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Medic Mindset Podcast: The patient’s perspective

Learn what it means to be “someone’s someone” with Noah Galloway, author of “Living With No Excuses,” and Ashley Liebig

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In this episode, host Ginger Locke captures the story of Noah Galloway and Ashley Liebig. In 2005, he was an infantryman and she was a combat medic. They were both assigned to the US Army’s 101st airborne division serving in Iraq. When Noah was injured by a roadside bomb, Ashley, as part of his medical team, started talking to him and their conversation has lasted over a decade.

They’ve both gone on to do amazing things in that time. Ashley is the clinical manager, flight nurse and rescue specialist for Starflight in Travis County, Texas.

Noah wrote a book about his recovery and the title of his book tells you how he lives his life. It’s called “Living With No Excuses.” When he was on Dancing with the Stars, all of America fell in love with him and with each passing day, as we get to know more of him, we fall harder and harder.

A gut check for medics

This is the first time Medic Mindset listeners have had the honor to hear the patient’s perspective and there is so much to learned from that vantage point. His stories will undoubtedly make you feel proud to be a medic and some insights might inspire you to do a gut-check about the medic you plan to be for your patients.

Being in the same room with Noah and Ashley is like being in a room with an old married couple. They talked for hours and it took some time to edit because so much of the audio track was pure laughter.

These two are beautiful as individuals and are they are only made more beautiful when they are in each other’s’ company. Listen to the whole episode because the gut check comes toward the end when he describes what it was like to be completely dependent on his care provider while confused and in pain.

The Medic Mindset podcast is created and hosted by Ginger Locke, BA, NRP. As an associate professor of EMS Professions at Austin (TX) Community College, she has immersed herself in the art and science of how medics think and perform. In interviews with medics and subject-matter experts, she thoughtfully explores the inner-workings of the minds of medics. Prior to becoming a paramedic, she studied social psychology at the University of Georgia and the University of Leicester, UK. Her professional endeavors revolve around the conviction that the most important and complicated tool in EMS in the brain of the medic.

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