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- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 12:35:27 -0500
- Sender: Emergency Services Discussion List <EMERG-L@MARIST.BITNET>
- From: Daniel Burstein <dannyb@PANIX.COM>
- Subject: transcript, ch 4 nyc-ems
- Lines: 101
-
- @logo= DIIR
-
- @volume= volume EJ Thursday Jan 28, 1993
-
- tv does an (ems) ride-a-long
-
- WNBC-tv, channel 4, continued its coverage of issues facing NYC-
- EMS. In tonight's broadcast (Weds, 1/27/1993) they featured an
- ems ride-a-long by reporter Dawn Fratangelo.
- Transcript by Danny Burstein, usual disclaimers about spelling
- and accuracy apply.
-
- Anchor Chuck Scarborough: Tonight our "Focus 4" report zooms in
- on the high speed heroes who do everything form delivering babies
- to saving gunshot victims. They're the City's EMS ambulance
- crews. Dawn Fratangelo is here to tell us that EMS technicians
- are facing their own health crisis, one that comes from being
- human.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: That's right Chuck, thanks. Dealing with New
- Yorks emergencies can be overwhelming. A recent study has found
- that suicides among the City's EMS personnel are three times
- higher than (in) the average population. EMS workers believe
- society dsoesn't understand the pressures they encounter. SO to
- get a better udnerstanding, we decided to ride along.
-
- EMS Lt. Kevin Haugh: ANyone who can tell you they walk away, or
- they're cold to what happens - they'd be lying to you.
-
- EMS tech Wayne Lynch: I don't think suicide is an answer to anything,
- but AI can see it building up to a climax such as that.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: Every day they deal with trauma and tragedy.
- Emergency Medical Service workers are expected to dsave our
- lives, but how do they save their own sanity from a daily dose of
- death.
-
- Lt. Haugh: Jobs that involve children seem to always hang onto me
-
- Wayne Lynch It kinds of get to me, you know, that this might even one
- day happen to my son.
-
- Lt. Haugh: This year I had the first child out the window of the
- season...
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: It is just one of an estimated million calls a
- year handled by New York's EMS, the busiest in teh country. But
- there's now evidence that close contact to carnage is taking its
- toll. Last year three EMS workers committed suicide, one of them
- was the first to respond to the Central Park jogger victim.
-
- Georgia Witkin, (psychologist) : It's not surprising that any EMS worker
- commits suicide. An
- EMS worker has to fail, by definition. They can't be successful
- all the time. Any (inaudible) business has a hit and miss rate.
- When the miss is life and death, teh sense of responsibility and
- guilt is very high.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: Incidents they find beyond them are ones which
- involve multiple casualties, like LaGuardia (airport's) US AIR
- crash, and the crushing deaths at CCNY (City College/NY),
- incidents where EMS personnel have to make choices.
-
- Lt. Haugh: They are very tough decisions, but that's what we're
- paid to do. We're paid to help the patient who has the best
- chance.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo (to xxx): Can you talk to your wife about some of
- the stress on the job?
-
- Wayne Lynch : Not really, she doesn't have an understanding of what the
- job is. Most people who don't do it don't have an understanding
- of what we go through.
-
- Lt. Haugh: We're dealing with death and destruction every day.
- After awhile, you just... or people say well, nobody really
- appreciates what I do. the guy who picks up your garbage is
- making more than I do to save your life. I think it's a point
- that hits home to a lot of people.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo, recapping : And that's another factor that adds to the
- stress. The average salary for EMS workers is only twenty-four
- thousand dollars a year, far less than that for firefighters and
- police officers.
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: The system does now have a counseling group to
- deal with pressures on the job. It is helping, but still, if EMS
- workers don't find their way into such a group, many know they
- will burn out before they get help. It's really a job where you
- have to vent... If you're dealing with death or some kind of
- emergency every day, the workers say, you just have to vent taht.
-
- Anchor Chuck Scarborough: The City recognized the stress faced by
- fire and police officers early on, but it took them a while to
- recognize this stress, didn't it?
-
- Dawn Fratangelo: It did. It (also) took awhile for EMS workers
- to organize also as a union. And the counseling group has been in
- place for about two and a half years, but they're finding that
- some of the workers aren't taking advantage of that. You're in a
- position of power when you're saving lives, (but) when you go to
-