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Before the Hospital

Before the Hospital

Di: EMS GLOBAL FOUNDATION
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Before the Hospital is a podcast for the people building emergency medical systems where they are needed most. Each episode brings together practitioners, researchers, and health system leaders working on the frontline of prehospital care in resource-constrained settings — sharing what works, what does not, and what it takes to build systems that save lives. Produced by EMS Global Foundation.

emsglobalfoundation.substack.com

© 2026 Before the Hospital
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  • 40 patients on one EMS shift
    Jun 20 2026

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    Dr Biyamba graduated from medical school in Mongolia and went straight to the ambulance. No transition, no supervised ramp-up - just the dispatch system in Ulaanbaatar and whatever came next.


    In a single summer shift, he treats 30 to 40 patients. In winter, that volume climbs to 90. Of those, roughly half genuinely require an emergency ambulance. The rest receive assessment, advice, and whatever treatment can be provided at the door. Nine to fifteen patients are transported; the others stay home.


    This is not a gap in the system. This is the system.


    In this episode of Before the Hospital, Dr Biyamba describes what it actually takes to run emergency care in Mongolia's capital - the caseload, the equipment, the training he received, and the structural reforms needed for workforce development.

    His account raises a critical health policy question that applies well beyond Ulaanbaatar: when a health system cannot afford to ease new doctors in gradually, what does that do to clinical confidence, patient safety, and amenable mortality?


    In this episode:

    • What a 24-hour ambulance shift looks like in Ulaanbaatar across seasons.
    • How the 103 system triages who gets transported and who stays home.
    • What equipment a Mongolian ambulance doctor carries—and what is missing.
    • Why new doctors in Mongolia start on the ambulance rather than a supervised hospital ward.
    • The specific training Dr Biyamba found most valuable, and the operational gaps that remain.

    The question this episode leaves open: If the ambulance is where new doctors learn under pressure, what does that mean for the patients who are part of that learning - and is there a more sustainable model for low-to-middle-income countries?

    For video podcasts visit: https://www.youtube.com/@ems-global2048/podcasts

    Our website: https://emsglobalfoundation.org/

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    6 min
  • No One Is Fixing Dead Time. Until Now.
    Jun 14 2026

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    The call has started. The patient is waiting. And the clinician is alone with their thoughts ... until now.

    Every ambulance call begins the same way. A dispatch notification. A vehicle moving. A clinician alone, working through what might confront them and what they will do when they arrive. That window - from dispatch to arrival - is what Joe Acker calls dead time. It is largely unexamined in the research literature, inconsistently used in practice, and quietly one of the most consequential periods in prehospital care.

    Simon Grosjean is an EMS physician in Aosta Valley, northern Italy. He encountered that silence on a night call - a routine case that became a breech presentation, no specialist reachable, searching the internet on his phone when his EMT partner raced him to the scene. The delivery went well. Simon was honest about why: physiology, not preparation: “This time I was lucky.”

    He spent the following year building something so he would not have to rely on luck again.

    EMSy is the AI-powered clinical decision support tool Simon developed not a diagnostic engine nor to replace clinical judgement. What it does is act as what Simon calls “a good librarian”: drawing together dispatch information, medication histories, ECG findings, and prehospital literature into a structured summary a provider can scan while their hands are already working. Voice-prompted. One app. No switching between tabs.

    In this episode, Joe and Simon work through what dead time actually is, why dispatch framing creates tunnel vision before the clinician even arrives, and why paramedics so often leave calls without ever knowing what their patient’s diagnosis turned out to be. They then road-test EMSy against a chest pain scenario - not for the clinical content, but for what it reveals about how much cognitive preparation is possible in that pre-arrival window, and how little of it currently happens by design.

    The episode closes on a question that matters for every service, everywhere. EMSy is about to be piloted in Mongolia - a place with different languages, different systems, and the same fundamental problem: a clinician, alone, moving, deciding.

    This is not a conversation about technology replacing people. It is about what fills the silence before you arrive.

    For video podcasts visit: https://www.youtube.com/@ems-global2048/podcasts

    Our website: https://emsglobalfoundation.org/

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    40 min
  • You Can't Clone Doctors. So She Found Another Way.
    May 26 2026

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    When Dr Suvd Nugui returned to Mongolia after training in the United States, she came back to a system where most of her colleagues had never heard the word “paramedic.” Neither had her parents.

    Her solution was simple and radical: if she could not be everywhere, she could train people who could. Seven years later, she is training more than 80 clinicians and drivers annually with a team of international paramedics. One result: Mongolian EMS doctors are performing ECG interpretation on monitors that sat unused for months because no one knew how to operate them.

    In this episode, Dr Suvd speaks with podcast host Hamish McLean about what sustained prehospital capacity-building actually looks like from the inside - the cultural barriers, the equipment gaps, the communication challenges and why a team that keeps coming back changes everything.

    About Dr Suvd Nugui Dr Suvd Nugui is a Mongolian cardiologist and in-country director of the EMS Global Foundation’s Mongolia programme, where she has led training delivery and local stakeholder engagement since 2018.

    Before the Hospital is produced by EMS Global Foundation. We examine how resource-constrained emergency care systems are built, funded, and reformed before the patient reaches hospital. Learn more at ems-global.org.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit emsglobalfoundation.substack.com

    For video podcasts visit: https://www.youtube.com/@ems-global2048/podcasts

    Our website: https://emsglobalfoundation.org/

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    8 min
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