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Top 6 events that should be in the EMS Winter Olympics

Ice scraper curling, driveway bobsledding or apparatus skating? What’s your EMS event?

Ambulance in Snow

What events do you think should be in the EMS Winter Olympics? Chime in with your comments!

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Despite most of us not having played a sport since high school (or ever!), we will likely still be watching this year’s 2026 Winter Olympic Games warm on our couches, eating a cheese ball and drinking hot buttered rum, thinking, “Curling? Meh, I could do that. They wanna sweep some ice, they can handle up on the front walk to the ambulance squad bay. Now that’s a workout.”

| MORE: Remember that time firefighting was featured at the Olympics?

So while those Olympic heroes do their thing, let’s show them what real heroes do during the winter months, in the Top 10 events of the EMS Winter Olympics:

6. Zipper races

So you’re outside shoveling the walk when the tones drop, and as ambulance tones are wont to do, they trigger that irresistible urge to void your bladder. We all know that EMTs never have to pee until they get a call, right?

Only this time, you have to shuck your gloves and work your way through a winter parka, a pants zipper and numerous layers of thermal underwear, all while desperately doing the potty dance. Gold medalist is the one with the dry pants and the relieved look on their face throughout the call.

5. Four-person icy driveway bobsled run

Sure, those luge, skeleton and bobsled racers can get to the bottom of the run in mere seconds, but gravity does all the work for them; all they need do is steer.

Try working against gravity, getting Mrs. Johnson to the bottom of her icy driveway safely.

Gold medalists experience the thrill of victory of getting Mrs. Johnson into the rig intact, losers experience the agony of defeat as Mrs. Johnson catches some serious air as she is catapulted off a runaway stretcher when it hits the curb across the street. On the bright side, they’ll be forever immortalized by having new company policies named after them.

4. Winter clothing gymnastics

Your patient is bundled in enough coats and sweaters to resemble Ralphie’s kid brother in “A Christmas Story” ... and you need to get a blood pressure and auscultate breath sounds.

Winners get down to bare skin before ED arrival, losers spend an hour picking goose down feathers from every crack and crevice in the patient compartment because the rookie cut something you told him not to cut.

3. Pairs figure skating … with emergency vehicles

You’re creeping along north, and the fire engine is creeping south, and you both have to turn onto the same side street which, unbeknownst to you, is coated in black ice. Your short program routine is to execute a perfectly synchronized double-axel/Salchow combination with a five-ton ambulance, ending up neatly parked at the curb behind the fire engine.

Style points will be awarded to the driver who manages to say, straight-faced, “Totally meant to do that.”

2. Curling, EMS style

You’re the third-out crew, and your rig is the spare that stays parked outside. And now you have a call, but your windshield is frosted over. So you scrape furiously at your side ... and then slide the ice scraper across the windshield to your partner on the other side of the rig.

1. ‘We’re status zero and our rig is broken down’ survival game

Your battery is dead and the rig won’t start, and you’ve been sitting at this post for four hours. Dispatch promises they’ll get a supervisor to you as soon as they can, but they’ve got calls holding all over the city. You’ve got plenty of energy bars and a thermos full of coffee, so you’re reasonably sure you won’t starve, but it’s starting to frost over inside the rig, and you can no longer feel your fingers or your feet. Will you make it in time for your next shift? Only time will tell!

That’s all we have. What events do you think should be in the EMS Winter Olympics? Chime in with your comments!

With the 2026 Winter Olympic Games underway, check out these first responders who served both locally and on the international stage

EMS1.com columnist Kelly Grayson, is a paramedic ER tech in Louisiana. He has spent the past 14 years as a field paramedic, critical care transport paramedic, field supervisor and educator. Kelly is the author of the book Life, Death and Everything In Between, and the popular blog A Day in the Life of An Ambulance Driver.