Tapout
Members-
Content count
230 -
Joined
-
Last visited
About Tapout
-
Rank
Emergency Dept. RN
- Birthday 08/01/1970
My Web Presence
- Website URL http://
Profile Information
- Location Westchester
- Agency Stellaris
-
helicopper liked a post in a topic: 9 Year Old honored for saluting the funeral procession of Fallen Trooper
-
Thanks for this post, crimecop. My 10yr old is being raised the same old school way. I just wish more of his peers were.
-
Very sad for her and her families, both off the job and on. But do NOT blame the breed. Blame the upbringing of the dog before she took it in. My mastiff/German shepherd is 145 pounds of mush to those she knows but will probably shred any dummy who enters my house unannounced. We rescued her from a shelter as a wee pup of 20 pounds. She's eaten a LOT since, obviously...
-
seriously? sad, no. disgusting, biased and not even proven factually accurate, yes.
-
Tapout liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
Tapout liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
Tapout liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
Tapout liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
Dinosaur liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
antiquefirelt liked a post in a topic: Too Many Heart Attacks...
-
Gotta love typing too fast and spell check. Sorry for the war and the jeep. LOL Hopefully you get the jist.
-
Please consider something less boring than a gym or the related equipment. I have all of that...the Nordic track makes a great Nordic coat rack... Try karate or krav maga type training. You'll run a little, do some situps and pushh ups, but more importantly you'll get your heart rate going enough to burn pounds and build the endurance you need to be good at what you do. And the perk with krav training is that you'll get hit war less often by EDPs and drug addicts looking to fight. Humor me... Www.Kmny.us I gain nothing if you join, but if it jeeps you alive longer, I as the local ER nurse, will be soo happy! My greatest day at work is when I don't have to care for my brothers and sisters. Seriously.
-
Hilarious! Id buy and wear that on a tshirt. To the new pilot... awesome! People like you rule because you are actual flying superheroes.... kinda like my favorite guy, Batman. Way to go!
-
Equal parts hilarious and sad. I think I know that guy. Flunked out of nursing school. Still lives in his moms basement. Posts on Lohud A LOT.
-
Wow. That was bizarre. Hope it gets their point across to the legislators. Truly bizarre. Who thinks of these things? LOL
-
One question to all involved: why the hell have SO many people been hit by mnorth trains lately?? Seriously, 3 or 4 employees in 2 weeks, plus a few civilians trying to off themselves, almost all in croton. What's the new trend about??!!
-
The trooper was temp insane and so far out of line that the line was a dot to him. That said, Abaduck is right with most of his opinions. Concurrently, the offended officer was also justified in feeling defensive and annoyed because abaduck often stirs the pot one too many times. Call a truce and move on.
-
Forgive me if this post posts twice. I typed away, hit add reply, and it all disappeared. Annoying. Anyway, I need to say a few things: 1. We are ALL buffs. It's part of why we all do what we do. We love the thrill, we love helping, we love a pat on the head if and when it happens. 2. If we were not buffs, we would, at the very least, suck at what we do. At worst, we would hurt or kill people with our ineptness (is that even a word?). 3. There is absolutely NO screening tool to differentiate between just the typical buff and the closet EDP who is going to start fires just to be the hero who puts it out and saves lives, or the nurse who is gonna slip a little extra K into an IV just to be the hero who resuscitates that patient. 3.5... If 90% of us in EMS, police, fire or in-hospital care were subjected to comprehensive psych evaluations as a condition of employment, we'd ALL BE WORKING AT McD's instead. Don't throw stones when you, too live in a glass house. 4. If you never met this young man, you can't understand the collective confusion and sadness that has blanketed his community. He was always energetic, enthusiastic, respectful toward staff and empathetic toward patients he brought into the local ER. A lohud article and facebook page do not give you the right to judge this young man's character or level of obvious mental illness. 5. Sleepy Hollow FD and VAC: hold your heads high and know that those who actually know you and work alongside you still respect you. Tapout
-
MoFire390 liked a post in a topic: What has happened to good BLS?
-
Tapout liked a post in a topic: What has happened to good BLS?
-
firedude liked a post in a topic: What has happened to good BLS?
-
We all respresent each other. We ALL represent EACH OTHER. WE ALL REPRESENT EACH OTHER. This simple line represents and perfectly sums up EVERYTHING we ALL do as EMS and ER healthcare providers. Say this line before every single shift you work. If you believe it, get to work! But if you don't, call out and consider submitting your resignation. Then consider another job because you won't be good at what you get paid to do and you will be eventually fired for being useless and ineffective. We all represent each other. If you love this job, you will be a perfect example of those of us who also love this job. You will make me look great and I thank you in advance for all of the gratiitude I'll get! But if you do badly because you don't love this job or do it for the wrong reasons, YOU MAKE ME AND ALL OF OF US WITH GOOD, ALTRUISTIC INTENTIONS, LOOK BAD. I will have to defend myself for YOUR lame actions and I will wish you ill in all kinds of ways. I'm harmless but Karma isn't. Never forget that and good luck with the fallout. I won't back you because you didn't back me. Tapout
-
BFD1054 liked a post in a topic: Thanks to all Good Samaritans
-
EMSer liked a post in a topic: Thanks to all Good Samaritans
-
batt2 liked a post in a topic: Thanks to all Good Samaritans
-
x635 liked a post in a topic: Thanks to all Good Samaritans
-
FD828 liked a post in a topic: Thanks to all Good Samaritans
-
The other day, the snowy commute proved horrendous. At the rollover between Peekskill Hollow and Bryant Pond Roads, so many Good Samaritans intervened and helped a hurt, scared lady who skidded off the road in her minivan and came to a stop on the vehicle's side against a tree. Thank you to the off-duty EMT I saw running into the woods toward her vehicle. Thanks to the guy trained as a first-responder who also was a life-long Boy Scout who just wanted to help if he could. Thanks especially to the several off-duty NYSTroopers who stopped, provided invaluable scene safety (with loaned flares- ahem) and helped to speed up the BLS response. And thanks, George the medic, for getting there to relieve me and allow me to get to work in the local ER (looking and feeling much like a wet, half-drowned rat). Evereytime I start to think that people in general just suck and don't care about anyone but themselves, Good Samaritans like the ones I met the other day prove me wrong and restore my faith in mankind. Thanks, all of you, for that.
-
I'm here working at the local ER. I had just intended to lurk but you called me out! LOL Seth. I agree that ER nurses should attend call audits for the exact reasons Seth mentioned. Medics and RNs are so similarly trained and relied on. They should sit and discuss cases from literally beginning to discharge. And is love some ridealong time too! Got my emt from OLM and had a blast answering stacked calls and driving on sidewalks... kidding. Lunch over gotta run. Be safe and thanks for the post Seth.
-
Welcome, young new EMT! Please, please oh PLEASE always be a good EMT. Never forget good, solid BLS. In CPR, never stop compressing that chest... even if you hear pops and breaks of ribs. Never ever wait for ALS to bring you meds or a defibrillator. Do your thing. Chances are YOU will be the one, with good solid continuous CPR, who actually saves the life of the person who went down and out. I love medics. I married one. But in the moment of BLS arriving first, IT IS THE EMT MOST TIMES WHO SAVES OR DOESN'T SAVE THE LIFE OF THE PATIENT. Your job is soooo much more important than you realize. Thank you for choosing this path. Now own up to it and never underestimate your value when it hits the fan. Gratefully, An old ER RN