Stuff You Should Know - How Paramedics Work
Episode Date: April 12, 2018Paramedics are not EMTs. Or fire fighters. Or cops. But they do ride around in ambulances (and drive) to help to save lives. It's a stressful job and we're here to shine a light on this noble professi...on. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark with Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry Jerome Rowland.
And this is Stuff You Should Know,
the emergency.
Reer, reer, reer, reer, reer, reer, reer, reer, reer, reer.
We should have a new podcast called
Sirens Around the World.
Yeah.
It's the most annoying show ever.
It would be pretty annoying,
but there'd be some subset of people
who just really despise themselves
that it'd be popular among.
So we would love it?
We don't hate ourselves, do we?
Tell me, I need to know.
No, I guess it depends on the day.
I didn't want to hate myself.
Sometimes I want to punch myself, does that count?
No, I know exactly what you mean, man.
Sometimes I'm just like, I am so sick of myself.
Is that what you're talking about?
That was a good song, remember that song?
No.
Sick of myself?
No.
That was Matthew Sweet.
Oh yeah?
Wow, that's weird that this is going on right now,
because Matthew Sweet just popped up randomly
in the last couple days in an article I was reading.
I was like, I forgot about him.
Haven't heard about him in 20 years,
and then bam, Bader Meinhoff, here he is again.
Well, he's still around.
He's an Atlanta guy, you know?
I didn't know that.
Well, that's cool.
Yeah, I think that's the way it goes.
Just because you had one hit and the world came
and listened to you and then moved on,
doesn't mean you're like, okay, well,
I guess I'll go bury myself alive now
in my own backyard.
He had two hits.
Usually the artist like keeps going, you know?
Yeah, he had two hits though.
I know, Girlfriend and then the other one
you were just talking about?
Yeah, Girlfriend, that's a great song.
Yeah, it's a good song.
Okay, so obviously what we're talking about today
are paramedics.
Paramedicin really is what we're talking about.
Yeah.
Which is, it's actually a pretty interesting topic
because you kind of look into it.
You're like, oh, these people save lives.
That's great.
Here's some of the life-saving techniques that they do.
Fantastic.
But there's like actually so much more to it.
It's got a really interesting history.
It's got a, it's one of those things where it's way worse
off than it should be as far as like funding
and like logistics and stuff like that goes.
I just find it interesting.
It's interesting to kind of poke into a topic
and then find that, oh, this is even more interesting
than I thought.
And have it poke back.
Yep, with forceps.
So I guess we should say right off the bat
that the word paramedic, para means alongside.
So alongside medicine, I guess,
which I'm not quite sure what that means.
So what I think it means is as follows, Charles.
Okay.
These people, paramedics, they are not doctors
but they work with and alongside and really honestly
as an extension of a doctor and MD.
I buy that.
So that's what I think it means
because it's not like what they're doing
is a different type of wacky medicine.
Like they're actually doing the same type of medicine
that an ER doctor and an ER nurse would be doing
in an ER, they're just doing it out in the field.
Could you imagine how disconcerting it would be
to be like on the ground and have a paramedic come up
and like blow green dust in your face or something?
You're like, what are the chicken bones for, man?
Oh, man.
Blow green dust in your face.
I don't know, it would depend
on what the effect of the green dust was.
That's true.
So I think that's what paramedic means, right?
Okay.
We can go further back actually
and describe what ambulance means.
We know that one for certain.
Yes, that came around in 15th century Spain
during the Inquisition, they clearly had a lot of need
for medical work and they actually had field hospitals
that were called ambulancias.
Right.
It was just basically like a mash unit out in the field.
And then eventually the French shortly after,
I think under Napoleon, they innovated on the ambulance
and said, well, that's great.
That's neat that we have these things out in the field,
but there's some guys way over there who are injured
and they probably wouldn't die if we could get them
to these ambulances, these field hospitals, right?
Correct.
So they came up with basically mobile ambulances,
which is this idea of a flying or a moving ambulance,
which is like a little medical facility
that they would put the people into
and move them away from battle to go patch them up
rather than waiting for the battle to end.
Well, yeah.
And before that even during the Crusades,
when they also had a great need for medical care,
there were the Knights Hospitaler, Hospitaller?
I think Hospitalier.
Oh, whoa.
Is there an extra,
I might be putting an extra syllable in there.
Well, that's all right.
I'm known to do that from time to time.
Knights Hospitaler, that's what I'm gonna say,
of the order of St. John of Jerusalem.
And they were the first kind of the first people
to practice emergency medicine on the battlefield.
And they even invented what we now call the stretcher,
although it's still called a litter in some circles.
Yeah, it's a pretty intuitive thing, but it works.
Someone had to think of it.
Couple of sticks with some canvas stretch between them.
Throw a person on there, you can pick them up.
Two people can pick them up
and get them off of the battlefield, lickety split.
Hooray.
So yeah, so this is the idea of emergency medicine
that grew basically exclusively out of warfare
over the centuries.
Well, yeah, but what's remarkable to me
is that from that time, I have the right idea.
Let's get these people out of here quickly.
It took about 130 years all the way
until the mid to late 1960s,
until they said, hey, wait a minute.
If we actually put trained medical people in these things
and weren't simply driving people to a hospital,
we might have even more luck.
Yeah, that was the late 60s.
Isn't that amazing?
It is, and at the time it was,
so a lot of medicine was practiced through house calls,
right?
Including emergencies, like if there was an emergency
and you could get ahold of a doctor,
the doctor was expected to go out to that emergency
and do what they could,
but more often than not, either the cops
or local morticians were tasked with,
basically it was called like a scoop and run
or scoop and carry, where you just basically
get the person out of that car wreck
or from the bottom of that ladder
or whatever just happened to them,
throw them in the back of a car, a cop car or a hearse.
I would looked it up, the Ecto-1,
the Ghostbusters ambulance is a modified Cadillac hearse.
Oh yeah, I'm not sure that was a sinking feeling.
It really was.
For a mortician to show up in a hearse
and be like, I'm gonna take you to the hospital,
depending on what happens,
you may be back in the same car.
Yeah, and talk about a conflict of interest,
you know what I mean?
Oh, well that's a good point.
Hopefully not, but yeah.
Take the long way.
I'm paper, yeah, right.
Or they just casually put their hand on the person's nose
and mouth in the back seat, just dry.
Terrible.
The thing is though, is whether the mortician or the cops
were getting you to the hospital,
even when you got to the hospital,
it's not like there was such a thing as an ER room.
ERs didn't come about really until like the mid-70s,
where you could find them in fair abundance
around the United States.
Like ERs just didn't exist.
It was, here you go, doc.
I know you just delivered a baby
and you treated somebody else for angina,
but now you've got to put this person's head back together.
Wow.
Yeah, and it was all just medicine at the time.
So yeah, the idea of getting somebody to a hospital
and having a medical person, a professional,
in the car that's transporting them,
it came out of Ireland, I think, right?
Yeah, big shout out 1967 to Dr. J. Frank Pantridge
of Belfast.
He had a study, he published a study that said,
hey, you know what, we have more success saving people's lives
when our mobile units have a physician or a nurse inside.
Right.
And everyone went, huh, never really thought about that.
But there it is, there's a study.
Yeah.
Pretty cool.
So he definitely set the stage for this.
And then the year before, there was a report.
I think it was a year earlier, right?
The one from Congress in America?
A couple of years, 65.
I think it was like the National Academy of Sciences
or somebody basically got together with another group
and said, let's study accidents.
And what they came up with was this idea
that there was this overlooked disaster that happened.
Accidents were a huge major leading cause of injury
and death in the United States.
And this inquiry determined that we
weren't doing much about it.
And specifically, a lot of people
died who otherwise wouldn't have if there
had been something like an emergency medical service
to attend to them at the accident scene
and on the way to the hospital.
And then having the hospital actually
know what they were doing as far as emergency medicine goes.
Yeah, it's just staggering to me.
It seems so intuitive.
And I can't believe it took that long for this to happen.
And in fact, the Emergency Medical Systems Act
was signed in 1973, which basically said,
we need a standardized system here nationwide.
That was after that paper came out in 1966.
Many years later.
I mean, that's the speed of government, I guess.
And then in 1977, the publication
of the very first national standard curriculum
for EMTs and paramedics.
77.
Yeah.
And then so alongside this, para this,
there were people like around the country at universities
around the country and around the world who
were kind of all recognizing all of this at the same time,
that there was a lot more that could
be done for people who were injured in accidents.
And so you had the people at Pitt University of Pittsburgh
taking up the cause.
Go Panthers.
Yeah, they started, is it the Panthers?
Yeah.
They started creating some of the first curriculum
for paramedics, some of the earliest tests for paramedics.
The University of Cincinnati came up
with the first curriculum for training physicians in ER
medicine.
I think the University of California
was an early entrant into the world of teaching paramedicine.
And I think they were the first one to be accredited in 1980.
Like they had their operation going for years,
but they were the first one to say, hey,
somebody take a look at this and make sure we're kosher.
And then we can say we're an accredited training facility
for paramedics.
Amazing.
It is pretty amazing.
And then the problem is this.
So the federal government got into the act in 1973
with the Emergency Medical Services Act.
But by 1981, there was an omnibus budget that said,
we're out, we're done.
We're not funding emergency services anymore.
And then from that point forward,
the emergency service system in the United States,
whatever had been developed to that point,
broke into patchworks of state, local, county programs.
Sometimes multiple ones within a single county.
I think there's a county in Michigan
that has like 18 different emergency services.
And that has kind of created this where we are now,
which is people doing the absolute best they can
in what amounts to a broken system in a lot of ways.
Should we take a break?
Sure.
All right, when we come back,
we will put the broken system behind us momentarily
and talk about EMTs and paramedics.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
One of my folks.
Just stay on the surface.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
called David Lasher and Christine Taylor
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days
of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping-off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it.
And now we're calling on all of our friends to come back
and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in as we take you back
to the 90s.
Listen to, hey, dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye,
bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio
App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha,
cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha, cha.
All right, so if you want to ride in an ambulance
or drive an ambulance and get on the scene
and help someone out who's in need,
there are a couple of ways you can do it.
You can be an EMT, emergency medical technician.
And this is the person who has undergone
about between about 120 and 150 hours of coursework.
They are well-trained in all kinds of lifesaving procedures.
If you need CPR, if you need oxygen administered,
if you were having some bad allergic reaction,
that your life is in jeopardy.
But there are limits to what they are allowed to do.
So one thing they cannot do, even in the case of giving shots,
is they can't break the skin, which is super interesting.
I never knew that.
No, I didn't know that either.
But you can consider an EMT like an entry-level
paramedicine professional.
Right.
That's where you would start.
And in fact, I think you have to start as an EMT
to go on to the next level, which would be paramedic.
For sure, yeah.
So if you're a paramedic, you have about 10 times
the amount of coursework and schooling under your belt
by the time you're a paramedic.
And I think you do have to have about six months,
at least, immediately prior EMT experience
to start becoming a paramedic as well, which I'm sure
is the way most people go, is you start out as an EMT,
and then you move on to the next level, which is paramedic.
Yeah, which, like you said, 10 times.
So that's about anywhere from 1,200 to 1,800 hours,
depending on your state or your municipality
to get certified.
And this is where the real action can happen.
You can give an IV.
If someone's having a heart attack, you can deal with that.
You can operate defibrillator.
Fibrillator?
Fibrillator.
Fibrillator.
It's fun to say once you master it.
They should have just called it the clear machine.
Yeah, the bzzz.
But it's a lot of work and a lot of hours.
And one of the people that they interviewed in this article
said that it's really grueling.
And when you're in paramedic training and school
and doing your coursework, basically for a year or two,
you can just say goodbye to your friends and family.
Yeah, I saw that too.
Yeah, that's tough stuff.
So the paramedic is actually, they
operate under the license, not just under the direction,
but under the license of a physician in their locale.
There's a couple of ways that you can do it.
And as you'll start to see, I saw a quote that said,
if you've seen one emergency medical system,
you've seen one emergency medical system.
They're all just so different, and the whole thing
is so patchwork.
But there is a national standard,
which I think is the National Emergency Medical Technician
Registry exam.
That's like the national exam.
And then you may have to pass a state and or local exam,
too, depending on where you live.
But there is a national accreditation
and national coursework.
But then how the system functions and runs
is what's the patchwork part of it.
Yeah, and it'll cost you, I mean,
it depends on where it is, of course, in what program.
But the example they used in our article
is the UCLA Center for Prehospital Care.
And they quoted about $10,000 for just the tuition.
And then, of course, like any college or coursework,
you're going to have to pay for books and equipment
and uniforms and stuff like that.
That's where they get you.
That's exactly where they get you.
The plaid skirt.
And then after that, though, the good news
is that you have a really good chance of getting work.
I get the impression that if you have gone through all
of your paramedic training, you're not sitting around.
Like there's usually a job waiting for you somewhere.
Yeah, I saw that as well.
And actually, it doesn't necessarily pay super well.
So if you ever see a paramedic, be extra nice to them.
For sure.
Because not only are they running around saving people's lives,
they're not getting rich off of it at all.
They're doing it because it's something they care about.
Yeah.
But despite that, despite the mediocre pay,
I saw it's going to be one of the most in-demand jobs
over the next 10 to 15 years.
I really wish I could remember the statistic exactly.
But I think they're expecting another like 53,000 EMT jobs
or paramedic jobs to be added to the American economy
over the next decade maybe.
So it's definitely a growing career, for sure.
A growing profession.
Yeah, and you mentioned the pay.
If you go to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics
to kind of find a mean salary or something, they do it.
It's not really, they should separate it out,
but they lump in EMTs and paramedics when, of course,
EMTs don't make the kind of money they're paramedic would.
But they had a mean annual wage of about $31,000
a few years ago.
And if you're in the top 10%, it's about $54,000.
And apparently, the state of Washington
is one on the higher side.
You can get as high as $71,000 in the state of Washington.
But I mean, that's a good living and a decent living,
but it's not like you said.
They don't go into this because like, oh, man,
that $31,000 a year, it's sort of like being a school teacher.
It's a, I feel like it's a calling in a lot of cases.
For sure, for sure.
As I was saying about the license
that they operate under, right?
So if you're a certified paramedic,
when you are, depending on the state you're in,
you may be operating under the license of the state medical
director, like that's where you have your license.
Or you could also be operating under the license
of a local physician, like that physician's license covers
you, covers the physician's assistant, basically
everything working for, everyone working for him or her.
So you might be operating under that physician's license.
Or, and I didn't know this, man, during an ambulance ride.
So remember how just adding like a trained medical
professional to the ride from an accident scene
to the hospital improves outcomes.
And we've known that since 1966 at least.
They figured out that if you can communicate
with a doctor, an ER physician en route,
you could also improve outcomes even more.
So during this transportation from an accident
to the hospital, the paramedic is probably
in touch with an ER doctor who is instructing and advising
and consulting with the paramedic to figure out
the best course of action, the best course of treatment,
and then how to carry that out.
And from what I understand at that time,
the paramedic is operating under that physician's license
in that state.
Would that make you feel better or worse?
What, that the paramedic was getting instruction
from a physician?
Yeah.
Like if you hear this going on.
I don't know.
I would say.
Part of me is like better because it's a doctor telling you
that, but the other part of me is like, don't you know?
Right.
And you would hate to hear like the doctor say,
we'll get the something, something,
and for the paramedic to say the what?
Right.
I don't know what that is.
I've never seen this before ever.
Have you ever had to take an ambulance ride for yourself?
No.
No, thank goodness.
I didn't think I had either, but then I did remember when
I was 13 or 14, my brother was 16 or 17,
we were in a car wreck.
There were eight people in a jeep,
in my brother's jeep that was once my dad's jeep.
And that was definitely not safe to do, to begin with.
But we were going to a movie after church on a Sunday night,
bunch of kids in youth group.
Raising hell.
Piled in my brother's jeep, wasted.
No, just kidding.
Completely sober.
Wasted on the Lord.
We were.
And it was raining really hard.
And you know, at Ponce, Ponce de Leon Avenue here
in Atlanta, everyone that doesn't live in Atlanta
probably laughs that we pronounce it that way,
instead of Ponce de Leon.
But on Ponce where it kind of, if you're leaving from Atlanta,
it's that big curve where you go over that large stone archway.
Yes.
Kind of headed toward Indicator.
We were coming down that way, nowhere
near Northlake Mall, where we were supposed to be headed.
We were lost.
And my brother, we hydroplained, hit a curb,
and turned the jeep over on its side.
And I ripped through the canvas ceiling or whatever it's made of.
Oh man, you got thrown?
Oh yeah, we were scattered all over the street.
You are lucky.
I know, it's the only time I think
that I've been knocked unconscious.
And I just remember waking up, what would have been probably
seconds later, the pouring rain and looking around
and seeing my friends scattered within 20 feet of each other
in various places.
Wow, man, that is scary stuff.
It was scary.
So in the end, the good news is no one had,
I think the worst injury was a broken collar bone.
I broke my finger.
There were little cuts and scrapes.
But nobody was hurt bad.
But I do remember this.
I hope my brother doesn't listen to this one.
In the ambulance, on the way, my brother
was just sort of catatonic.
And they said they were trying to get information.
And they asked what his name was.
And he said, A-hole.
What?
He said, A-hole.
He said the real word.
Because he felt so bad?
Yeah, I think he was just sort of out of it
and felt terrible.
Poor Scott.
And he didn't curse at all at the time.
Still doesn't even curse much.
But it was just weird that that is what stands out in my mind.
I wonder if he remembers that, actually.
Well, that's a big one, especially if you didn't curse.
So funny.
Man, you are a great storyteller.
Was that a good story?
Yeah.
I was seriously, well, you kept going off on tansons.
I'm like, no, we've got to get back to the story.
What happened to the cheek?
I know.
You looked a little nervous.
Yeah.
So wow, OK, should we take a break?
Oh, yeah.
And also, I forgot to mention the one guy that
was tragically killed.
Right.
You're like, but did I mention I also broke my finger?
No, nobody.
Nobody was hurt.
Everybody was too bad.
Everybody was good.
Everybody was good.
I think my brother broke his foot.
I am.
Yeah, it was just stuff like that.
Heck of a story, Chuck.
Heck of a story.
Thank you.
Yeah, let's take a break and regroup, shall we?
Yeah, let's do.
OK.
Chuck, thank you very much.
God damn you.
Well done, Chuck.
Well done, Chuck.
Chuck.
Chuck.
Just get a service.
On the podcast, HeyDude, the 90s,
called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, HeyDude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use HeyDude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends, and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to HeyDude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week
to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast, and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
OK, we're back.
I'm not reeling quite as much as I was,
but that was a good story again.
I feel like we should mention, even though it's kind of silly,
that emergency TV show.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
From the 70s, because it seems like it definitely,
like, actually played a part in ramping up ambulance services.
Yeah, so this is, I think, 1971 or 72 when it premiered.
And remember, the Emergency Medical Services Act
wasn't passed until 1973.
That white paper had come out in 1966.
So this idea of this new type of medicine,
this new type of health care worker,
was really on America's mind.
But one of the ways it got there was from that TV show
emergency, in part because it was shot like documentary style.
People played themselves on it.
Like, there were real dispatchers on the show,
acting as dispatchers.
It just captured America's imagination.
Yeah, I remember watching it.
Dude, I don't think I ever saw an episode of it.
Yeah, it was an emergency with an exclamation point.
It ran until 77.
And it was mainly two dudes, two firefighter characters
that the story centered on.
And one of them was a young Kevin Tigg or Teague.
He was the Jefferson Roadhouse.
Yeah.
He was the owner.
He's a character.
He's been in a lot of things.
He owned the Double Deuce.
Yeah, he's great.
I can't remember what else I've seen him.
I've seen him young before.
I wonder if it was emergency now that you mentioned it.
Maybe.
Huh, maybe I have.
Because I'm a big Jack.
I bet it ran every runs.
For sure it did.
But I'm a Jack Webb fan.
And I think he produced or created it.
Your big Jack Webb guy?
Mm-hmm.
Are you not?
I don't know.
He's the dude from Dragnet, Sergeant Friday.
Yeah, I guess I need to think about that.
Yeah, he's awesome.
I'll let you know.
Man, if you go back and watch like old episodes of Dragnet,
oh my god.
Yeah, that was a good show.
Yes, it was.
And I think emergency, maybe Adam 12
is like the direct spin-off of Dragnet.
Maybe that's what I'm thinking of.
But I swear I know exactly what you're talking about
with the Teague fella from Roadhouse.
And then wasn't Dragnet Colonel Potter?
Yes, Harry Morgan.
Right, we had a, Emily and I had a long conversation
about M.A.S.H. the other day.
And how that was, I was a M.A.S.H. nut.
And how that show was one of the few to survive
like major cast changes.
Oh yeah, like three of them.
Yeah, they certainly didn't like big stars.
Like co-stars.
I think one of the few people who made it through
was Alan Alder, right?
He was there the whole time?
Yeah, and like Hot Lips, I think, was the same
and a few others, but they had like Radar and Klinger.
Yeah, they were there the whole time.
Although they coexisted, I think.
But eventually Radar left and Klinger took his job.
They, Potter took over for what's his face,
the original guy.
I don't remember, but he wore the fishing hat.
Yeah, he was, oh man, the saddest ending ever for that one.
What, when he left?
Yeah, I remember he got his papers to go home
and everyone's all excited and then he was killed
in a helicopter crash or a plane crash.
I don't remember that.
On his way out.
Wow.
And then of course, Frank Burns left
and was replaced by Winchester.
And then Trapper left and was replaced by Honeycut.
Right.
But it just, it was still great.
Well, it wasn't as great at the very end.
I don't know, man.
Goodbye farewell and amen was one of the all time
best last episodes ever.
True, for sure.
But you're saying they pulled it together
at the, in the last episode?
I think I remember the last couple of seasons,
it was a little bit like, you know,
this maybe it had run its course.
Huh, I got it.
But I was a very discerning 12 year old viewer.
Yeah, I guess so.
Yeah, like they've really gone to the hooch gin joke
too many times this episode.
It is funny though that like little 12 year old me
thought like the funniest thing in the world was
war surgeons, drunk war surgeons.
Right.
Drunk philandering war surgeons.
All right.
I really got off track there.
Yeah.
Maybe we should take a third break.
No, I don't think so.
I don't think we should either.
So we're talking about paramedics today.
Yes.
Believe it or not.
And one of the things we talked about was the idea
that paramedics, well, let's talk a little bit more
about their job, right?
Okay.
One of the things that paramedics are sometimes
criticized for is that they don't run to the scene
of an emergency.
I've never thought about that once.
You haven't.
I really hadn't either.
But then I started thinking about it.
I'm like, yeah, I can totally see that.
Apparently for some people who are at an emergency scene
and see the paramedics kind of walk up,
they appear a little too casual and they want to know,
what are you doing?
Why aren't you rushing to the scene?
And paramedics, I think we saw a question answered
on Cora or something like that.
And a paramedic explains, there's actually a number
of really good reasons why paramedics,
why you don't see them running to the scene.
First of all, they're going to park as close as they can.
Sure.
So that running is only going to shave
a couple of seconds off.
But really the number one reason or one of the top reasons
is that they're supposed to bring with them
to this scene of catastrophic panic, basically.
Calm and professionalism and being in control.
Yeah, I get that.
Like, I think it would be a little disconcerting
if I was injured and I saw a paramedic burst
into the room, like breathing heavy.
Oh my God.
What's going on?
What's going on?
Is everybody okay?
Yeah, plus they might get hurt running.
That's another one.
And they're usually, you know, or not usually,
but I would say probably a lot of times it's not like
they're walking through a, you know, a perfectly laid pathway.
Like they could be running upstairs
or through a house of hoarders or, you know,
through the woods.
Like you don't know what's going on.
You got to be careful on your way there.
Yeah, and you have to be going slow enough
that you can assess what the risks you're walking into are
as you're walking into them.
Rather than running into it and being like,
oh, the guy who shot you still here waiting for me.
You know, now that I've run into the scene,
I know that, but it's terrible.
It's also kind of hard to run from place to place,
depending on the equipment that they're carrying with them.
Those stretchers get heavy.
The EKG machines get heavy.
The defibrillators get heavy.
All that stuff gets heavy.
So there's a number of reasons why you won't see
a paramedic rushing to the scene.
You will see them rushing to the scene in the ambulance,
though.
And from what I understand,
that driving in the ambulance or riding in the ambulance
is the most dangerous part of the entire job.
Yeah, and here's another tip, aside from being nice
to your EMT or paramedic,
is don't call them ambulance drivers.
Yeah.
Because that's part of their job.
And it's a weird thing too that it's not like
they hire a driver who's super skilled at that,
and then they have other people in there that do the work.
Like they do double duty.
They have to learn to drive like that.
I mean, while their EMTs are paramedics.
Yeah, and so if you've ever seen an ambulance
going through an intersection,
they're gonna slow and maybe even stop and then proceed.
They still get broadsided very frequently
by people going through the intersection
because they have a green light
and they're not paying attention.
They'll hit an ambulance, like T-Bone, an ambulance.
And the driver's probably okay,
or I should say the paramedic driving is probably okay.
But the paramedics in the back,
they probably aren't lashed down in any way, shape, or form
because they're working on the patient.
And so they're getting thrown around
and can get injured and killed themselves that way.
So that's the most dangerous aspect of the job
from what I've seen.
Yeah, another interesting thing that I saw
from that list you sent was that
if you're in a big city, a lot of times
they even have divided up between EMT and paramedic
for different cases.
So like if there's a scene of trauma going on,
like a car accident, then you're more likely to get an EMT.
Whereas if you're at home and you're like,
my husband's having a heart attack
or my child's having a seizure,
then you're more likely to get a paramedic,
which is interesting.
Yeah, and in cities as well, if you're a paramedic,
you probably, once you get into your ambulance,
you're basically stationed at the ambulance
for the rest of your 12-hour shift.
You don't go back to like the firehouse
or to the ambulance clubhouse or anything like that.
The ambulance clubhouse.
You're like on a designated street corner parked
waiting for your next call.
Probably killing time somehow,
but there's not very much downtime in a city especially.
The opposite is true for more rural EMTs and paramedics.
And that there's a lot of downtime.
So much so that this guy who was actually
one of the consultants on that show, Emergency Years Back,
he became a minister of health, I think in Nova Scotia.
And he created this program for rural EMS workers
to use their downtime in much the same way
that like a country doctor would have made house calls.
Yeah, so they're like, wasn't the idea
that they would go to places and sort of help train
like regular citizens on how to avoid getting hurt
and stuff to begin with?
Right, yeah.
Like doling out preventative medicine,
like making sure that people are taking their medicines
correctly, teaching CPR classes,
teaching leading exercise classes for like seniors
at a senior center, like doing all the stuff
to reduce the number of calls that they have to go on anyway.
So it cuts down on their downtime,
which I think is actually very much appreciated
by paramedics.
Cause there's really nothing more boring
than sitting around constantly.
And then they're actually doing something
and also making their community a healthier place.
Yeah, I thought it was funny when they were talking
to some real on the ground paramedics about the downtime.
They were like, well, HBO goes kind of awesome.
Right, yeah.
Like, oh, well, I guess you gotta pass the time.
It's better than Nicholas Cage and bringing out the dead.
What did he do?
Cause I remember that movie,
but I don't remember all of the details of it.
Well, it wasn't that great.
I liked it.
He did tons of drugs.
Oh, okay.
That's why he was on drugs.
I think he was like a speed freak or something.
I gotcha.
Yeah.
Yeah, he kept begging to be fired, right?
Ah, I don't remember it very well at all actually.
I think he did.
Like that was his shtick.
He begged to be fired.
So one of the things about those that downtime,
the community preventative medicine initiatives,
they've kind of spread from Nova Scotia out
through around the country.
When you see a paramedic doing that,
they're not being paid or at the very least,
their unit or their county or their city
is not being paid for that, which is a huge problem.
Yeah, this is where I got a little confused.
The way I was reading this was Medicaid and Medicare
and stuff and insurance companies will reimburse
only if they have transported someone to a hospital.
Yes.
So in other words, if you go as an ambulance
in a paramedic or EMT to a place
and you actually can just help and treat someone there
and they don't need to go to the hospital,
then that's a freebie or did they send a bill to the people?
As from what I understand, it's a freebie.
I don't, probably since it is such a patchwork
of systems all around the country,
I'm sure that you could live somewhere
where you, the person would get a bill for that.
I think as a matter of fact, you do no matter where you live,
but Medicaid and Medicare won't pay for it.
So there is a substantial reason
to say keep working chest compressions
on a person who is obviously dead
all the way to the hospital.
Interesting.
So that you can like bill Medicaid for that transport
or getting somebody to go to the hospital
even though they don't need to,
so that you can bill Medicaid for that as well.
And the problem is that leads to other problems as well.
Like hospital ERs are very much overcrowded
and understaffed and overworked, right?
Yeah.
So when you show up with another person,
that's one more person they have to deal with.
And apparently it creates a bit of a conflict.
Yeah, there's a cultural conflict
between the people, the paramedics and those EMTs
bringing people to the ER
and the people who staff the ER
and are accepting these people.
And so much so that there's,
it's become kind of common for ER rooms
to issue ambulance diversions.
Right.
They're saying don't bring anybody to our ER,
go somewhere else.
And on a really bad night in a really populated city,
you might find every single ER room
like with that diversion alert on.
And you've got to take somebody out to like a country hospital
that doesn't know anything about trauma
and it takes 45 minutes to get there.
And they're not gonna get the care they could receive
at a good trauma center in the city.
So that's a real problem.
Yeah, and isn't too in terms of pay,
and we need to hear from people on the ground
because this, it's surprisingly confusing
when you research this on how it all works.
And maybe that's the point,
but it seems like it's also a fixed rate.
There's no difference between,
I treated a kid for an allergic-beasting reaction to,
I brought a guy back from the dead
who had had a heart attack or heart failure.
Is that right?
Yeah, so long as you transport both of them
to the hospital that you're gonna get,
I think I saw as low as 25 bucks from Medicaid
in some places.
I don't understand, the numbers just do not add up.
I don't get it at all.
I know that some places, some counties and cities
fold their EMT or EMS workers under their fire departments
so that they fall under the fire department's funding,
which I think fire departments tend to be way better funded
than any kind of EMS service.
So I think that's how, that's one way that it happens,
but I just, I don't get how this actually works money-wise
because it doesn't add up, it doesn't make sense.
Yeah, I mean, it's not often that we're a little stymied.
So we're gonna follow up for sure with some emails,
but I think that it's also gonna vary from place to place.
Because the other thing that I got really confused about
was the privatization of ambulance services.
And as best as I can tell is in the 70s and 80s,
there were a lot of small private ambulance companies,
but then they merged into more regional things.
And that these days, there's just a few like big
multinational companies that are the most dominant
in the industry.
But I don't get how that works.
Like if they're private, are they like working
with only private hospitals
or can they go to a state hospital?
I think that they can get a contract from the state.
They can be, they can have a license to operate
within a state or a county or wherever.
And I think they go wherever they're called to.
I know that there can be like competition among them.
So like multiple ambulances will show up
at a scene sometimes.
It's just, it's kind of a bit of a cluster
as far as competing with the local EMS services.
And I think it's on the decline from what I've seen.
Yeah, but when you call 911, do you have a choice?
So what you can do, I think it's kind of like Uber,
where like the 911 dispatcher has a log of companies
or services like public funded or private services
that it can be issued to and they send out the alarm
and whoever takes the call goes and gets it.
Interesting.
So the problem is, is I saw a Las Vegas
review journal article about this.
Las Vegas was debating whether to just totally privatize
their EMS services.
Their EMS just like went berserk.
They're like, no, like this doesn't work.
The private companies are late,
I think they were late like 10,000 plus times
in one year in Las Vegas.
Their response time tends to be less than
the actual fire department or EMSs.
It's just not as preferable.
And the reason why private ambulance services
came about or became widespread is this idea
that you should just privatize everything
and then that competition will keep everything going.
And that hasn't necessarily pan out to be the case.
And from what I see,
New York is actually scaling back on theirs, right?
Yeah, I think Giuliani is one of the people
that really tried, and of course,
no surprise given his politics,
trying to privatize the industry.
But apparently a lot of those had gone bankrupt basically.
And during the housing boom,
the financial collapse strangely,
or maybe not strangely, cause I don't understand it,
a lot of private equity firms
started buying up ambulance services.
Yeah, there you go, there's the downfall.
It's just so interesting.
I know that this is one of those where someone's
gonna knock our socks off with a great email.
Yeah, I think also one more thing
about the private ambulance services,
it's not like they're just a bad idea all around.
Sure.
In a locale that is underserved,
if a company wants to come and set up ambulance services,
that would be great for that area.
Because they can get places faster in an ambulance
than they could have before.
In a place where you've got your EMS overstretched
and the county's like, no,
we're not hiring a single additional EMS worker.
The company that sets up shop
can actually take up the slack.
Like there are good aspects to it.
Like it's not just like some terrible idea,
but in practice, it hasn't worked out
as well as one would hope from what I understand.
Yeah.
Yeah, EMS workers, like email us,
like explain this because I really,
like you, I do not get who's footing the bill.
It has to be insurance companies.
And then if you don't have insurance,
it has to be just the person, the individual.
Yeah, and I think we have,
we waited into the waters of doing a 911 podcast once
and didn't, isn't that correct?
Because it was, I mean, we'll do it at some point,
but I remember thinking, oh, that's a good easy-ish one.
And it ended up like being super convoluted.
Yeah, I think we should do that.
We should also do just ERs in general too.
Yeah.
So that's a bit about paramedics.
Sounds like there's way more to it, right?
Yeah.
But you got anything else for now?
No, sir.
Okay, well, since Chuck said no, sir,
it's time for Listen to Mail.
All right, I'm gonna call this,
We Help the Dude Win Something.
Yeah, I love this one.
Hey guys, been listening to your show for about four years
and always wanted to write in,
but now I have a great reason.
A local store was doing a giveaway a few days ago
and they posted that the first people to show up
and answer correctly would win a prize.
The question was,
baking an eggs was not always a breakfast food
and what year did it become so
and who was the man behind the marketing idea?
So this guy sounded super excited
because he knew the answer.
Immediately I thought of your show
and the uncanny ability of Mr. Edward Bernays
to pop up in seemingly strange histories.
I remembered your PR episode
and knew it was sometime in the 20s,
so I hopped in my car and took off for the business.
When I got there, I told him the answer
with a startled look,
they told me I'd won a huge case of meat.
And not just junky stuff either.
This place sells to restaurants and businesses
all across the country.
I love that.
I was super stoked.
Good meat.
He's like, I won meat.
And not just like terrible meat, like good stuff too.
When they asked if I had to look it up,
I told them no, that I listened to stuff you should know
and they retained it in the back of my mind.
They asked for the name of the show
and they said they were going to play it
for all the workers there during the day.
So now they can get more difficult and random questions.
That's awesome.
And he said it doesn't in there.
I went back later in the week
and the same girl I'd spoken to recognized me.
So they had two other people come in
that had known the answer from stuff
you should know as well.
All right.
Even though we live in super rural Utah,
you apparently have a large following
and that is from John Robison.
Thanks John Robison.
I hope you have a healthy EMS service out there
to come find you after you eat that box of meat.
Yeah. And you know what?
Let's hear from Salt Lake City
because we have debated a live show there
and just didn't know if we had the support.
So I want to hear it.
Okay. So we want to hear from Utahans and EMS workers.
Yeah. If we get 10 people that email us
and say to come to Salt Lake City, we'll come.
I think we should set the bar higher than that.
Oh, okay. Okay.
Well, if you want to let us know
that you're from Utah and you want us to come
or you're an EMS worker
and you got some good stories for us,
you can tweet to us.
I'm at Josh M. Clark and at SYSK Podcast.
Chuck's at Charles W. Chuck Bryant on facebook.com
and at Stuff You Should Know on Facebook as well.
You can send us an email.
It's probably easiest to stuff podcast
at howstuffworks.com.
And always join us at our home on the web,
StuffYouShouldKnow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander
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Tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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