We put EMTs out on the street with only 10 hours of ride time in an ambulance. Paramedics are allowed to do advanced procedures with as few as 40 "ALS" patient contacts and in some areas that doesn't even have to done on a transporting ambulance.
And I think that isn't near enough.
Florida also has a similar "prehospital provider" statute that requires an EMT or Paramedic to be on an ambulance which is why the state, along with others allows the RN to challenge the Paramedic after a 2 week EMT course.
California allows RN's, PA's, and MD's to challenge the Paramedic License... and it's not a "2-week" course. They must complete, and pass, a 480 hour internship, just like every other Paramedic student. If the challenge student doesn't pass... no Paramedic License will be issued. While an MD can work in the field under his/her own Medical License, an RN (even a well experienced CCRN or CEN) is limited to BLS care... PA's, for all their knowledge and education, are limited to being bystanders... MICN's, if authorized by their County, may be able to provide ALS in the field.
Do you think the RNs on Calstar just stand around on scene? You seriously have never seen the protocols of a flight nurse nor do you know what they can do on an IFT.
I'm well aware of what CALSTAR Flight RN's do on scene. I have in fact, seen, and read, Flight Nurse protocols. I'm also at least aware of what they can do on an IFT. Do not presume to think that I haven't, that I don't understand, or that my education is limited to just Paramedicine.
How long do you think it would take to "train" a Paramedic to perform on a high acuity CCT the same as an experienced critical care RN? Many Paramedics don't even have college level A&P or pharmacology so the foundation education is lacking before "training" the Paramedics for advanced patient care. In CA the Paramedic, even with the expanded scope, can not touch the meds or equipment used for some of the transports. I find it to be a bad situation to where RNs must also accompany the Paramedics for a patient that has a med hanging that the Paramedics can not touch. These RNs are expected to get on an ambulance whether they want to or not and function outside of the hospital to pick up the slack in a lacking EMS system even to get a chest pain patient to a cath lab.
This one, I'll throw back at you: Vent, do you consider yourself experienced enough, even after many years as an RRT and a Paramedic, to manage high acuity CCT patients as well as an experienced critical care RN? How long did it take for you to get to that point? What would you consider to be "experienced" for purposes of this exercise? 2 years? 15 years? 30 years? I'm well aware that there are meds and equipment that even an "Expanded Scope" Paramedic is not allowed to work with. Appropriate education would (eventually) change that. An experienced Med/Surg RN would not do too well if simply dropped into an ICU and told to have at it.
On a related note: I would hope that the RN that is told to accompany a patient on an ambulance is covered for medical liability by his/her employer while out on the ambulance to the same degree that is provided while working in the hospital.
If you have only worked in California under the scope of practice for the Paramedic in California, then yes you may have a long way to go.
I have only worked as a California Paramedic. I'm well aware of the limitations of what California allows... and I feel quite constrained by it.
For some Paramedics who have not worked elsewhere, they believe California is the greatest thing in EMS.
As I indicated earlier, California EMS is basically stuck in it's infancy. I certainly do not believe that California EMS is the greatest thing since the invention of sliced bread...