The Rules of EMS
By Lifeline Staff on Dec 21, 2009 in Just For Fun
- Skin signs tell all.
- Truly sick people don’t complain.
- Air goes in and out, blood goes round and round, and any variation on this is a bad thing.
- The more equipment you see on a EMTs belt, the newer they are.
- If you drop the baby, pick it up.
- When dealing with patients, supervisors, or citizens, if it felt good saying it, it was the wrong thing to say.
- All bleeding stops….eventually.
- All people will eventually die, no matter what you do.
- If the child is quiet, be scared.
- Always follow the rules, but be wise enough to forget them sometimes.
- If the patient vomits in the rig try to hold their head to the side of the rig with the disposable equipment, not the stuff you have to clean.
- If someone dies by chemical hazards, electrical shocks or other on-scene dangers it should be the patient, not you.
- Any EMT, FF, LEO and/or scene chief who is more stupid than the patient is the real problem.
- There will be problems.
- You can’t cure stupid.
- If it’s wet and sticky and not yours, leave it alone!
- If at all possible, avoid any edible item that firefighters prepare, especially the tuna casserole.
- Heaven protects Fools and Drunks.
- EMS is extended periods of intense boredom, interrupted by occasional moments of sheer terror.
- Every Emergency has three phases: Panic, Fear, and Remorse.
- You are bound to get a call either during dinner, while you are on the can, or at 02:00 in the middle of a great dream.
- The severity of the injury(s) is directly proportional to the difficulty in accessing, as well as the weight, of the patient.
- Turret mounted machine guns would work better than lights and sirens.
- Make sure the rookie EMT knows that a med patch is a radio term, and not a medicated bandage.
- Paramedics save lives; But it’s EMT skills that save Paramedics.
- When a patient vomits outside, be sure to aim it at the citizens who wouldn’t back up.
- Never trust your rig, drug box, or airway bag to be fully stocked. In spite of the assurances of the offgoing crew.
- If you don’t have it, don’t give up, Adapt, Improvise, Overcome, (then call for a second unit).
- There is no such thing as a “textbook case”
- Newbies always look for large things in the smallest compartments and vice versa.
- There is no such thing as a bad call. Only calls that didn’t go the way you planned.
- If there are no drunks at an MVA after midnight, keep looking, some one is missing.
- Remember what MICN stands for, “May I interrupt your Call Now?”.
- Just because someone’s license date is before yours does not mean they know what they are doing.
- Newbies have their own way of doing things.
A publication of the Arkansas EMT Association





You must be logged in to post a comment.