EMS World

JUN 2013

EMS World Magazine is the most authoritative source in the world for clinical and educational material designed to improve the delivery of prehospital emergency medical care.

Issue link: https://emsworld.epubxp.com/i/131347

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 17 of 69

BEYOND THE BOOKS | By Mike Smith, BS, MICP Show Me the Professionals If we want respect, we need to look and behave like we deserve it 18 For more information, visit EMSWorldExpo.com MIKE SMITH is a featured speaker at EMS World Expo 2013, Sept. 8–12, Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, NV. DURING MY TRAVELS around the country, and as I interact with EMS instructors, one of the recurring themes discussed over the past couple of years has been that of professionalism. When all is said and done, there are two main elements of professionalism: behavior and appearance. You either act in accordance with the standards of the profession or you do not. Additionally, you either dress like a professional or you do not. For most folks, these two elements of professionalism go hand in hand—looking the look and walking the walk. When it comes to professional behavior, it's not as simple as telling a newly graduated EMT-Basic to "act like a professional," and magically expect professional behavior to appear. Where would a young person turn to fnd professional behavior worth emulating? From sports professionals? Doubtful, at best. In recent years, the stories of cheating, such as blood doping, steroid or human growth hormone use/abuse, or the use of other performance enhancing drugs seems to be never-ending. Maybe our young people should look to business professionals as role models. Once again, unscrupulous business practices seem to be the rule rather than the exception. Taxpayer bailouts of the auto, banking and real estate industries are events secondary to behaviors that should be avoided, not emulated. With such a glaring lack of acceptable professional behaviors to draw upon, we seem to be left with but one choice: professional role modeling within the EMS profession itself. I believe we each need to make a concerted effort to continually exhibit professional behavior, which can be distilled to two basic elements: be competent and be nice. JUNE 2013 | EMSWORLD.com Paralleling the issue of professional behavior is that of professional appearance. As a mentor who entered my life early on in my EMS career once told me, "If you show up for a call and you look like a clown, it should be easy to understand why the public would treat you like a clown." Strange as it may seem, the matter of professional attire is apparently not just a challenge for our young people. Recently I was in my offce getting ready for class when the phone rang. My secretary was on the other end of "If we want the public to treat us as professionals, we need to behave accordingly." the line and told me there was a sick student in the front offce. She asked if I could "check him out" while waiting for the 9-1-1 responders to arrive. Though neither my instructional partner nor I are running an ambulance service at the college where we co-instruct the paramedic program, we have always felt a professional obligation to respond to any call for help. I found a 26-year-old male complaining of shortness of breath along with a terrible headache. When his B/P turned out to be 184/106, it was clear to me something serious was going on with this young man. I went downstairs to tell my teaching partner I'd be tied up for a few minutes and went back upstairs. When I got back to the patient, I asked when the paramedics were expected and a guy wearing a faded, wrinkled fre department sweatshirt, a pair of uniform pants that had been washed so many times they were much closer to gray than navy blue, and a baseball hat that looked like it had been stored in a back pocket for the last week told me that the medics had come and gone. Moments later, a couple of frefghters came in and addressed the man as captain—and I was stunned. This was a senior command offcer making a six fgure salary responding to a call at 2 in the afternoon dressed like he was a frat boy, or possibly going on a camping trip, or maybe a supply run to Cabelas. This fellow works for a department with a multimillion-dollar budget that apparently thinks his attire is acceptable for a fre service professional. Had this been a call that came in after the crew had gone to bed, bunker gear or a sweatshirt might fy. But even then, not some ratty, faded sweatshirt. I just kept asking myself, "Does this man have no pride? How can he pretend to be a professional when there is clearly no interest in looking like one?" What happened to allow this to occur? Clearly, indifference on his part, as well as his department. Thank goodness this department is the exception rather than the rule, as the close to 30 provider agencies we interact with routinely have much higher standards for professional attire. When all is said and done, if we want the public to treat us as professionals, we need to behave accordingly. Then again, if we dress like clowns? Until next month… Mike Smith, BS, MICP, is director of clinical education and lead instructor for the EMS program at Tacoma Community College in Tacoma, WA, and a member of the EMS World editorial advisory board.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of EMS World - JUN 2013