Without evidence of benefit, an intervention should not be presumed to be beneficial or safe.

- Rogue Medic

As if I were not feeling negative enough about EMS already . . .

Mark Glencorse writes My farewell to blogging. Mark is not going to be writing Medic999 any more.

Why?

The usual miscreants – those afraid of anything new or different. Their fear is more important than making things better for patients, because better means evil rotten nasty change.

As you know, I am a family man, and that is my prime responsibility. I cannot risk my livelihood and my ability to financially support my wife and children. That has been the final nail in the coffin of my blog.

I find it a shame that the reason for this blog ending is the general lack of understanding of blogging and social media. I feel that I have promoted best practice, shared my passion for the job that I do, and hopefully have shown all readers what it is that makes EMS and those that devote their lives to it so special. However, there still remains this general unease about social media and blogging in the Health Service. Some of the bloggers out here may want to continue the fight, and maybe I am being a coward, but I dont want to risk getting into a position where I cannot provide for my family and can no longer do the job that I love so much.

Choosing family over blogging is not even a little bit cowardly.

One of our problems in EMS is that it is difficult, in many ways, to keep family close. Our children, and others we call family, may know what our job title is, but how much do we really tell them about the calls that have been permanently burned into our memories.

The grandmother who felt that fighting with a healthy looking infant to get medicine in was a bad idea. She didn’t want to be in a situation where we were compressing the chest of her grandchild. Even worse for her – when we stopped compressions.

The mother who devoted her life to her daughter. We didn’t even start compressions.

The daughter, who expected this to be the best day of her life, realized it may be her worst.

This is not what we share with family, at least not the family that everyone considers to be family. Maybe we don’t even share with the family we work with. But some people help us to share these things by blogging. Mark is one of those people.

Some willfully ignorant, willfully harmful people have decided that this darned new-fangled blogging stuff is just too confusing for them.

They need to stop it, because What if . . . ?

This –

plus this –

was a bit too much for some people.

Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions. – Albert Einstein.

We have no shortage of most people. Mark never was, and never will be, most people. Mark won’t be blogging, but there is still The Chronicles of EMS and maybe I will be able to catch Mark getting up at 2 – 3 AM GMT to be on the EMS Garage.

Every valuable human being must be a radical and a rebel, for what he must aim at is to make things better than they are. – Niels Bohr.

Too many people oppose this. These people are the enemies of our patients. Mark will continue to make things better, he just won’t be using his blog to make things better any more.

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