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Personally, I'd prefer a blend of the what your state had then and has now. There should be a single set of protocols that are common to ALL services. Why? So that any Paramedic can move around within the State and not have to learn the basics. Call it a Basic Scope of Practice, if you will. Then authorize each Local EMS Medical Director to authorize an expanded scope of practice and each Paramedic would "simply" have to be accredited for that procedure. Move out of that region and you leave your accreditations behind, but you still perform as a Basic Paramedic.They were separate incidences, the one I spoke of touched off a change in our state which allowed a paramedic to perform any procedure the local medical director authorized to much more rigid statewide scope of practice. The latest state protocols are extremely conservative and now universal to all state services. It was definitely a step backward in my opinion.
Something I am all too familiar withHowever I was thinking more along the lines of emergent procedures like the crash c section. Usually when doing that, there is already significant fetal distress which is not responsive to treating the mother. (if she is even still alive)
It is quite unfortunate that your state does NOT authorize a Paramedic to perform certain heroic measures AFTER making base contact. As I see it, if the mother is deceased and the fetus hasn't expired already, a crash c-section performed by someone authorized to do so, provides the best chance at life a fetus has instead of none. Those certain specific heroic measures should be documented though, in a heroic measures type of protocol. No base contact, no go for any of those.
I don't like the fact that mine doesn't authorize those either...
