First Responder Readiness | EMT, Back Pain, Recovery, Sleep Deprivation, Functional Strength Workout
This episode breaks down patient lifting in EMS, including why lifts feel harder late in shift and how fatigue changes movement, coordination, and performance. You’ve done this lift before. Same type of patient. Same equipment. Same general movement. But this time? It feels heavier. Harder to control. More awkward than it should. So what changed? In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down why patient lifting in EMS feels different late in shift and what fatigue is actually doing to your movement, coordination, and force production. Because it’s not that you suddenly forgot how to lift. Your body state changed. What You’ll Learn * Why patient lifts feel harder later in your shift * How fatigue changes strength, coordination, and movement quality * Why technique alone isn’t the full answer * The connection between fatigue, injury risk, and performance * What you can do to improve how your body handles these demands Key Takeaways 1. Fatigue changes how your body produces and controls force 2. Patient lifting becomes harder when stability and coordination decrease 3. Technique matters—but body state matters too 4. Training should prepare you for lifting under realistic conditions 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand how fatigue affects movement and lifting, check out: * Episode 12: EMS Lifting Mechanics | Why Patient Lifts Break Down Under Fatigue [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000758417691] * Episode 14: First Responder Fatigue | How Exhaustion Is Affecting Your Performance [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000760035891] * Episode 6: Pain After Long Shifts | How Accumulated Load Causes Back, Knee, and Hip Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000753629719] Homework During your next shift, pay attention to: * When lifts start feeling harder * How many calls you’ve already run * Whether your posture or control changes late in shift Start noticing the relationship between fatigue and movement. Fit for the Call Insider If you’re trying to build a body that actually holds up under the demands of the job, I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider]is where I share practical strategies to help you: * build strength that transfers * reduce injury risk * improve recovery * stay ready for the job Coaching Call If you’re dealing with lifts that feel harder than they should—or recurring pain that shows up after physically demanding shifts— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] We’ll break down your movement, training, and what may be contributing to the issue. Share & Support If this episode resonated with you: * Follow the podcast * Leave a review * Share it with your partner or crew
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