First Responder Readiness | EMT, Back Pain, Recovery, Sleep Deprivation, Functional Strength Workout

E23 | Getting In and Out of Patrol Cars | Why This Movement Causes Pain Over Time

13 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio E23 | Getting In and Out of Patrol Cars | Why This Movement Causes Pain Over Time

Descripción

It’s one of the most repeated movements in your job. Getting in. Getting out. Twisting. Stepping. It doesn’t feel like much in the moment. But over time… it adds up. In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down why getting in and out of vehicles may be contributing to knee pain, hip pain, and low back pain—and how repetition, positioning, and fatigue combine to create wear and tear over time. Because it’s not always the big movements that cause problems. Sometimes it’s the ones you do every shift. What You’ll Learn * Why repeated vehicle entry and exit impacts your body over time * How asymmetrical movement patterns contribute to pain * The role of hip rotation, single-leg loading, and trunk position * Why small, repeated movements can lead to bigger issues * How to start improving the way your body handles these demands Key Takeaways 1. Repetition matters more than intensity over time 2. Most job movements are asymmetrical—not evenly distributed 3. Fatigue changes how your body handles repeated stress 4. Small movement patterns can create long-term wear and tear 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand how this connects to pain and performance, check out: * Episode 11: Knee Pain in Police Officers | Why Patrol Cars Are Wrecking Your Knees [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000757704645] * Episode 21: Hip Pain in First Responders | The Hidden Driver of Knee and Back Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000765500862] * Episode 6: Pain After Long Shifts | What Accumulated Load Is Doing to Your Body [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000753629719] Homework This week, start paying attention to your movement patterns: * Do you always lead with the same leg? * Do you twist the same way each time? * Does one side feel more stiff or uncomfortable? Awareness is the first step toward reducing long-term stress on your body. Fit for the Call Insider If you’ve been dealing with pain that seems to build over time and you’re not sure why, I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider] is where I share simple, practical strategies to help you: * move better * reduce pain * train for the job Coaching Call If you want help identifying the movement patterns that may be contributing to your pain—and how to fix them— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] Share & Support If this episode made you think differently about something you do every shift: * Follow the podcast * Leave a review * Share it with someone on your crew

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27 episodios

episode E26 | EMS Lifting vs Carrying | What First Responders Actually Need to Train artwork

E26 | EMS Lifting vs Carrying | What First Responders Actually Need to Train

This episode breaks down EMS lifting vs carrying, including why first responders need to train for more than just the lift itself.   Most people think the hardest part is getting the patient off the ground. But in reality? The lift is often just the beginning. Because once the patient is up, you still have to: hold the load walk with it adjust your grip stabilize under fatigue navigate stairs, hallways, obstacles, and awkward environments In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down the difference between lifting and carrying in EMS, why they place different demands on your body, and what first responders actually need to train to hold up on shift. Because producing force and sustaining force are not the same thing. What You’ll Learn * The difference between lifting and carrying from a performance standpoint * Why carrying often becomes more physically demanding than the initial lift * How grip endurance, core stability, posture, and single-leg control affect performance * Why traditional gym training may miss what the job actually requires * How to start training for real-world EMS demands Key Takeaways 1. Lifting and carrying are different physical demands 2. Carrying requires sustained force, not just force production 3. Grip, posture, and core endurance play a major role in performance 4. Fatigue makes carrying breakdown happen faster 5. Training should reflect the full task—not just the first movement 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand how this connects to fatigue, lifting mechanics, and job-specific performance, 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] Homework This week, add one carry variation to your training. Pay attention to: * when your grip starts to fatigue * whether posture changes under load * if one side feels weaker or less stable * how long you can maintain control Awareness is where better training starts. Fit for the Call Insider If you’re trying to build strength that actually holds up through the entire job—not just the first part of the movement—I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider] is where I share practical strategies to help you: * train smarter * reduce injury risk * improve durability * stay ready for the job Coaching Call If you’re realizing there’s a gap between how you train and what your job actually demands— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] We’ll break down your movement, training approach, and what adjustments will better match your real-world demands. Share & Support If this episode changed how you think about training for the job: * Follow the podcast * Leave a review * Share it with your crew or partner

2 de jun de 202612 min
episode E25 | Patient Lifting In EMS | Why It Feels Harder Late in Shift artwork

E25 | Patient Lifting In EMS | Why It Feels Harder Late in Shift

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

26 de may de 202613 min
episode E24| Lower Back Injuries in First Responders | Why They Keep Happening in Departments artwork

E24| Lower Back Injuries in First Responders | Why They Keep Happening in Departments

This episode breaks down lower body injuries in first responders, including why recurring knee pain, hip pain, and low back issues keep showing up across departments. Knee injuries. Hip pain. Low back issues. You see it across the department. Different people. Different shifts. Same problems. So the question is—is this just part of the job… or are there patterns driving these injuries? In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down why lower body injuries in first responders keep happening and what’s actually contributing to these recurring issues across departments. Because injuries are rarely random. They’re usually the result of repeated movement patterns, accumulated stress, fatigue, and training that doesn’t fully match the job. What You’ll Learn * Why lower body injuries are often patterns—not isolated incidents * How repetitive asymmetrical movement contributes to pain and injury * The role fatigue plays in movement breakdown * Why general fitness doesn’t always translate to injury prevention * What both responders and department leadership should be paying attention to Key Takeaways 1. Most injuries develop over time—not in one moment 2. Repeated asymmetrical movement creates long-term stress 3. Fatigue changes movement quality and increases injury risk 4. Training needs to reflect the actual demands of the job 5. Looking at trends—not incidents—is how departments reduce injury patterns 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand the movement patterns behind these injuries, check out: * Episode 11: Knee Pain in Police Officers | Why Patrol Cars Are Causing Chronic Knee Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000757704645] * Episode 21: Hip Pain in First Responders | The Hidden Cause of Knee and Back Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000765500862] * Episode 23: Getting In and Out of Patrol Cars | Why This Movement Causes Pain Over Time [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000767375824] Homework Start looking for patterns. Ask yourself: * What injuries show up most often in your department? * When do they tend to happen? * What movements are repeated every shift? Awareness is the first step toward changing the system. Fit for the Call Insider If you’ve been dealing with recurring pain—or trying to understand why it keeps coming back—I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider] is where I share practical strategies to help you: * reduce pain * move better * recover smarter * stay ready for the job Coaching Call If you’re dealing with recurring pain—or you’re in leadership seeing the same injury patterns over and over— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] We’ll break down what’s actually driving those issues and what needs to change. Share & Support If this episode made you think differently about injuries in your department: * Follow the podcast * Leave a review * Share it with your crew, training officer, or leadership team

19 de may de 202613 min
episode E23 | Getting In and Out of Patrol Cars | Why This Movement Causes Pain Over Time artwork

E23 | Getting In and Out of Patrol Cars | Why This Movement Causes Pain Over Time

It’s one of the most repeated movements in your job. Getting in. Getting out. Twisting. Stepping. It doesn’t feel like much in the moment. But over time… it adds up. In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down why getting in and out of vehicles may be contributing to knee pain, hip pain, and low back pain—and how repetition, positioning, and fatigue combine to create wear and tear over time. Because it’s not always the big movements that cause problems. Sometimes it’s the ones you do every shift. What You’ll Learn * Why repeated vehicle entry and exit impacts your body over time * How asymmetrical movement patterns contribute to pain * The role of hip rotation, single-leg loading, and trunk position * Why small, repeated movements can lead to bigger issues * How to start improving the way your body handles these demands Key Takeaways 1. Repetition matters more than intensity over time 2. Most job movements are asymmetrical—not evenly distributed 3. Fatigue changes how your body handles repeated stress 4. Small movement patterns can create long-term wear and tear 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand how this connects to pain and performance, check out: * Episode 11: Knee Pain in Police Officers | Why Patrol Cars Are Wrecking Your Knees [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000757704645] * Episode 21: Hip Pain in First Responders | The Hidden Driver of Knee and Back Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000765500862] * Episode 6: Pain After Long Shifts | What Accumulated Load Is Doing to Your Body [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000753629719] Homework This week, start paying attention to your movement patterns: * Do you always lead with the same leg? * Do you twist the same way each time? * Does one side feel more stiff or uncomfortable? Awareness is the first step toward reducing long-term stress on your body. Fit for the Call Insider If you’ve been dealing with pain that seems to build over time and you’re not sure why, I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider] is where I share simple, practical strategies to help you: * move better * reduce pain * train for the job Coaching Call If you want help identifying the movement patterns that may be contributing to your pain—and how to fix them— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] Share & Support If this episode made you think differently about something you do every shift: * Follow the podcast * Leave a review * Share it with someone on your crew

12 de may de 202613 min
episode E22 | Single-Leg Strength for First Responders | Why It Matters on Shift artwork

E22 | Single-Leg Strength for First Responders | Why It Matters on Shift

Most of your job isn’t done evenly. You’re stepping, reaching, carrying, and shifting your weight—often with one leg doing more work than the other. But most training? It’s done evenly. Squats. Deadlifts. Presses. All important—but all symmetrical. In this episode of First Responder Readiness, we break down why single-leg strength is essential for first responders, where traditional training falls short, and how to start building strength that actually transfers to the job. Because real-world strength isn’t just about how much you can lift… It’s about how well you can control your body under real conditions. What You’ll Learn * Why most job movements are single-leg dominant * The gap between gym strength and real-world strength * How asymmetry contributes to injury risk * Why balance and control matter as much as strength * How to start building single-leg strength that transfers to the job Key Takeaways 1. Your job is not symmetrical—your training shouldn’t be either 2. Single-leg strength improves stability, balance, and control 3. Asymmetries can lead to compensation and increased joint stress 4. Strength that transfers requires control, not just load 🎧 Continue Listening To better understand how this connects to pain and movement, check out: * Episode 11: Knee Pain in Police Officers | Why Patrol Cars Are Wrecking Your Knees [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000757704645] * Episode 21: Hip Pain in First Responders | The Hidden Driver of Knee and Back Pain [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-responder-readiness-emt-back-pain-recovery-sleep/id1879792258?i=1000765500862] Homework This week: Add one single-leg exercise to your routine. Then notice: * Which side feels weaker? * Which side feels less stable? * Does one side fatigue faster? Awareness is where improvement starts. Fit for the Call Insider If you’ve been trying to figure out how to train in a way that actually matches what you do on shift, I created something for you. Fit for the Call Insider is where I share simple, practical strategies to help you: * move better * build strength that transfers * stay ready for the job 👉 Join Fit For The Call Insider [https://www.ebtraining.net/firstresponderreadinessinsider] Coaching Call If you’re realizing there’s a gap between how you train and what your job actually demands—and you want help closing that gap— 👉 Book a 1-hour coaching session [https://calendly.com/eliciab-ebtraining/coaching_session] Share & Support If this episode helped you think differently about your training: * Follow the podcast * Leave a quick review * Share it with someone on your crew

5 de may de 202617 min