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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!PANIX.COM!DANNYB
- Message-ID: <Pine.2.4.9212311356.A28041@panix.com>
- Newsgroups: misc.emerg-services
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 13:33:54 -500
- Sender: Emergency Services Discussion List <EMERG-L@MARIST.BITNET>
- From: Daniel Burstein <dannyb@PANIX.COM>
- Subject: news coverage NYC-EMS stress and suicides
- Lines: 141
-
- to: various EMS types
- from: Danny Burstein
-
- a quick transcript of the WWOR story on EMS stress
-
- @logo=DIIR
-
- @volume= Vol EH Thurs 12/31/1992
-
- Ch 9 "I-Team" report on NYC-EMS stress
-
- WWOR tv, ch 9, based in Secaucas NJ, ran a report produced by its
- "Investigatory team" following up on the NYC-EMS stress and suicide
- problems first reported by Gale Scott of New York Newsday.
-
- Attached is the transcript. usual disclaimers as to spelling and
- accuracy apply...
-
- News Anchor Sara Lee Kessler: The trauma of taking a life can cause
- incredible stress as you can imagine, but so can teh experience of
- seeing terrible wounds and fighting every day to save lives. The
- burden is so great that some people who save lives are taking their
- own. Our "I-team's" Joe Collin investigates:
-
- (various I-team" intro clips..., then:)
-
- Video of ambulance racing down the street, lights in sirens in use,
- radio noises in the background, etc. closes onto numerous clips of
- EMS personnel treating various patients. Ending scene: crew is
- doing cpr on shooting victim lying down in ambulance, and one crew
- member shouts: "go.. now!"
-
- Cut to: dispatcher on telephone speaking to caller, asking them:
- Person who needs help, are they breathing, are they awake?
-
- Various EMS worker voices played video shows a most impressive CPR
- effect: "You see humainty at its worst on this job." "I think there
- is an element of burnout on this job."
-
- Reporter Joe Collum (with Harlem Hospital as a backdrop): NYC has
- the biggest Emergency Medical Service in the United Statees. EMS
- workers here respond to 125 calls every hour, more than a million
- every year. And one of the results is an extremely high level of
- stress on the job. So high, in fact, that some believe stress may
- have contributed to a rash of suicides among EMS workers this year.
-
- Joe Collum: tragedy permeates the working days and nights of EMS
- paramedics and technicians. Within ten minutes of every train
- crash, building collapse, or shooting the City suffers, (cut to
- video of shooting victim inside ambulance, crew doing CPR, medic
- calling out: "... Harlem hospital, approx 35 year old male shot once
- in the head..") EMS workers are their, ofgten trying to start hearts
- that have stopped beating.
-
- Paramedic Rocco Cassetta: You go into the job sometimes, you cannot
- believe what people will actually do to each other. I've gone home,
- and couldn't sleep for hours, (inaudible) just trying to make sense
- of it.
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: AS 1992 draws to a close, EMS workers are
- trying to make sense of three confirmed and three more suspected
- suicides by fellow workers this year, four of them in July alone.
- That was four months after a US Air jet crashed on takeoff at
- LaGuardia (video clips of the crash scene in background)
-
- Dr. Alexander Kuehl: Many people after, for example, the US AIR
- crash, have a general feeling of letdown, almost like a malaise..
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: Dr. Alexander Kuehl ran EMS for nine years
- during the Koch administration. <editor's note: umm, not quite.>
- He and others say the US Air crash left a deep sense of frustration
- among the hundreds of EMS workers who got to the scene too late to
- save the lives of the twenty seven passengers.
-
- Dr. Kuehl: I think that there was a sense of "my god, look at all
- these people, I can't do anything about this, they're dead."
-
- Cut to a different call, crew rushing down an avenue, radio
- squawking..
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: Major disasters aside, EMS workers say the
- stress of trying to save lives in New York City is an everyday
- thing. Driving headlong into oncoming traffic, trying to cross town
- with drivers and perdestrians alike ignoring your siren.
- EMS worker in a stuck ambulance: That cab won't move to the side.
- He's (inaudible, but not complimentary)
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: Every day is an emotional roller coaster ride
- for EMS workers. With each call they must prepare for disaster, but
- often find only false alarms.
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: On this night several EMS, fire, and police
- units rushed to a building in Harlem where a caller claimed somebody
- had just jumped from an upper floor. It wasn't true.
-
- EMS Public Affairs representative Sondra Mackey: It kind of makes
- you stop and think. You're thinking of the patient who really does
- need (help), who will now have to wait longer (because we were
- called to the false alarm).
-
- Cut to: The Local 2507 rap video:
- ...called for a cut that wouldn't heal
- and in the meantime, right around the block,
- there's a twelve year old girl who just got shot
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: This rap video, produced by EMS workers,
- explores the stresses of the job...
-
- Cut to: dispatcher on the phone with a caller: "He WHAT? Why? Check
- and see if he has a pulse and if he's breathing. if he is, do NOT
- give him mouth to mouth. tell her that now.
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: The constant pressure of dealing with life and
- death pressures is aggravated by the threats EMS workers face daily
- to their own lives
-
- EMS worker: I've been hit on the job, I've been attqacked by violent
- patients, I've been shot at...
-
- EMS worker Lou Couly: Sometimes you get to a shooting and the
- shooting is still going on, we have to hide around the corner..
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: But in this day of AIDS and tuberculosis,
- the greatest danger these people face is the breath and blood of the
- people they're trying to save.
-
- Medic Rocco Cassetta: You go home and you get a cough or you get a
- little congestion in your chest and you go, "oh my god, I better get
- a PPD, a TB (tubercolusis) test or something like that. It will
- just stress you out.
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: Do you see how some of your fellow workers may
- have been stressed out that they even took their own lives?
-
- Rocco Cassetta: That's hard to say. I think this job definitely
- contributed. Definitely it contributed to what happened..
-
- Reporter Joe Collum: Joe Collum, channel 9, I-team.
-
- <sent from email account, "dannyb@panix.com", or "dburstein@mcimail.com"
- (no quotes, of course) >
-