Thursday, May 15, 2008

Thursday (12 hours)

6:50- toned to an injury from a fall. 90 year old woman. When I heard fall, I was thinking of somebody falling off a roof or something. The woman had fallen in the bathroom and hit her head. She was bleeding a little from the head. We put a collar on her and took her to Franklin.

8:00- toned to a medical alarm activation. It was a false call (the woman had been sleeping) and I think we ended up just scaring her more.

9:05- We received a call from highway patrol about a motor vehicle accident. It was a very complicated call, to say the least. On the way, we saw a green truck (without license plates) driving towards us, and when it saw us it turned around and followed us back to the scene. The people in that truck ended up being 2 of the people involved in the crash. What supposedly had happened was that there were 2 cars involved in a head on collision. Car 1 had one man, and Car 2 a man and a woman. They hit head on, seriously injuring the woman in Car 2. The man in Car 2 went down the road to get another car and then he and the woman started to drive to the hospital. When they saw us they turned around. The man in Car 2 took the woman out and put her on the ground. She had 2 big lacerations on her head (she had broken through both layers of glass and plastic on the windshield) and was bleeding profusely. "She's going," somebody said and I thought 'I'm going to see this person die.' I tried to keep calm and do whatever I was told to do. We wrapped her head in gauze, put a collar on her and back-boarded her. During this, I held c-spine and then we loaded her and headed toward FRH. I kept talking to her to keep her consious. Her level of consciousness came in and out, with a downward trend. We called for the Dart and transported her to FRH. She was in a tough state. With an MOI of 'trying to stop her forward motion with her head' she wasn't looking too good. Her fiance was taken to the hospital by Tilton-Northfield and the driver of Car 1 was taken in for blood tests. The Dart arrived and they lifted her out. We have not heard any news, but everybody seemed to be calling us to see what happened. 
Picture                Picture
Car 1 is the Dodge sedan and Car 2 is the red pick up. In the left picture, you can see the white spot on the windshield is where the woman put her head through. 
For an online article: 

http://citizen.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080516/GJNEWS02/46810414

We later found out how much more complicated the situation was. First of all, all 3 people worked together. Car 1's driver owned an auto dealer and Car 2's driver worked for him. The woman was the fiance of Car 2's driver and also the secretary at the dealer. Car 2 had skid marks about 75 feet long leading up to the crash, but Car 1 did not have any. As you can see in the first picture, Car 1 had driven all the way across the yellow lines and Car 2 was all the way in the break down lane. Both drivers reported to have seen "an animal run across the road" ("something like a mountain lion") and had swerved to avoid it. Car 2's driver at first denied to have left the scene, even though there was evidence that he obviously had. He came on to the scene at the same time we did in the ambulance, but the car he was in was untouched. He reported later that he had 'borrowed it' from somebody. We found out that it had come from the dealership. Also, the red pick up involved in the crash, belonged to the driver of Car 1. Later, when the police were investigating, they found Meth and Cocaine in Car 1. This was no accident. Were they playing 'chicken' to see who would swerve first? Or were they trying to hurt somebody?

My first car accident! It was a very exciting day and all the calls happened before lunch. It's a good sign when you don't want to leave at the end of the day.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Wednesday

Another day off. We almost went to paddle the Winny today, but I thought that if we had another incident in Franklin my ego at FFD would be ruined!! We did some work with gates and ended practice a little early.

Around 8 I went to the New London Hospital with Chris because he's started developing a rash/bump. It was interesting to see the other side of the medical work. I am used to taking people there, handing the care over to the ER people, doing some Temsis and then peacing out. We were there for sooooooo long!!! I even had to leave early. 

Hopefully we'll have an eventful day tomorrow!!!

Tuesday

Today was a "recovery" day for catching up on sleep. I studied a little more on the heart rythems and EKG patterns I had worked on with Joanie. Long kayak practice to make up for the one I had missed. 

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Monday (24 hours)

After a busy weekend, with a kayak race and formal, I was not very excited to get up at 5:30 on Monday morning. However, this 24 hour shift with A was a little more eventful. Everytime I got I progressively get more calls. In the morning we washed a few of the engines and went on a call to "E". She was a very sweet elderly woman who 'couldn't find her pulse' (she had been feeling her forearm for a pulse and found none). All of her vitals were normal with a slightly high glucose level (she reported to have had 2 cups of cocoa for breakfast). Joanie taught me a little about all of the medications and their purposes. I've got my work cut out for me if I ever want to be a Paramedic! In the afternoon we went to the Peabody House for a woman who had had abnormal heart rythems. After, we had some training about the heart and what different rythems looked like. SN node, AV junction, left and right bundle branches, Purkinje, P Q R and S waves... Around 6 we responded to a call for "an allergic reaction to a bee sting." When we arrived, our patient was alert and breathing normally. His vitals all turned out to be perfect and we decided he didn't need to be transported. He said he had had an incident about 10 years ago where he had gotten stung 10 times and had had a reaction so he wanted to make sure he was OK. Joanie made an amazing dinner of bourbon marinated steaks and "homemade" potato and pasta salads. We didn't get a single call all night. I woke up the next morning thinking I had missed something, but when I looked at the log nothing had changed. I guess I still have the "white cloud effect." 

Friday (24 hours)

Today was my first 24 hour shift! The morning was pretty quiet. We had a call to a possible fire at the sewage plant down the road, but there was no signs of smoke or fire. We did some more work with the hoses and went to the river to train on the boat. Right after we suited up (in these huge orange float-able suits) and started down the river, a tone went out for a medical call. Our patient, "M", had a case of the "leg shakes." We transported her to the hospital and left her at triage. We suspected some kind of street drug. Once again we took the boat out, this time uninterupted. Jason 'prepared' us a great meal of stuffed peppers. The evening was very quiet, except for the Sox game. Around 1 am a tone went off and I nearly catapulted myself out of my chair. The call was to "R", a 'frequent flyer." He was slightly intoxicated, but less belligerent than normal. He was taken by the police and we returned back to the station. No more tones went off for us, but Laconia and Tilton-Northfield were very busy and the loud tones kept me awake. I ended up watching lots of country music videos and long infomercials until shift change.