Showing posts with label Donations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donations. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2009

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Support EFF

If you still have a job and you’re still donating to good causes, here’s this year’s recommendation: How about a donation to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)?

The EFF fights for online privacy rights, network neutrality and independence, reasonable intellectual property rights, fair use rights, and other stuff that we should all care about a great deal. They go over the top sometimes, for my taste, but we need people pushing the limits and paying lawyers to fight these battles.

Go support them, if you can.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

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Volunteer Ambulance Corps

Ossining Volunteer Ambulance CorpsI tried a new adventure this week: I did a ride-on shift with the Ossining [NY] Volunteer Ambulance Corps. Some background:

I play volleyball with a paramedic at the O.V.A.C., and when I was at IBM I worked with two volunteer Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs). I’d often said that I admire people who do that sort of thing, devoting their time to helping people. When I told my volleyball teammate that I’d been laid off, she suggested that it might be an opportunity to look at something completely new... like taking EMT or Paramedic training.

The idea struck a spark, but it took a few months for me to get around to setting up a ride-on, where I’d really get to see what they do.

For those who don’t know the difference: EMTs have a relatively brief training period, and are only authorized for basic life support (BLS) tasks: CPR, giving oxygen, splinting, that sort of thing... and, of course, transport. Paramedics have significantly more training, and they can perform advanced life support (ALS) tasks, such as running IVs, giving certain medications, and using the defibrillator. Ossining has two ambulances — one with two EMTs and one with an EMT and a paramedic — and a “fly car” — an SUV that a paramedic goes alone in.

The protocol at Ossining is that whenever possible, either both ambulances or the two-EMT ambulance and the fly car go to a call. That ensures that there’s a paramedic there, so ALS is available. And if the paramedic decides that ALS isn’t necessary, the EMTs take care of the situation and, if necessary, the transport, leaving the paramedic available for the next call.

On my day, we had an extra EMT with us, one who is just finishing his paramedic training. I rode in the “bus” with my paramedic friend and two EMTs.

The shift started at 8 A.M., but it wasn’t until a little before 10 that we got our first call. After that they came pretty steadily, with just short gaps... six calls for us, all told (and a couple of calls we didn’t go to because we were busy — the fly car took those).

The calls varied in scope:

  1. A worker felt strange, enough so that the crew called us. The paramedic asked some questions, did some basic exam. Blood pressure high, nothing else obvious. EMTs transported him to the hospital.
  2. A woman cut her leg. EMTs cleaned and bandaged it, no transport needed.
  3. A man with a history of emphysema complained of shortness of breath. Nothing immediately urgent, so EMTs gave oxygen and transported him.
  4. A woman fainted at her workplace. Vitals were normal when we got there, but paramedics gave her a saline IV and we took her to the hospital. Very nice (new) emergency department. Not crowded, not hectic.
  5. A woman was in an auto accident, complaining of neck/back pain. No ALS needed, but the other bus was busy, so we transported her.
  6. A man thought he was having a heart attack at his workplace. He looked pale and ashen when we arrived, high blood pressure and tachycardia (rapid heartbeat). Paramedics gave him aspirin, nitroglycerin, and saline, monitored him (EKG, BP, oxygen level) in transit — his stats went back to normal.
And that was the day. No traumas, nothing very challenging,[1] but a variety of things that let me see these folks in action.

Two things struck me, in particular. The one I completely expected is that the paramedics and EMTs are well trained, competent, and effective. The area covered is small enough that we were just a few minutes from every call. Everyone knew just what to do, and did it with confidence.

The other thing was less obvious: they have a practiced, easy “bedside manner”. One of the most important parts of what they have to do is to make the patients feel calm, safe, and relaxed. Think about it: you’ve collapsed at work and the ambulance has come for you! You’d have to be agitated, frightened. And the EMT talks with you calmly, the paramedic has a soothing manner with you. It’s OK. We’ll get you to the doctor, and you don’t need to worry. I could see the difference that made.

I’ve asked my volleyball teammate to let me know when the next EMT class is. I’m going to learn to do this, as part of giving back to the world.
 


[1] I actually felt a little odd at the start of the day, in that I knew that if we didn’t get any calls I’d wind up spending the day watching dumb stuff on TV... but that it was kind of weird to hope that a few people would get sick or injured so that my day would be more interesting.

Monday, December 15, 2008

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How to spend your donation money

Here we are, halfway through December. That means there’s half a month left to top off your donations for the 2008 tax year. Two weeks to figure out how to trim a few hundred dollars more off your taxable income, while you’re helping fund a good cause or two.

Allow me to make a suggestion.

I love the Chicago Public Radio show This American Life — an entertaining, amusing, and interesting hour of storytelling each week. You can stream all the episodes online for free. And for the last two years, they’ve made the current week’s podcast free as well. I’ve been taking advantage of that: every week, I download that week’s podcast, and I save them up for when I’m travelling. They make flights seem to... fly by.

Only, it’s expensive, their giving these out for free. The extra fees they have to pay their ISP for the downloads that we’re all doing come to more than $150,000 a year. “Free” to you and me and the other 400,000 or so listeners who download the podcast doesn’t mean “free” to them, to radio station WBEZ, which produces the show.

So, this weekend I went and made a donation to help them pay for it. I figure that, in round-ish numbers, each listener who downloads a show has a share in the cost of around 35 cents a year (OK, those numbers are not terribly round; bear with me, here). That’s 35 cents a year, not per show. Yes.

Knowing, as we all do, that most listeners won’t give them anything, I covered a bunch of you: I gave them $100. I figure that if I cover 300 listeners, and a few of you out there cover 300... or 100, or 50... it’ll really help. And, hey, you can cover 50 listeners plus a few for only a $20 donation. It’s hard to find a better value than that.

If you need to listen to an episode or two or three to convince yourself, check out their staff favourites page.

Go ahead. Why not?