Ep 53: The Hypnotic State of Emergency Patients with Bram Duffee
Description
What if the words you say to a patient in crisis are as critical as the medications you give them? Dr. Bram Duffee, a 25-year paramedic working 72-hour weeks on Houston ambulances AND a PhD researcher, reveals why patients in medical emergencies enter a hypnotic state that makes them hyper-vulnerable to every word you say.
Bram started saving lives at 14 and became one of the youngest paramedics in the country at 19. Now he splits his time between critical care ambulance work, teaching 170 communication students at Kennesaw State University, and leading research at the First Responder Behavioral Health Institute. His latest book, Hypnotic Communication in Emergency Medical Settings, hit #1 in Amazon's Emergency Medicine category for a reason.
In this episode:
- Why patients become highly suggestible during medical emergencies
- The nocebo effect: how your words can accidentally worsen outcomes
- Rapid rapport-building techniques for high-stress situations
- The paramedic PTSD crisis nobody talks about (Bram shares his own story)
- Why EMS research is critically underfunded—and what we can do about it
- Therapeutic communication strategies that improve patient outcomes
This isn't soft skills—it's clinical intervention backed by 25 years in the field and peer-reviewed research.
🎧 Essential listening for: Paramedics, EMTs, ER nurses, critical care staff, and first responders
CONNECT WITH BRAM:
- First Responder Behavioral Health Institute: frbhi.com
- Faculty page: facultyweb.kennesaw.edu/bduffee
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