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When silence kills: Why EMS needs active bystandership now

A fatal mistake. A missed intervention. Learn how EMS leaders are confronting a culture of silence with science-backed strategies to protect providers and patients alike.

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PHOENIX 鈥 鈥淭he world will not be destroyed by those who do evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.鈥 鈥 Albert Einstein

In a Pinnacle EMS leadership conference session, Monte Chambers and Abigail Tucker, PsyD, offered a wake-up call and a solution to complacency grounded in science: active bystandership.

Chambers, a public safety consultant with ; and Tucker, a licensed psychologist and cofounder of , called on attendees to recognize the role we each play in keeping our colleagues accountable.

| Get your copy: What paramedics want in 2025 鈥 From chronic burnout and staffing gaps to a lack of meaningful leadership engagement, personnel are sounding the alarm 鈥 and offering a roadmap for change

Memorable quotes

  • 鈥淚 truly believe most individuals in this line of work want to do good.鈥
  • 鈥淲hen we take a moment to reflect on our own experiences, we鈥檙e more likely to take that forward into new learning.鈥
  • 鈥淥ur society likes to spend a lot of time focusing on what鈥檚 not working 鈥 we鈥檙e missing the opportunity to look at every one of these examples to look for the missed opportunity to intervene.鈥
  • 鈥溾業s this the norm here鈥 is code for that鈥檚 not right but I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檓 allowed to say anything here.鈥

Following are top takeaways from their discussion.

Silence harms

In EMS, where burnout, trauma and human error intersect, silence can be deadly. Chambers offered a compelling example centered on 鈥淕eorge,鈥 a 15-year veteran paramedic suffering from burnout. Known for his reliability, George had become physically and emotionally exhausted. On a shift with a new EMT, George bypassed a full assessment for a frequent patient, joking dismissively and facilitating a refusal.

Before they even arrived back at the station, the patient coded. When EMS returned, it was too late. The cause wasn鈥檛 incompetence 鈥 it was unspoken burnout, compounded by silence from a newer provider who noticed, but didn鈥檛 intervene.

The damage extended beyond the fatal outcome:

  • The EMT questioned the profession鈥檚 standards.
  • Leadership missed warning signs.
  • A culture of looking away enabled the failure.

Dr. Tucker asked attendees to think of a time they noticed a colleague slipping, and consider the following:

  • What was the harm that occurred?
  • Do you still think about it today?
  • Are there other people who witnessed that deterioration, mistakes, harm?
  • What would the news headlines read?
Breaking a groupthink mentality requires two key skills 鈥 and support from leadership

Why EMS needs active bystandership

Active bystandership 鈥 developed from the research of Dr. Ervin Staub 鈥 empowers individuals to act when they see potential risk or harm.

鈥淎 bystander is a witness who knows action is needed and is in a position to take that action,鈥 Dr. Tucker said. 鈥淭here is no neutral.鈥

Active bystandership trains individuals to recognize when something鈥檚 wrong and gives them the skills and confidence to intervene.

Chambers added, 鈥淭raining is a pathway to culture shift. It鈥檚 not blind loyalty 鈥 it鈥檚 calling things out to protect each other.鈥

Barriers to action

Several psychological forces keep EMS providers from stepping in:

  • Diffusion of responsibility. 鈥淪omeone else will do it.鈥
  • Pluralistic ignorance. 鈥淚f no one else is reacting, maybe I鈥檓 wrong.鈥
  • Hierarchy and role confusion. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 above my pay grade.鈥

Cultural idioms, like 鈥淣ot in my job description,鈥 鈥淚t is what it is鈥 and 鈥淚 just work here鈥 erode accountability and reinforce silence, particularly around shift change when fatigue is high and refusals spike.

5 principles for EMS leaders

Dr. Tucker outlined five actionable points to build a harm prevention culture:

  1. Active bystandership is a learnable skill. It should be taught and practiced like any other clinical skill.
  2. There is no neutral. Inaction is a form of permission.
  3. Choose the right tool for the situation. Like varying BVM mask sizes, no one intervention fits all.
  4. Effective training changes culture. Peer-driven, in-person training 鈥 especially across disciplines 鈥 is critical.
  5. A healthier workforce makes fewer mistakes. Invest in health and wellness 鈥 and make sure resources are actually used.

Bottom line

When EMS professionals fail to intervene 鈥 whether out of deference, fear or burnout 鈥 harm often follows. But the tide can turn. With proper training and leadership modeling, a culture of active bystandership can protect providers and the communities they serve.

As Dr. Tucker put it: 鈥淲e spend so much time focusing on what鈥檚 not working, we miss the opportunity to ask 鈥 what could I have done differently?鈥

Don鈥檛 just rely on policy. Lead by example. Empower your workforce to speak up, step in and support each other.


It is paramount that we are finding the secret sauce to engage our workforce

草莓影视 is using generative AI to create some content that is edited and fact-checked by our editors.

Kerri Hatt is editor-in-chief, 草莓影视, responsible for defining original editorial content, tracking industry trends, managing expert contributors and leading execution of special coverage efforts. Prior to joining Lexipol, she served as an editor for medical allied health B2B publications and communities.

Kerri has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in English from Saint Joseph鈥檚 University, in Philadelphia. She is based out of Charleston, SC. Share your personal and agency successes, strategies and stories with Kerri at khatt@lexipol.com.