Our First Medical Director

Our original EMS Paramedic class consisted, as I recall, of 32 students. We were each street hardened, having served the City of New York as EMTs for an average range of 18-months to 36-months. EMT-1 is the basic level of emergency care for ambulance crews, EMT-4 is the paramedic level. Without doling out too much […]

A Blog Life of Its Own

Every time you win, it diminishes the fear a little bit. You never really cancel the fear of losing; you keep challenging it. — Arthur Ashe My last post (which I thought was at least semi-brilliant), was lost in a mid-WIFI cycle at Starbucks. Fortunately, the coffee was still good. So, I sat down to […]

The Last Class of Jacobi Medical Center

We graduated from Jacobi Hospital #paramedic school in August 1985, the same month and year that Roy Harold Scherer Jr. (aka Rock Hudson) announced his #AIDS diagnosis. He held onto his secret for so long, that by October 2, 1985, he was gone. It was to be the last class to graduate from Jacobi. Thirty-seven […]

Covid was not HIV

When I was in the process of writing “The Sea of Peroxide,” my recent title on my experiences as a New York City Paramedic during the AIDS crisis, I would occasionally encounter people who would ask, “Why are you writing about a disease that happened all those years ago? You should be talking about Covid-19.” […]

Monday Morning Ethics, and My Friend, Chuck Gallagher

On this writing journey, I have had my share of low’s as well as high’s. I have learned from both. I did not expect much when I first encountered Chuck through a website that matched writers with business leaders and speakers. Chuck is a very busy guy (and one of America’s leading experts on ethics). […]