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367 points DustinEchoes | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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captainkrtek ◴[] No.45909911[source]
My condolences, very sorry for your loss.

I work as an EMT (911) and resourcing is certainly a problem. In my small city, our response time is around 5 minutes, and if we need to upgrade to get paramedics, that’s maybe another 5-10.

However, if we are out on a call, out of service, or the neighboring city is on a call, now the next closest unit is 15+ minutes away.. sometimes there can just be bad luck in that nearby units are already out on multiple calls that came in around the same time, making the next closest response much further.

for a heart attack or unstable angina, the most an EMT will do (for our protocols) is recognize the likely heart attack, call for paramedics to perform an EKG to confirm the MI, administer 4 baby aspirin to be chewed and/or nitro (rx only), and monitor closely in case it becomes a cardiac arrest. If medics are far away we will probably head immediately to a hospital with a catheterization lab, or rendezvous with medics for them to takeover transport.

The few goals though:

- recognition (it could also be something equally bad/worse like an aortic aneurysm).

- aspirin to break any clots, assist administering nitro if prescribed.

- getting to a cath lab.

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ryanjshaw ◴[] No.45910598[source]
Possibly a dumb question, but wouldn’t the other thing you do be to carry the guy out on a stretcher? It seems like her dad was able to get into the car but that last bit where he got out at the hospital and walked was just too much. Or do you think the stretcher would make zero difference?
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1. captainkrtek ◴[] No.45910691[source]
Yes! These patients are critical and we would not let them ambulate themselves to the ambulance, we would insist on loading them and moving them ourselves to limit exertion. Extra exertion could tip them into cardiac arrest.