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In-Service EMS Podcast

Podcast de Jason Falvey

inglés

Tecnología y ciencia

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In-Service is a podcast for EMTs, paramedics, and EMS leaders who want to stay informed, inspired, and ready for anything. Hosted by a 30-year veteran of emergency medical services, this show covers EMS leadership, field operations, clinical best practices, and real-world challenges faced by first responders. Each episode features interviews with experts and frontline professionals offering practical insights, career advice, and tools to grow in today’s fast-changing EMS landscape.

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24 episodios

episode More Than Lights and Sirens: Redefining EMS as Healthcare | Israel Contreras artwork

More Than Lights and Sirens: Redefining EMS as Healthcare | Israel Contreras

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2514614/fan_mail/new] In this episode of In-Service: EMS Podcast, Jason sits down with Israel Contreras for a deep conversation about the future of EMS and the growing shift from a transportation-based model to a true healthcare delivery system. Israel, currently serving in EMS Transformation and Innovation, explains why the traditional “you call, we haul” approach is no longer sustainable in modern EMS. Together, they explore how systems across the country are beginning to rethink response models, integrate nurse navigation and telehealth, and develop smarter ways to connect patients with the right level of care — not just the nearest emergency room. At the center of the discussion is a powerful idea: EMS is no longer just prehospital care. It is out-of-hospital healthcare. The conversation dives into the operational realities driving that transformation. Israel breaks down the inefficiencies that have become normalized in EMS — chronic hospital wall times, low-acuity call volume, staffing fatigue, reimbursement limitations, and outdated deployment strategies. Rather than simply criticizing the system, he outlines how innovative EMS agencies are using data analytics, AI-assisted dispatching, alternative transport models, and dynamic deployment strategies to improve both patient outcomes and provider availability. Jason and Israel also discuss the resistance that inevitably comes with change and why gaining buy-in from frontline crews, communications centers, hospitals, and leadership teams is critical to making these models actually work on the street. One of the most compelling moments of the episode comes when Israel reflects on a pediatric end-of-life transport that profoundly shaped his perspective on healthcare, compassion, and leadership. The story becomes a thread that runs through the broader discussion on emotional intelligence in EMS and the importance of seeing patients not as call types, but as people in crisis. That conversation naturally evolves into an honest discussion about provider mental health, burnout, and leadership responsibility. Israel speaks candidly about the cultural shift occurring in EMS around psychological wellness, the importance of giving providers permission to process trauma, and why strong leaders must know their people beyond schedules and productivity metrics. The episode also explores the rapid advancement of clinical medicine inside EMS systems. Jason and Israel discuss whole blood programs, trauma care, RSI, ultrasound, AI-generated documentation, predictive deployment software, and the expanding role of technology in field medicine. Rather than viewing innovation as futuristic gimmicks, Israel frames these tools as ways to improve clinical decision-making, reduce provider fatigue, and deliver better care faster. The discussion highlights how progressive EMS systems are increasingly focused on building clinicians — not simply adding protocols and equipment — through stronger education, mentorship, and ongoing professional develop Support the show [https://www.bonfire.com/welcome/0fc4d7cb2daf4/] In-Service: The EMS Podcast is dedicated to the professional on the front lines of emergency care - in the field, the classroom and behind the scenes. Subscribe for new episodes featuring EMS leaders and innovators shaping the future of pre-hospital care. Merchandise Store:  https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default [https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default] If you have suggestions for future guests email: contact@in-serviceemspodcast.com

14 de may de 2026 - 1 h 13 min
episode Toxic EMS Culture: Ethical Drift, Burnout & Leadership Failures | Dave DiNapoli artwork

Toxic EMS Culture: Ethical Drift, Burnout & Leadership Failures | Dave DiNapoli

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2514614/fan_mail/new] This episode digs into the real-world side of values, ethics, and culture in EMS—where the decisions are rarely clean and the consequences are never theoretical. Dave DiNapoli brings the conversation out of the classroom and onto the truck, exploring how values show up in patient care, how ethics can drift under pressure, and how providers are tested when policy, judgment, bias, and human emotion collide. We talk through the uncomfortable places where EMS providers and leaders are forced to make hard calls: refusals, terminal patients, first responder injuries, frequent callers, unhoused patients, intoxicated patients, and the moments when a policy can become a shield instead of a guide. Dave breaks down how shortcuts become normalized, how compassion fatigue and burnout can quietly change care, and why leaders have to pay attention before those warning signs become culture. The conversation then turns directly toward toxic EMS culture—what it feels like, how it grows, and why it can be so damaging to both providers and patients. When a medic or EMT walks into shift change with a pit in their stomach and says, “I don’t want to be here,” that culture has already redlined. And it did not get there overnight. We also examine the power of informal leaders, gossip, hypocrisy, and respected toxic providers. Policies may be written by leadership, but culture is often shaped in the day room, the ambulance bay, and the conversations leaders never hear. Dave challenges EMS leaders to stop avoiding confrontation, engage the people creating the culture, and understand the difference between managing the operation and actually leading the workforce. At the center of this episode is a simple but demanding standard: patient care has to trump everything else. If leaders tolerate shortcuts, bias, indifference, or toxic behavior, they are not just allowing a personnel problem—they are allowing a patient care problem. This is a hard conversation, but it is exactly the kind EMS leadership needs to keep having. Support the show [https://www.bonfire.com/welcome/0fc4d7cb2daf4/] In-Service: The EMS Podcast is dedicated to the professional on the front lines of emergency care - in the field, the classroom and behind the scenes. Subscribe for new episodes featuring EMS leaders and innovators shaping the future of pre-hospital care. Merchandise Store:  https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default [https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default] If you have suggestions for future guests email: contact@in-serviceemspodcast.com

25 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 12 min
episode The Clinical Expansion of EMS: Blood, Ultrasound, and RSI | Michael Henry & Eric Falvey artwork

The Clinical Expansion of EMS: Blood, Ultrasound, and RSI | Michael Henry & Eric Falvey

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2514614/fan_mail/new] This episode of In-Service: The EMS Podcast dives into the evolving edge of prehospital care, exploring how advanced interventions like RSI, blood products, and ultrasound are reshaping what it means to be a paramedic. Jason sits down with Michael Henry and Eric Falvey to unpack not only the clinical tools driving modern EMS, but the operational realities of delivering that care in a high-volume, high-acuity environment with massive seasonal population surges. The conversation sets the stage for a deeper look at how systems must adapt when demand, geography, and patient complexity collide. Through personal stories, Mike and Eric ground the discussion in experience—from a first cardiac arrest complicated by CPR-induced consciousness to a seemingly routine transfer that reshaped an entire career perspective. These moments reinforce a core truth: EMS isn’t just about high-acuity interventions—it’s about human connection, decision-making under pressure, and recognizing the weight of every patient interaction. Whether it’s a D-Day veteran or a crashing CHF patient, the impact of care extends far beyond the immediate call. The episode also tackles the real-world challenges of implementing cutting-edge medicine in the field. From the logistics and provider buy-in required for carrying blood, to the cognitive load and safeguards necessary for RSI, to the cautious integration of ultrasound, the discussion highlights a system intentionally pushing forward without losing sight of fundamentals. The theme is clear—technology and capability mean nothing without disciplined providers, strong culture, and leadership that prioritizes both performance and patient outcomes. Ultimately, this conversation shifts toward the bigger picture: the evolution of the paramedic from protocol follower to clinical decision-maker. It explores what separates average providers from exceptional ones, the importance of feedback and continuous learning, and the leadership decisions required to raise the standard across an organization. As EMS continues to straddle the line between public safety and healthcare, this episode makes one thing clear—the future belongs to systems and providers willing to adapt, think critically, and commit to getting better every single call. Support the show [https://www.bonfire.com/welcome/0fc4d7cb2daf4/] In-Service: The EMS Podcast is dedicated to the professional on the front lines of emergency care - in the field, the classroom and behind the scenes. Subscribe for new episodes featuring EMS leaders and innovators shaping the future of pre-hospital care. Merchandise Store:  https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default [https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default] If you have suggestions for future guests email: contact@in-serviceemspodcast.com

8 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 24 min
episode From Tactical Leader to System Thinker | Wayne Sandford artwork

From Tactical Leader to System Thinker | Wayne Sandford

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2514614/fan_mail/new] In this episode of In Service, Jason Falvey sits down with Wayne Sandford for a wide-ranging conversation on leadership, scale, and service across more than five decades in the fire service. From his beginnings as a firefighter in East Haven, Connecticut, to leading the Connecticut Fire Academy, serving 15 years as fire chief, helping build Connecticut’s Department of Emergency Management and Homeland Security, and later teaching at the University of New Haven, Sandford reflects on the lessons that shaped his approach to leadership. A central theme of the conversation is Sandford’s belief that the chief is not the “chief firefighter.” Rather than stepping in and taking over every incident, he saw his role as developing officers, strengthening decision-making, and preparing others to lead. He shares a pivotal early fire as chief that reinforced the need to coach officers in real time and build their confidence and judgment instead of rescuing them from responsibility. The episode also explores how leadership changes when incidents grow in complexity and scale. Sandford explains the shift from tactical problem-solving to broader system thinking: recognizing when a scene is outgrowing the first plan, calling for resources early, protecting life safety, and seeing the incident beyond the immediate flames. He discusses why smaller departments can struggle with this transition, and why experience, education, and intentional teaching matter so much in preparing leaders to think ahead. Sandford also reflects on major events that shaped emergency management, including 9/11, the evolution of incident command, regional coordination, and the creation of state-level systems for resource deployment, intelligence sharing, and incident management. He shares powerful stories from the fire service response to 9/11, the contamination risks firefighters faced, and the operational realities of trying to protect a local community while also answering a national tragedy. Throughout the episode, one word keeps surfacing: relationships. Whether between chiefs, public works, law enforcement, neighboring departments, or state agencies, Sandford argues that large-scale leadership is built on trust long before the crisis begins. This is a conversation about leadership maturity, officer development, interagency coordination, and what it really means to serve at a higher level when the stakes keep rising. Support the show [https://www.bonfire.com/welcome/0fc4d7cb2daf4/] In-Service: The EMS Podcast is dedicated to the professional on the front lines of emergency care - in the field, the classroom and behind the scenes. Subscribe for new episodes featuring EMS leaders and innovators shaping the future of pre-hospital care. Merchandise Store:  https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default [https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default] If you have suggestions for future guests email: contact@in-serviceemspodcast.com

10 de mar de 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode “Sign Here”: The Most Dangerous Decision a Paramedic Can Make in EMS | Paul Girard artwork

“Sign Here”: The Most Dangerous Decision a Paramedic Can Make in EMS | Paul Girard

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2514614/fan_mail/new] This episode is a blunt, practical deep-dive into why patient refusals are the most dangerous decision a paramedic can make—not because the paperwork is hard, but because the mindset shifts: crews treat refusals like “not a real call,” cut corners, and then get crushed later when the outcome goes bad. Paul Girard breaks down how refusals become career-ending events through weak assessments, vague documentation, and failure to prove true decision-making capacity. Paul lays out what investigators and plaintiff attorneys actually do: they deconstruct the call to answer whether your actions were reasonable and prudent, and they’ll use far more than your narrative—EPCR metadata, timestamps, geolocation, monitor data, audit trails, and third-party video can all be pulled to expose inconsistencies or outright fraud. His message is simple: you can’t “clean it up later.” If it didn’t happen—and you can’t prove it—it will be assumed it didn’t happen. The core refusal skill is capacity, and Paul defines it in plain terms: the patient’s ability to understand their situation and the risks/benefits of refusing—and your ability to document that understanding. The most common “capacity failures” he sees aren’t exotic—they start with a bad or incomplete assessment, refusals signed by minors or intoxicated patients, and refusals done across language barriers without a real interpreter. He also calls out provider-induced refusals—subtle or direct steering (“the ER is slammed,” “it’s expensive,” “you sure?”) that looks like you’re trying to avoid transport. From there, the conversation goes hard into documentation: stop hiding behind “advised of risks up to and including death.” Paul explains why generalities destroy credibility and what works instead—specific risks tied to your assessment, plus a reasonable “we can’t rule out everything in the field” caveat. He also shares the brutal reality: your report is often your best defense or your demise, and short on-scene times, missing details, or signatures done later can sink you fast. They round out with high-exposure scenarios that trip up even good crews: lift assists as “hidden refusals,” repeat callers (the “boy who cried wolf” problem), police-driven evaluations in custody situations, and when to elevate to online medical control—not because it fixes every refusal, but because sometimes a physician voice gets a patient to go, and it documents prudence. Bottom line: treat refusals like high-acuity events, slow the scene down, do the assessment, and write the report like your career depends on it—because sometimes, it does. 🔗 Website for Paul Girard & Associates – Expert EMS QA/CQI consulting and resources: 👉 https://girardassoc.com/   🎙️ Official Podcast – The G&A Way – Paul and Kevin’s EMS CQI podcast: 👉 https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-g-a-way/id1675678712   Support the show [https://www.bonfire.com/welcome/0fc4d7cb2daf4/] In-Service: The EMS Podcast is dedicated to the professional on the front lines of emergency care - in the field, the classroom and behind the scenes. Subscribe for new episodes featuring EMS leaders and innovators shaping the future of pre-hospital care. Merchandise Store:  https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default [https://www.bonfire.com/store/in-service-ems-podcast/?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=store_page_share&utm_campaign=in-service-ems-podcast&utm_content=default] If you have suggestions for future guests email: contact@in-serviceemspodcast.com

20 de feb de 2026 - 1 h 15 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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