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Every EMS provider has that call they replay intheir head on the drive back to the station: the surprise needle stick, the bloody splash to the eye, the coughing mystery illness in the back of the rig. In this episode of Back in Quarters, Dustin and Stephanie sit down with infectious disease physician Dr. Amanda Carlson and infection preventionist Lauren Watson to unpack what actually counts as an exposure, what makes it “significant,” and what happens next.
They dig into real-world scenarios—needle sticks, respiratorypathogens, measles scares, meningitis, HIV, hep B and C—and walk through how risk is really assessed, why timing and reporting matter, and what the follow-up looks like. Most importantly, they talk about the part we don’t say out loud: the fear, the “what if I take this home?” worry, and how a whole behind-the-scenes team works to support EMS providers after an exposure. If you’ve ever gone home from shift quietly spiraling about a patient’s “unknown status,” this one’s your permission slip to stop suffering in your own head and use the resources that exist for you.
By SSM Health EMS Program5
22 ratings
Every EMS provider has that call they replay intheir head on the drive back to the station: the surprise needle stick, the bloody splash to the eye, the coughing mystery illness in the back of the rig. In this episode of Back in Quarters, Dustin and Stephanie sit down with infectious disease physician Dr. Amanda Carlson and infection preventionist Lauren Watson to unpack what actually counts as an exposure, what makes it “significant,” and what happens next.
They dig into real-world scenarios—needle sticks, respiratorypathogens, measles scares, meningitis, HIV, hep B and C—and walk through how risk is really assessed, why timing and reporting matter, and what the follow-up looks like. Most importantly, they talk about the part we don’t say out loud: the fear, the “what if I take this home?” worry, and how a whole behind-the-scenes team works to support EMS providers after an exposure. If you’ve ever gone home from shift quietly spiraling about a patient’s “unknown status,” this one’s your permission slip to stop suffering in your own head and use the resources that exist for you.