Mountain Res-Q
Forum Deputy Chief
- 1,757
- 1
- 0
A discusion in regards to this topic came up in Chat a while back, and I wanted to get your thoughts on this... Obviously we all have various levels of Medical Abilities and Skills depending on your level of training and certification, but the fact remains that we all have some level of ability that is greater than your average person (even those with Basic FA/CPR from the ARC
). Citizens call 911 when they are experiencing (at least in their minds) the worst thing ever. They call (and I am giving them the benifit of the doubt) because they believe that once you arrive, they will be okay (to an extent). Hence, they have a level of respect for your abilities, even if they call you "an Ambulance Driver". LOL... However, that respect never seems to come from family. What do I mean? Example:
A family member is ill or injured (choose your semi-emergent issue, we all have had this), and you, being who you are, know exactely what needs to be done, starting with you taking a look at the issue, providing some basic off-duty care, and suggesting they do this or that (Doctor, FA care, etc...). However, it has been my experience that on things that are emergent (at least in that family members eyes), they ignore you, disregarding the fact that "Emergency" is what you do and, no matter what your level of training, you just might be in a better postition to assist here and now... i.e., my father just "misfired" with a preasure washer and hit his leg... he yells for me... I take a quick look at this bloody mess... go to my SAR pack to grab by Medical Kit (15 seconds)... and the second I start cleaning the area to check it out... he is trying to get up to get to the car so that he can drive himself to Prompt Care... This despite advise from me and my mother (i.e. let me clean it up, assess it, dress it, and then let mom drive him)... Rather, he grabs a paper towel and starts driving himself down the hill with a nice huge abrasion and a laceration that seemed to be filled with the water or maybe it was a hematoma (didn't get enough time to exam, but with a preasure washer, there is the strong possibilty of the laceration being down the the bone, with possible internal bleeding and skelatal involvement...)
On the other hand, I am constantly getting medical (non emergent and usually after the issue has persisted for weeks) questions from family (usually over the phone or my e-mail) and they expect me to diagnose them based upon statements like: "I woke up last week with a knot in my shoulder and it hasn;t gone away... what is it", "My right finger has been twitching on and off for a month now... what it wrong", or (my personal favorite) an aunt I have not seen in 6 years sends me a e-mail photo of a red sore on her cheast that has been there for 3 weeks "what is it?" Obviously, I can not answer these questions other than to speculate (although I could hazard an educated guess), but what good what that serve them?
So, to recap... We are in EMERGENCY Medical Services... that is what the public calls on us to provide to them... when family has a emergent situation, they ignore us... when family has a non-emergenct situation, they suddenly remember that great-nephew (insert name here) is an "Ambulance Driver"...
What is this all about? Has anyone else experienced this? Am I the only one whose family thinks I am a Ambulance Driver when they injure themselves (and I can be of use), and a Neuro-Surgeon when they have a new mole? :glare:

A family member is ill or injured (choose your semi-emergent issue, we all have had this), and you, being who you are, know exactely what needs to be done, starting with you taking a look at the issue, providing some basic off-duty care, and suggesting they do this or that (Doctor, FA care, etc...). However, it has been my experience that on things that are emergent (at least in that family members eyes), they ignore you, disregarding the fact that "Emergency" is what you do and, no matter what your level of training, you just might be in a better postition to assist here and now... i.e., my father just "misfired" with a preasure washer and hit his leg... he yells for me... I take a quick look at this bloody mess... go to my SAR pack to grab by Medical Kit (15 seconds)... and the second I start cleaning the area to check it out... he is trying to get up to get to the car so that he can drive himself to Prompt Care... This despite advise from me and my mother (i.e. let me clean it up, assess it, dress it, and then let mom drive him)... Rather, he grabs a paper towel and starts driving himself down the hill with a nice huge abrasion and a laceration that seemed to be filled with the water or maybe it was a hematoma (didn't get enough time to exam, but with a preasure washer, there is the strong possibilty of the laceration being down the the bone, with possible internal bleeding and skelatal involvement...)
On the other hand, I am constantly getting medical (non emergent and usually after the issue has persisted for weeks) questions from family (usually over the phone or my e-mail) and they expect me to diagnose them based upon statements like: "I woke up last week with a knot in my shoulder and it hasn;t gone away... what is it", "My right finger has been twitching on and off for a month now... what it wrong", or (my personal favorite) an aunt I have not seen in 6 years sends me a e-mail photo of a red sore on her cheast that has been there for 3 weeks "what is it?" Obviously, I can not answer these questions other than to speculate (although I could hazard an educated guess), but what good what that serve them?
So, to recap... We are in EMERGENCY Medical Services... that is what the public calls on us to provide to them... when family has a emergent situation, they ignore us... when family has a non-emergenct situation, they suddenly remember that great-nephew (insert name here) is an "Ambulance Driver"...
What is this all about? Has anyone else experienced this? Am I the only one whose family thinks I am a Ambulance Driver when they injure themselves (and I can be of use), and a Neuro-Surgeon when they have a new mole? :glare:
Last edited by a moderator: