kkhartzog
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if anyone is working in so-cal can you post your company's website^_^ it would be greatly appreciated
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What do you mean?I cannot say which company I work for, we aren't into advertising. All three companies get about the same amount of applications that a fire department gets and there might only be one opening. Though, you will not get the opportunity to do what we do in L.A. County, unless you're LAFD.
What do you mean?
Medics are on ALS rigs only. Here in Ventura county, we have Ds and medics on a rig. From what I know about L.A. County, which I don't know much, EMTs just do IFTs. A few months after I was hired by my company, I was working ALS. Even before that, I was already running calls on a BLS rig.
Medics are on ALS rigs only. Here in Ventura county, we have Ds and medics on a rig. From what I know about L.A. County, which I don't know much, EMTs just do IFTs. A few months after I was hired by my company, I was working ALS. Even before that, I was already running calls on a BLS rig.
What level is EMT-D? Last time I checked, the levels in California were EMT-I, EMT-II, and EMT-P.
In Ventura County, we have EMT-Ds. They are EMT-1s who are hired by one of the three ambulance services here and put through a special class to assist paramedics on a split 911 rig. They are authorized to push the shock button on the lifepak when the medic tells them to...
In Ventura County, we have EMT-Ds. They are EMT-1s who are hired by one of the three ambulance services here and put through a special class to assist paramedics on a split 911 rig. They are authorized to push the shock button on the lifepak when the medic tells them to...
Trans-q pacing? I'd love to see that protocol. Technically the vast majority of AEDs are really semi-auto. Push one button, it analyzes. Push another and it shocks. That is the textbook definition of semi-auto. Technically, I can see your medical director throwing 3, 12, SpO2, EtCO2 as "obtaining vital signs," especially if you aren't interpreting them. Doing things like 3, 12, SpO2, etc under a medic shouldn't require any sort of authorization.Let me add a slight correction that D's can do whatever their medical director authorizes them to do with a defib, and that policy is unbelievably restrictive.... only when the medic tells you to? (as they are presumably two feet away) Good grief, whats the point? I was a D, and we got to do (completely independant of medics) semi-auto defib, 3-lead, 12-lead, sPO2, etCO2, and (more restrictive) trans-q pacing.
Doing things like 3, 12, SpO2, etc under a medic shouldn't require any sort of authorization.
Alternatively you're medical director is authorizing things outside of California law or I'm missing something in my reading of it.
Here is the legal state wide scope of practice for EMT-Is.What law would that be?
The legal scope of practice for EMT-Is.
http://www.emsa.ca.gov/laws/files/reg2.pdf
As far as defibrillation, there's a difference between manually defibrillating a patient and using an AED/SAED.
So, where is the authorization for for basics to pace? The section covering manual defib is on page 11 and is the first skill package covered under the optional skill heading. Still, though, outside of studies, medical directors can only designate skills covered under statute, unlike paramedics who have an "unlimited scope of practice" since anything that their SOP is anything that their medical director and state EMSA signs off on.
Personally, I'm more shocked that any county would use that optional skills package (this isn't the first I've heard about it, so don't go assuming that just because I worked in Orange County that I think OC is THE system). I've just always figured that there was no real point to have a basic manually defib when under direct supervision of a paramedic, RN, MD/DO, or (I think at least), an EMT-II. I also don't really considered being allowed to push a button under direct supervision something to be excited about or "progressive."JP, EMT-D is an internal county designation. It is authorized by the state. The EMT-D is just an optional add on for EMT-1s. It is shocking for some Orange county EMTs to find out about because compared to them, Ventura county is pretty progressive. The only additional things I know they are allowed to do push the shock button when the paramedic tells them to, set up ALS equipment, preform but not interpret 12 lead, etc.
Personally, I'm more shocked that any county would use that optional skills package (this isn't the first I've heard about it, so don't go assuming that just because I worked in Orange County that I think OC is THE system). I've just always figured that there was no real point to have a basic manually defib when under direct supervision of a paramedic, RN, MD/DO, or (I think at least), an EMT-II. I also don't really considered being allowed to push a button under direct supervision something to be excited about or "progressive."