So I'm back out on the road working on the Rapid Response Vehicle (those Ambulance marked cars you see zipping around your local city).
We received a call - Green 2 for difficulty breathing, partial airway obstruction, ?tonsillitis. It was originally graded as a Green 4 call but as it's allotted 4 hour response time had elapsed it had upgraded to Green 2 and we were asked to attend - the call had originated from NHS 111. At this stage it's safe to say my mentor and I let out a little groan as we made our way to the address, talking through the options available to us for this type of call - our impression at this stage is that it really didn't warrant an emergency Ambulance response.
However, it wasn't quite what it seemed! Read on to find out what happened next and a humbling lesson learnt for me.

My journey from Military Medic, to Civilian Paramedic and everything in-between. I will reflect as I go through the challenges of University, offer some advice and tips on being successful at getting into University, talk about incidents as case studies and more.
Feel free to contact me via the form at the bottom or click on an option below for Advice, Resources, or my Diary to follow my journey.
Showing posts with label Ambulance Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ambulance Service. Show all posts
Friday, 20 February 2015
Monday, 26 January 2015
Diary: Weeks 14,15 & 16 - Back to Uni
So Instead of writing week by week of my return to Uni, I appreciate it's probably less interesting to read than zipping around on Blue Lights so I thought that I'd condense my first three weeks into one post instead.
Coming back to Uni after Christmas and the excitement of Placement was harder than I'd thought. Initially I found myself lacking that get up and go with my home studies after lectures each day. Before placement I'd happily sit for a few hours when I got back to my room and study things around what I'd learnt or read ahead on things I was going to learn but now I was having to force myself to do the same. After a few days I gave myself a kick up the back-side and just remembered how bad I wanted this and how hard I'd worked to get here and I was fine again.
Seeing all of my colleagues again has been great, everyone has their own war stories to share from Placement and hearing about their experiences helps my own learning too.
Read on to find out what I've been learning about since I got back!
Coming back to Uni after Christmas and the excitement of Placement was harder than I'd thought. Initially I found myself lacking that get up and go with my home studies after lectures each day. Before placement I'd happily sit for a few hours when I got back to my room and study things around what I'd learnt or read ahead on things I was going to learn but now I was having to force myself to do the same. After a few days I gave myself a kick up the back-side and just remembered how bad I wanted this and how hard I'd worked to get here and I was fine again.
Seeing all of my colleagues again has been great, everyone has their own war stories to share from Placement and hearing about their experiences helps my own learning too.
Read on to find out what I've been learning about since I got back!
Labels:
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Diary,
History,
Hospital,
junior paramedics,
Student Paramedic,
University
Thursday, 8 January 2015
Diary: Week 13 - slightly late!
So I got caught up in Christmas and New Years and gorging myself with food and alcohol and generally not needing to worry too much about University and my Paramedic training for a couple of weeks so I'm abit behind. However 2015 is here and I'm back in the swing of things at Uni for 5 weeks, I thought I'd update my diary for my second and final week on my Ambulance Placement which I spent on the Rapid Response Vehicle (one of the Ambulance Cars you see driving around everywhere...).
Read on to see how it went...
Read on to see how it went...
Labels:
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Diary,
History,
JRCALC,
junior paramedics,
Paramedic,
Placement,
Pre-Hospital
Monday, 15 December 2014
Diary: Week 12
Week 12 brought my first week out on the Ambulance. This meant meeting my Mentor for the first time, getting to know those I'd be working with on my Station, and getting into the swing of things out on the road.
This week I was on a double crewed ambulance (DCA), this meant working with a Technician and my Paramedic mentor. On my first shift, I learned what equipment and consumables should be on the back of the vehicle and where to get anything that we were short of - by the end of my 4th shift I was comfortable doing this without prompting after seeing what we seem to use alot of and not alot of during out shift.
Read on to find out how the rest of my week went.
This week I was on a double crewed ambulance (DCA), this meant working with a Technician and my Paramedic mentor. On my first shift, I learned what equipment and consumables should be on the back of the vehicle and where to get anything that we were short of - by the end of my 4th shift I was comfortable doing this without prompting after seeing what we seem to use alot of and not alot of during out shift.
Read on to find out how the rest of my week went.
Labels:
Advice,
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Diary,
Experience,
History,
Hospital,
junior paramedics,
Paramedic,
Placement,
Student Paramedic
Saturday, 29 November 2014
Diary: Week 10
Week 10 brought my first week of Placement. Switching from predictable days in University to back to back 12 hour shifts was 'interesting' - especially when my housemates insisted in screaming the house down when they came back drunk at 2am in the middle of those shifts... twice. So for anyone reading who is due to start Uni - try and get housed with other Health Care Students!
Read on to find out how I got on...
Read on to find out how I got on...
Labels:
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Blog,
Diary,
ECG,
Experience,
Gastrointestinal System,
History,
Hospital,
junior paramedics,
Nursing,
Observations,
Physiology,
Placement,
Respiratory System,
University
Saturday, 22 November 2014
Diary: Week 9
Well my final week at Uni before Placement has now passed and I'm looking forward to getting out on the road and putting into practice what I've learned so far over the Christmas period.
Read on to see what my final week consisted of!
Read on to see what my final week consisted of!
Labels:
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Defibrillator,
Diary,
ECG,
Gastrointestinal System,
Hospital,
LifePak 15,
Nursing,
Observations,
Placement,
Respiratory System,
Splint,
Stretcher
Monday, 17 November 2014
Diary: Week 8
Week 8 flew by and I found it really enjoyable. Moving and Handling came to an end with a more practical application of skills orientated session, so getting people out of beds and chairs in a hurry (ie about to perform chest compressions on them because they were in Cardiac Arrest) and out of tight areas like toilet cubicles
Read on to find out what else I've been upto this week including attending Court!
Read on to find out what else I've been upto this week including attending Court!
Labels:
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Cardiac Arrest,
Coroners,
Court,
Diary,
ECG,
GCS,
History,
Legal,
Nursing,
Observations,
Physiology,
Pre-Hospital,
Student Paramedic,
University
Monday, 10 November 2014
Diary: Week 7
Well Week 7 has been and gone.
As Placement approaches the course content is stepping up a notch. I've had my Home Station given to me and my shifts (lots of lates!). This week we've been learning how to take baseline observations including BP, Blood Sugar (BM), Pulse, Resp Rate, Glasgow Coma Scale etc. and more moving and handling (manhandling eachother up and downstairs on different sorts of equipment was fun and knee destroying all at once!).
There has been of course A&P where we've moved onto the Lymphatic system and the obligatory Study Skills where we learnt how to look after ourselves with regards to the stress and pressure that Uni can sometimes bring with it.
Personally I've been using my free time to further develop my understanding of ECGs and I also found out that the back page of JRCALC has guidelines on how to treat people that have been Tasered and hit with a Baton Gun further leading to my belief that this book seems to have everything in it. With placement looming in just over a weeks time I'm now just really excited to getting out into practice and wondering what Week 8 will hold (a courtroom actually! - more next week on that one...).
As Placement approaches the course content is stepping up a notch. I've had my Home Station given to me and my shifts (lots of lates!). This week we've been learning how to take baseline observations including BP, Blood Sugar (BM), Pulse, Resp Rate, Glasgow Coma Scale etc. and more moving and handling (manhandling eachother up and downstairs on different sorts of equipment was fun and knee destroying all at once!).
There has been of course A&P where we've moved onto the Lymphatic system and the obligatory Study Skills where we learnt how to look after ourselves with regards to the stress and pressure that Uni can sometimes bring with it.
Personally I've been using my free time to further develop my understanding of ECGs and I also found out that the back page of JRCALC has guidelines on how to treat people that have been Tasered and hit with a Baton Gun further leading to my belief that this book seems to have everything in it. With placement looming in just over a weeks time I'm now just really excited to getting out into practice and wondering what Week 8 will hold (a courtroom actually! - more next week on that one...).
Labels:
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Aspiring Paramedics,
Diary,
ECG,
History,
Paramedic,
Physiology,
Revision,
Student Paramedic
Thursday, 6 November 2014
My Student Paramedic Reading List
So you've got an offer, or you've just began your studies and you're wondering what books should be filling that space on your shelves/drawers/floor (depending on the organisation of the Student...). Most Uni's will give you a reading list, some won't, but some of the ones that do will have a list as long as your arm that will lead you to think they get royalties from some of the Publishers.
So, what I thought I'd share with you is the books that I'VE found useful, you can make your own minds up from there! Read on for a breakdown of what I've got on my shelf and what I use them for.
So, what I thought I'd share with you is the books that I'VE found useful, you can make your own minds up from there! Read on for a breakdown of what I've got on my shelf and what I use them for.
Labels:
Advice,
ALS,
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Anatomy,
Aspiring Paramedic Advice,
Aspiring Paramedics,
Blog,
BLS,
Cardiac Arrest,
ECG,
Physiology,
Pre-Hospital,
Revision
Saturday, 18 October 2014
Diary: Week 4
Well Week 4 has been and gone, they seem to be going by alot quicker now I've settled into a routine.
In Uni this week has been all about more A&P (shock!), History of the Paramedic Profession, 4 & 12 Lead ECGs and Infection Control. Read on to find out more!
In Uni this week has been all about more A&P (shock!), History of the Paramedic Profession, 4 & 12 Lead ECGs and Infection Control. Read on to find out more!
Labels:
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Aseptic,
Aspiring Paramedics,
Blog,
Diary,
ECG,
History,
Infection Control,
Paramedic,
Pre-Hospital,
University
Saturday, 11 October 2014
Diary: Week 3
Well week 3 came and went rather quickly. I've spent a large part of my week preparing for my BLS OSCE which is coming along well I feel - I'm rehearsing adult and pediatric BLS with AED before bed every night (which the person who lives under me must love listening too...). Even this early on in the course this is a pass or fail exam, a failure will get you a resit, a second failure will see you removed from the course - this may seem a little harsh but if you can't grab the basics at this early stage then it unfortunately looks like the profession may not be for you! Read on for what else I've been upto...
Labels:
Ambulance Service,
Diary,
Experience,
Paramedic,
Student Paramedic,
UCAS,
University
Saturday, 4 October 2014
Diary: Week 2
The first 'proper' week of my Course this week - and don't I know it.
We've been bombarded with Anatomy and Physiology, professionalism, and Basic Life Support for both Children and Adults this
We've been bombarded with Anatomy and Physiology, professionalism, and Basic Life Support for both Children and Adults this
Labels:
Advice,
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Aspiring Paramedics,
Diary,
junior paramedics,
Student Paramedic,
University
Tuesday, 15 July 2014
DIARY: Getting close now!
September is on the horizon and so the start date for my first year at University is getting closer and closer. In the past few months I've finished my College Access Course and come out quite well with enough distinctions to satisfy my admissions criteria which is a huge load off of my mind.
Friday, 13 June 2014
Life & Death On The Streets - Stuart Gray
So I was recently doing some work abroad and I stocked up on a few books before I left, with my Paramedic Course looming ever closer I thought I'd look around for any books that could give me a good insight into what I'm getting myself into. I ended up picking up "A Paramedics Diary - Life and Death On The Streets" by Stuart Gray.
Read on for how I found it!
Sunday, 11 May 2014
RESOURCE: In-Depth Bag-Valve Mask (BVM) Analysis
Good afternoon readers,
I'll be quiet for 3 weeks as I'm off out to do some Medical work out in Germany, but before I leave I thought I'd share with you what I thought is an excellent in-depth analysis of best practice use of the BVM - it might be basics to some but it never hurts to refresh something that's so simple to use, but can be devastating if you get wrong.
American College of Emergency Physicians - BVM
Hope someone finds this useful!
I'll be quiet for 3 weeks as I'm off out to do some Medical work out in Germany, but before I leave I thought I'd share with you what I thought is an excellent in-depth analysis of best practice use of the BVM - it might be basics to some but it never hurts to refresh something that's so simple to use, but can be devastating if you get wrong.
American College of Emergency Physicians - BVM
Hope someone finds this useful!
Thursday, 24 April 2014
The Student Paramedic Shopping List
So with my University start date looming, I'm obviously putting some money into the equipment I need for when I begin my journey as a Student Paramedic.
Now before you start parting with cash, get in contact with either Students currently on your course or a member of staff that lectures for your course. I opted to email one of the course leads and asked them for an essentials and nice to have list of things for their students, here's what I'm buying:
Now before you start parting with cash, get in contact with either Students currently on your course or a member of staff that lectures for your course. I opted to email one of the course leads and asked them for an essentials and nice to have list of things for their students, here's what I'm buying:
Wednesday, 16 April 2014
Paramedic Career Development
Hello readers,
I thought I'd devote some cyber-space to something all aspiring Student Paramedics should know about for Interviews - Career pathways and specialisations once you are qualified. I was asked this on two of my Interviews which made me glad that I had done my research, one interview I was even asked how I would like to specialise later on down the line if I was successful and why I chose that particular career path.
So here we go with some of the options available to a Paramedic with a few years under your belt:
I thought I'd devote some cyber-space to something all aspiring Student Paramedics should know about for Interviews - Career pathways and specialisations once you are qualified. I was asked this on two of my Interviews which made me glad that I had done my research, one interview I was even asked how I would like to specialise later on down the line if I was successful and why I chose that particular career path.
So here we go with some of the options available to a Paramedic with a few years under your belt:
Thursday, 10 April 2014
REFLECTION: To me a Paramedic is...
So I attended a Cardiac Arrest last night, not my first but it was the first where I was the first person on scene, working alone for some time and the only one with any sort of medical training.
To arrive at a scene of mayhem where emotions are running high, to enter a room when all eyes suddenly drop on you to have the cure for what is happening to this persons loved one, to teach someone with no experience how to carry out CPR when it is their loved one they're about to do it to, and to co-ordinate and motivate this group effort in the soul purpose of giving life back to the person laying before you.
To arrive at a scene of mayhem where emotions are running high, to enter a room when all eyes suddenly drop on you to have the cure for what is happening to this persons loved one, to teach someone with no experience how to carry out CPR when it is their loved one they're about to do it to, and to co-ordinate and motivate this group effort in the soul purpose of giving life back to the person laying before you.
Labels:
ACLS,
ALS,
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
BLS,
Cardiac Arrest,
First Responder,
Paramedic,
Pre-Hospital,
Reflection
Monday, 7 April 2014
DIARY: The road so far
It's been twelve months now, twelve months since my FianceƩ convinced me (and it took alot of convincing...) that despite what I thought, I could make it into University even with my rough road with Education in life so far. I was convinced that me and Education were never meant to be - if you told the 16, 18, even 25 year old me that I would one day study at University I would have laughed and walked away! However with a shove from my better half I enrolled on a College Access course with a view of taking my Medical Career to the next level and making the jump from Combat Medic to a fully qualified State Registered Paramedic.
RESOURCE: Easy 4 H's & T's revision (ACLS)
Hello Readers,
Pretty good video below on the 4 H's and T's otherwise known as the reversible causes of a Cardiac Arrest. Pretty good for revision, whilst there's plenty of material out there for ACLS - I think this is one of the better revision videos going.
Hope this helps!
Pretty good video below on the 4 H's and T's otherwise known as the reversible causes of a Cardiac Arrest. Pretty good for revision, whilst there's plenty of material out there for ACLS - I think this is one of the better revision videos going.
Hope this helps!
Labels:
ACLS,
Advice,
ALS,
Ambulance,
Ambulance Service,
Blog,
Cardiac Arrest,
Experience,
junior paramedics,
Paramedic,
Pre-Hospital,
Revision,
Student Paramedic,
Student Paramedic Zone,
UCAS,
University
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