haven't really retired, I just don't work nights, holidays, or weekends.  I escaped the Northeast a couple of years ago and now live in Texas.  I'm more than just a little opinionated, but that comes with having been around the block more than once. You can email me at EMSArtifact@gmail.com After living most of my life (so far) in the northeast my lovely wife and I have moved to central Texas because we weren't comfortable in the northeast any longer. Life is full of twists and turns.

9 COMMENTS

  1. I'm with you, TOTWTYTR, but I still eat the stale cookies. The damn thing is usually over before I knew it began.

  2. Sad part is what you say is all too true…And I'm being considered for a Supervisor position – what's up with that?Happy EMS Week, TOT. And have a slice of that cold, greasy pepperoni pizza for me, willya? I'm going to have a re-heated hockey puck sometime tomorrow during my tour in Newton, I suspect…

  3. There is nothing worse than stale cookies. Well, maybe stale doughnuts, but I digress. I'm not being wise guy, but is there a National Fire Fighters Week?Maybe that's the root of the problem, it's "EMS Week", not "EMT Week". After all, it's "Nurse Week", not "Nursing Week". Walt, I have no doubt that you'll make a fine supervisor. EMS needs more old farts, I mean mature providers in supervisory roles. After all, we know all the tricks, we invented half of them!

  4. Amen brother.It's not EMS Week, it's "let's make them happy with cheap trinkets, fake respect, and crappy food week." At least one of our hospitals is offering dinner for night owls. To be honest, with the way things are going and have been going, I don't want to be a paramedic anymore.

  5. Unfortunately, I think the name itself says more about what the focus really is about during "EMS Week." It purports to celebrate what we do and how we do what we do and not the "Who" of EMS. We don't call it EMT or Paramedic week after all. Once again the nurses get it right by celebrating the nurses themselves rather than their role. Another lesson to be learned by the red-headed step children of the health care field.

  6. I agree Podmedic. I posted a similar comment on another blog. Maybe the NAEMT will sponsor "EMT Week" as a way to celebrate the people who make "EMS Week" possible. And I don't meet the doctors. Then again that would require NAEMT to actually DO something.

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