Tuesday, 4 August 2020

Moving To A New Platform...Want To Follow?



From July 2020 this blog will be available at www.gbuparamedic.com/blog.
All of the posts here on Blogger have been migrated so can be read either here or there.

Thanks for reading...see you over at the GBU Paramedic site.

Sunday, 17 May 2020

All Aboard! Welcoming Rapid Recruits Into Healthcare

Crowd of People Forming Healthcare Cross

The sea of healthcare is unsettled right now. In varying states of flux around the world, we are either inundated and struggling to stay afloat or, for the more fortunate, cautiously waiting. Full of hope and dread until the status quo changes for better or for worse.

A proactive approach to dropping anchor, however, appears to be haste. Accelerating the pathways that enable graduate paramedics, nurses, midwives, doctors and other health professionals to join our ranks, before the vessel we travel upon, together, begins to sink.

Monday, 20 April 2020

Frontline Empathy is a Two Way Street


Empathy may be a confusing and contrary word, but one with great value, particularly in providing a buffer against professional burnout and in building positive relationships with patients. As one of those "soft skills" integral to the paramedic's toolkit, it is encouraging to see how widely it appears in research, training, leadership and culture.

Thursday, 26 March 2020

Paramedics in Pandemic "No Man's Land"



Together, through the worldwide pandemic we find ourselves drowning in, stand millions of paramedics, EMTs and frontline ambulance personnel. Despite our numbers, never has the prehospital arena felt so lonely. With so many messages coming from far and wide about how to pave the way through the good, the bad and the ugly of paramedicine right now, it made sense to put some of it down in words.

Tuesday, 18 February 2020

Ambulance Detectives

Ambulance Detectives Image



















When we get it wrong at work…how does it feel?
If we make a mistake in provisional diagnosis and treatment…how does it affect our patient?
For those of us who feel comfortable that we’ve been "in the game" long enough that we don’t need to be concerned, it’s vital to remember that it’s not just new paramedics and healthcare professionals making errors. One of the most common causes of medical mistakes and misdiagnosis is that of overconfidence.