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Exposure
03-21-2004, 11:43 AM
EMS Laws
Anyone who has ever worked on an ambulance for even a short time can relate to many of these "Laws".

This little list was given to me by a friend. It stated at the top the author was unknown, so if someone has copyrighted this material please let me know before you call the feds.

I have bolded some of the best ones

THE FIRST LAW OF EMS:
All Emergency calls will wait until you begin to eat, regardless of the time
COROLLARY 1 -- Fewer accidents would occur if EMS personnel would never eat.
COROLLARY 2 -- Always order food "to go".

THE PARAMEDICAL LAWS OF TIME:
1. There is absolutely no relationship between the time at which you are supposed to get off shift and the time at which you will get off shift.
2. Given the following equation:
T + 1 Minute = Relief Time
"T" will always be the time of the last call of your shift. E.g., if you are supposed to get off shift at 1900, your last run will come in at 1859.

THE PARAMEDICAL LAW OF GRAVITY:
Any instrument, when dropped, will always come to rest in the least accessible place possible.

THE PARAMEDICAL LAW OF TIME AND DISTANCE:
The distance of the call from the Hospital increases as the time to shift change decreases.
COROLLARY 1 -- The shortest distance between the station and the scene is under construction.

THE PARAMEDICAL RULE OF RANDOM SIMULTANEITY:
The emergency calls will randomly come in all at once.

THE RULE OF RESPIRATORY ARREST:
All patients, for whom Mouth-to-Mouth Resuscitation must be provided, will have just completed a large meal of Barbecue and Onions, Garlic Pizza, and Pickled Herring, which was washed down with at least three cans of Beer.

THE AXIOM OF LATE-NIGHT RUNS:
If you respond to any Motor Vehicle Accident call after Midnight and do not find a drunk on the scene, keep looking -- somebody is still missing.

THE LAW OF OPTIONS:
Any patient, when given the option of either going to Jail or going to the Hospital by a Police Officer, will always be inside the Ambulance before you are.
COROLLARY 1 -- Any patient who chooses to go to Jail instead of the Hospital probably knows you're the driver.

THE FIRST RULE FO EQUIPMENT:
Any piece of Lifesaving Equipment will never malfunction or fail until:
1. You need it to save a life, or
2. The salesman leaves.

THE SECOND RULE OF EQUIPMENT:
Interchangeable parts don't, leak proof seals will, and self-starters won't.

THE FIRST LAW OF AMBULANCE DRIVING:
No matter how fast you drive the Ambulance when responding to a call, it will never be fast enough, unless you pass a Police Cruiser, at which point it will be entirely too fast.

PARAMEDICAL RULES OF THE BATHROOM:
1. If a call is received between 0500 and 0700, the location of the call will always be in a Bathroom.
2. If you have just gone to the Bathroom, no call will be received.
3. If you have not just gone to the Bathroom, you will soon regret it.
4. The probability of receiving a run increases proportionally to the time elapsed since last going to the Bathroom.

THE BASIC PRINCIPLE FOR DISPATCHERS:
Assume that all field personnel are idiots until their actions prove your assumption.

BASIC ASSUMPTION ABOUT DISPATCHERS:
Given the opportunity, any Dispatcher will be only too happy to tell you where to go, regardless of whether or not (s)he actually knows where that may be.
COROLLARY 1 -- The existence or non-existence of any given location is of only minor importance to a Dispatcher.
COROLLARY 2 -- Any street designated as a "Cross-Street" by a Dispatcher probably isn't.
COROLLARY 3 -- If a street name CAN be mispronounced, a Dispatcher WILL mispronounce it.
COROLLARY 4 -- If a street name CANNOT be mispronounced, a Dispatcher WILL mispronounce it.
COROLLARY 5 -- A Dispatcher will always refer to a given location in the most obscure manner as possible. E.g., "Stumpy Brown's Cabbage Field" is now covered by a shopping center.

THE FIRST PRINCIPLE OF TRIAGE:
In any accident, the degree of injury suffered by a patient is inversely proportional to the amount and volume of agonized screaming produced by that patient.

THE GROSS INJURY RULE:
Any injury, the sight of which makes you sick, should immediately be covered by 4x4s and Kerlix.

THE RULE OF FUNDING AND DONATIONS:
All Funding and Donations are received in amounts which are inversely proportional to need.

THE FIRST LAW OF EMS SUPERVISORS:
Given the equation:
X - Y = Quality of Care
where "X" is the care that you render and "Y" is the assistance supplied by any Supervisor. If you can eliminate "Y" from the equation, the Quality of Care will improve by "X".
COROLLARY 1 -- Generally, Field Supervisors have no business in the Field.
COROLLARY 2 -- The level of technical competence is inversely proportional to the level of management.
COROLLARY 3 -- Technology is dominated by those who manage what they do not understand.

THE LAW OF PROTOCOL DIRECTIVES:
The simplest Protocol Directive will be worded in the most obscure and complicated manner possible. Speeds, for example, will be expressed as "Furlongs per Fortnight" and flow rates as "Hogsheads per Hour".
COROLLARY 1-- If you don't understand it, it must be intuitively obvious.
COROLLARY 2 -- If you can understand it, you probably don't.

THE LAW OF EMS EDUCATORS:
Those who can't do, teach.

THE LAW OF EMS EVALUATORS:
Those who can neither do nor teach, evaluate.

THE PARAMEDICAL LAW OF LIGHT:
As the seriousness of any given injury increases, the availability of light to examine that injury decreases.

THE PARAMEDICAL LAW OF SPACE:
The amount of space which is needed to work on a patient varies inversely with the amount of space which is available to work on that patient.

THE PARAMEDICAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY:
The number of distraught and uncooperative relatives surrounding any given patent varies exponentially with the seriousness of the patent's illness or injury.

THE PARAMEDICAL THEORY OF WEIGHT:
The weight of the patient that you are about to transport increases by the square of the sum of the number of floors which must be ascended to reach the patient plus the number of floors which must be descended while carrying the patient.
COROLLARY 1 -- Very heavy patients tend to gravitate toward locations which are furthest from mean sea level.
COROLLARY 2 -- If the patient is heavy, the elevator is broken, and the lights in the stairwell are out.

THE RULES OF NO-TRANSPORT:
1. A Life-or-Death situation will immediately be created by driving away from the home of a patient whom you have just advised to go to the hospital in a private vehicle.
2. The seriousness of this situation will increase as the date of your trial approaches.
3. By the time your ex-patient reaches the witness stand, the Jury will wonder how a patient in such terrible condition could have possibly walked to the door and greeted you with a large suitcase in each hand.

THE FIRST RULE OF BYSTANDERS:
Any bystander who offers you help will give you none.

THE SECOND RULE OF BYSTANDERS:
Always assume that any Physician found at the scene of an emergency is a Gynecologist, until proven otherwise.
COROLLARY 1 -- NEVER turn your back on a Proctologist.

THE RULE OF WARNING DEVICES:
Any Ambulance, whether it is responding to a call or traveling to a Hospital, with Lights and Siren, will be totally ignored by all motorists, pedestrians, and dogs which may be found in or near the roads along its route.
COROLLARY 1 -- Ambulance Sirens can cause acute and total, but transient, deafness.
COROLLARY 2 -- Ambulance Lights can cause acute and total, but transient, blindness.
NOTE
This Rule does not apply in Massachusetts, where all pedestrians and motorists are apparently oblivious to any and all traffic laws.

THE LAW OF SHOW-AND-TELL:
A virtually infinite number of wide-eyed and inquisitive school-aged children can climb into the back of any Ambulance, and, given the opportunity, invariably will.
COROLLARY 1 -- No emergency will come in until they are all inside the Ambulance and playing with the equipment.
COROLLARY 2 -- It will take at least four times as long to get them all out as it took to get them in.
COROLLARY 3 -- A vital piece of equipment will be missing.

THE RULE OF ROOKIES:
The true value of any rookie EMT, when expressed numerically, will always be a negative number. The value of this number may be found by simply having the rookie grade his or her ability on a scale from 1 to 10. For rookie EMT's in the back of the vehicle:
1 = Certified Health Hazard
10 = Member, ACEP
and for rookie EMT's driving the vehicle:
1 = Obstruction to Navigation
10 = Mario Andretti

The true value of the rookie is then found by simply negating the rookie's self-assigned value
COROLLARY 1 -- Treat any rookie EMT assigned to your Unit as you would a Bystander (see The First Rule of Bystanders, above).

THE RULE OF RULES:
As soon as an EMS Rule is accepted as absolute, an exception to that Rule will immediately occur.

PimpOnDuty
03-21-2004, 07:32 PM
Classic. True, and classic.

611FF44
03-22-2004, 05:39 AM
those are good

paramedic 35
03-22-2004, 12:36 PM
I like it!!
I will have to add some of these to, what I refer to as the 3 absolutes.
1) All bleeding will eventually stop.
2) All patients will eventually die
3)If you drop the baby, pick it up. (Thats what the umbilical cord is for)

Fghtng5thFemale
03-23-2004, 10:16 PM
If you're talking, you're walking.

PimpOnDuty
03-23-2004, 10:31 PM
ABC's of EMS.

Ambulate
Before
Carrying.

ohfrmn89
03-23-2004, 10:49 PM
you forgot to add that the chances of getting a run increase when going to bathroom to take a shit.......kind of goes along with eating. under rules of warning devices i thought that involved new york city not massachussetts??? i don't run in either state but was just wonderring.

PimpOnDuty
03-23-2004, 10:58 PM
See paramedic rules of the bathroom dude. It's in there.

Joe Fireman
04-01-2004, 08:44 PM
extrication rule - try before you pry

Doc
04-04-2004, 03:15 AM
ABC
A- Always
B- Bring
C- Clipboard

~~~~~~~~~

Laws of Motion

NEVER stop forward progress of your ambulatory patient to the ambulance.

~~~~~~~~~

No matter what the chief complaint is when you get on scene, or the past medical history, it will ALWAYS be different than what is told by the patient to the E.R. Staff!!!!

~~~~~~~~~

Misc. EMS rules

You never REALLY appreciate the heaviness and size of your clipboard until confronted by a violent 302 (psych patient) or large family dog!!!

Never give Narcan until out of the house and in the rig in a more controlled environment, saves the fight while trying to get them down from the 3rd floor (the Closer to God rule - see below).

Never give Lasix until pulling into E.R. = Dry Ambulance

~~~~~~~~~

Laws of Height and Weight / AKA - Closer to God Rule

The proportion of patient weight and closeness they are to dying the higher up (floors-wise) they go, I figure it's to be closer to God!!!

i.e.: If a patient weighs 150 lbs. and is dying they may go 1st or 2nd floor, whereas, a 350 lb. patient in cardiac arrest is 9 times out of 10 on the 5th floor.

THIS is where the elevator rule listed previously comes into play!!!

~~~~~~~~~~

Edgar Snyder Rule

NEVER, but NEVER get onto a bus after a crash and ask.....
"WHO'S HURT"

All hands will raise!!!

This rule has an equal/similar rule:

Anyone WITHOUT car insurance after an accident will ALWAYS be injured more than the person they hit.

~~~~~~~~~~~

It doesn't matter how fast you drive to a fire, no matter how quick you get there, if it's burning, it will STILL be burning 2 minutes later!!!

~~~~~~~~~~~

and last.......

No matter the size of the hole, SOMEONE will always try and place SOMETHING larger or of a difference shape into it..........

use THAT as a reference......(not from personal experience, THANK YOU!!!)

pmedic8991
04-30-2004, 04:52 PM
"It doesn't matter how fast you drive to a fire, no matter how quick you get there, if it's burning, it will STILL be burning 2 minutes later!!!"


Yeah, and if you wait...you'll get to play longer with fire!

medicerik
06-03-2004, 03:38 PM
How about:
Air goes in and out. Blood goes round and round. Any variation of this is bad.......
Erik