Fellow Firefighters:
I was an EMT/Firefighter for a volunteer fire department south of Houston, Texas. Spent five years there and enjoyed it. 70% of my time was EMS, and that was most of the calls. Had quite a bit of older folks in the area, so I responded to a variety of sick calls. Our department allowed us the option of either running on the engine company, running on the ambulance, or doing both. For two years, I did both Fire and EMS.
The last three, I had returned to college full-time, so to get a more regular schedule, (and the fact I found I liked EMS better) I changed over to strictly EMS. I haven’t run a call in a number of years (although I have stopped to help on automobile accidents sometimes) and I miss it, but I’ve had a good career, and I did design fire protection systems for a number of years too.
These threads say it best. **When the call goes out, you go no matter what. You give 110% to every patient. ** I love the line in the movie The Guardian when Neal McDonough’s character (who is a Chief Petty Officer E-7 in the Coast Guard) says, “when the Navy is scared to go out, they call us!”, but I digress.
Getting back to the question - Yes, I would start CPR and utilize the AED on a heart attack victim at a strip club (I remember many Saturday night bar fight calls at 2:00 a.m.), and I definitely would help a 19 year old having complications after an abortion. I’ve rendered aid for those who had been arrested, and I’ve helped on one or two psychiatric cases. One sad call I still recall was a suicide - when we arrived, the 27 year old male was already in rigor mortis. Several EMS crews in larger cities respond daily to stabbings, shootings, and drug overdoses.
Today, the city where I was a volunteer firefighter south of Houston has gone to an all-paid EMS crew, with two paramedics (in my day, our ambulance was all EMT’s - basic life support only) on the ambulance working 24 hour shifts. The ambulance is now city run. However, the fire department is still there, and is still all volunteer. When I visited last year, I was glad to see a bunch of young guys out there, and ran into two or three guys who are still there. I still remember that day in 1989 when I got my rookie helmet. A couple neighboring volunteer fire departments down there have either gone “all paid” or pay a day crew consisting of firefighters. In Texas, every certified firefighter has to be at least a certified basic level EMT.
The bottom line is …every firefighter, every EMT, and every Paramedic - when the call goes out, they go, no matter what. Johnny and Roy always did.