"In Pittsburgh, in 1966, twenty-four Black men from the Hill answered a call for help and in the process changed the world."
American Sirens is non-fiction that reads like a novel due to Hazzard's prose and the care he put into bringing these real-life heroes to life on paper. It's about the Freedom House Ambulance Service, the first of its kind and the hallmark of EMS to this day, but unfairly, cruelly, the majority don't even know of its existence.
I didn't expect this book to impact me the way it did. I received an advance reading copy from Hachette Books and was interested due to my own experiences working as an EMT. I expected an educational objective work on a piece of EMS history; maybe a little dry, but worth gritting my teeth through to learn about something I wouldn't learn elsewhere. Instead, I cried and laughed and didn't want to put the book down. I felt outraged at the abuses these men experienced, felt pride for their accomplishments, for becoming the blueprint for the generations to come. I found myself grateful for their perseverance so that I can feel that same awe and pride treating a patient in an ambulance today, as a brown woman, over 50 years later. This is a book that I want in the hands of every EMT, paramedic, or medical student hoping to be an emergency medicine resident someday sitting in a classroom. It feels that foundational. Every student should know to whom they owe the privilege of saving a life on the street today. Because it is a privilege and honor, to walk into someone's home and see them at their lowest and then be entrusted with something as precious as their lives. The Freedom House paramedics knew that because they had to fight for it every inch of the way.
I enjoyed how this book's focus was on the people who made EMS happen, and less so on the nitty-gritty medical details. Hazzard includes the important ones to show the realities of street medicine, but for a book about such a vital, unfairly forgotten piece of history, I'm glad that it didn't devolve into the trauma/gore fetishization seen in much of medical non-fiction (and fiction) these days. Instead, Hazzard emphasizes the very human reasons why individuals like Safar, Caroline, and Moon worked so hard to see Freedom House succeed and the illogical and racist policies that hindered it, ultimately leading to the unjust erasure of these brilliant paramedics. From my time with people in the medical field, it seems like sometimes medical professionals forget that medicine should be just as much about the dignity and humanity of the patients they serve as it is about the anatomy and physiology of the body. Freedom House was the original depiction of what could and should be community health care, in a world where those who needed care most were ignored or misused by authority.
Today's America shows how essential learning about Freedom House is, from the constant waves of police brutality seen on the news to the current toxic environment of the public safety triad with fire, police, and EMS, or the "white frat" culture that permeates the field. Recognizing the history that has led us to today is critical in ensuring that representation in medicine continues to grow and having the Freedom House paramedics and their work at the forefront of our minds ensures we have the right heroes to thank for it. American Sirens in my opinion is a must-read and one that I won't forget.