Based in the discussion here if you initiated IV access and patient is paying for it, and you are not giving any IV meds or IV fluids that the patient currently requires then IV access that was established is not actually being utilized.
I am very liberal with my 12 lead acquisitions and I have...
Again I am not advocating starting IV access on every single person. However if you only initiate IV access on people you are giving IV medications to that number will be very small to maintain IV skill proficiency.
Let's say we go with "because I might need it later" approach.
Would you...
First I never stated EVERYONE is getting an IV for practice. I would say the populace that truly requires IV access for medication administration/fluid administration is tiny compared to overall call volume.
Second IV access and Nasal Pharyngeal Airway skills are not at all the same. Have you...
Please get of your high horses about this noble pursuit of "only if truly required". If you followed this rule you would be performing maybe 1 IV a day or most likely not at all, as majority of ALS calls don't "truly require" IV access. I guess none saw any flaw with this statement "because I...
One needs to perform the skill to maintain adequate proficiency for the select few patients who really do require IV access. If you only initiate IV access on very small percentage of patients who truly need it, you may lose the dexterity and precision and the diabetic with BGL of 30mg/dl who is...
Yes, I agree going to medical school mainly to advance EMS would be a bad proposition. Matter of fact, advancing EMS as a profession would not even be on my list of things to do.
What impact can you have as a medic with bachelors or masters degree on EMS? Write a few articles in Jems...
Imagine if a medical director of tertiary care facility or big name hospital was able to change requirements for paramedic hire form this:
Requirements -
Minimum five years experience as an Paramedic, preferably in a large metropolitan area. Current licensure and/or certification as listed...
And how many of those professions allow 2 week transition course for medics? Yet we allow anyone to be a medic in 2 weeks.
If you want to be taken seriously, yes you need credibility and research to back it. If you dont have a degree how can you argue the merits of mandatory degree?
Because a physician first assessed said patient and gave the orders/standing orders for you to follow henceforth. When a Paramedic arrives on scene sadly there is no doctor there assessing the patient and informing me of the care plan.
My main point here was to illustrate that a physician was trained to perform physicians job and practice medicine from the start, he was not practicing nursing and then decided to specialize and go into anesthesia. Practicing nursing and practicing medicine are too different things, yet nurses...
I am not sure of your experience. However if you are just starting out I would recommend doing the standard assessment in order as your were taught in class. Truly it is a dynamic process and very patient/situation/condition/knowledge/ specific and sensitive. However when you are starting out...
I agree that nurses do exists in all realms of health care and function in their respected roles and practice nursing. Yet have a belief that after years of nursing that they can take a 2 week course here, a residency training there, or masters degree and transform to another health care...
This is just natural progression from this
Life Lion -- Life Lion Crew Members Dave Zook, RN and Steve Weihbrecht, EMT-P escorting Fire/EMS personnel to the aircraft to load Zeke (K-9 Dog) for transport to the Vet Hospital.
Based on their skills sheet critical area still is ____ Failure to voice and ultimately provide high concentration of oxygen
https://www.nremt.org/nremt/downloads/E201%20Trauma%20Assessment.pdf
For testing they cannot fail you if you gave NRB at 15, so like I said on Basic testing it...