Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Kristin Duisberg sitting on the back of a McGregor EMS ambulance

As editor, I often find myself assigning out to other writers stories I wish I had the time to write myself. But when Bill Cote ā€™74 approached me earlier this year about highlighting McGregor Emergency Medical Services (EMS) on the eve of the organizationā€™s 50th anniversary, I knew it was one I couldnā€™t pass up.

Iā€™ve long been impressed by the UNH students I meet, but never more than when speaking to these McGregor students and recent alumni.

Leaving aside my elementary school crush on the lead actors from the TV show ā€œEmergency!ā€ and my unrealized youthful medical aspirations, McGregor ā€” or the Durham Ambulance Corps, as it was called at the time ā€” loomed large in my Durham childhood. One of our neighbors was a Durham Ambulance volunteer, and when Iā€™d see his red Mazda RX-7 speeding by with its emergency light spinning, Iā€™d often wonder what sort of heroics he was off to perform. When one of my best friendsā€™ fathers fell from a ladder and broke both his arms and one of his legs, volunteers from the ambulance corps were the first to arrive on scene. My own father worked closely with the organization for the brief window in the mid-1980s when UNH had a hyperbaric chamber to treat scuba divers with decompression sickness and patients with other injuries.

In the three days I spent at McGregor conducting research and interviews, there were few dramatic moments (I learned that thereā€™s a term in EMS for people who seemingly possess the ability to keep the calls from 911 at bay: white clouds), but there were plenty of opportunities to witness the profound dedication and talent of UNHā€™s volunteer crew, which is largely made up of undergraduate students. When I was in college, I went to classes and wrote a little for my campus newspaper, but thatā€™s about all. These students put in upwards of 100 hours a month as voluntary medical caregivers while balancing full class loads in demanding majors, sports, clubs and (I hope) at least a little bit of fun.

Iā€™ve long been impressed by the UNH students I meet, but never more than when speaking to these McGregor students and recent alumni. Backed by skilled, caring mentors and rigorous training, they are, as Bill Cote calls them, ā€œrock stars,ā€ providing critical services to the local community and preparing themselves for bright careers as medical professionals. Their passion, commitment and intelligence should make you proud to share the title Wildcat. And while I hope you never need their services, I promise youā€™re in good hands if you do.

Kristin Duisberg's signature

Kristin Waterfield Duisberg

Editor-in-chief

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Originally published inĢż

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Photographer: 
Jeremy Gasowski | UNH Marketing | jeremy.gasowski@unh.edu | 603-862-4465