As part of a pre-hospital medicine elective, I did a 10-hour shift ambulance ride-along with a couple of paramedics. I took this elective because I wanted to get a better idea of what happens with patients before they arrive in the emergency room, but the experience ended up teaching me more about the general job duties and perspectives of a paramedic.
My shift started at 2:30 pm and went to 12:30 am. It was a rather slow night - good that few people were getting hurt, but unfortunate for me since it made for a boring experience. We didn't get our first call until 5:30. Over the course of the night, we only had 6 calls total, 4 of which were Code 10 (sirens blaring). My classmates who also did a ride-along had vastly different experiences: one was doing CPR in the back of the ambulance while a patient was having a heart attack.
During all that down time, the two paramedics who I was shadowing talked a lot about their various interactions with nurses and doctors. I found it interesting that they grouped the quality of their interactions with nurses according to the hospital (apparently each hospital has its own "culture"), but the quality of their interactions with doctors was based more on individual personality rather than a particular hospital's culture. If I got anything else out of this elective, my two paramedic friends reinforced the interdisciplinary teamwork lessons that were drilled into us last semester: doctors are one component of a medical team, and patient care is maximized when the team works well together.
I enjoyed my experience overall, and would recommend this elective to someone interested in emergency medicine, but I do wish the ride-along could have been a bit more exciting.
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