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Yes, the good old days when ACLS was a pass or fail course. Now everyone passes, no matter what. That is why none of the AHA courses hold any credit with anyone any more. They are all a big joke now.
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Yes, the good old days when ACLS was a pass or fail course. Now everyone passes, no matter what. That is why none of the AHA courses hold any credit with anyone any more. They are all a big joke now.
+1 x Infinity...plus one.Wouldn't it be more helpful if we went back to having doctors be the primary preceptors for paramedics?
Wouldn't it be more helpful if we went back to having doctors be the primary preceptors for paramedics?
I am not nor ever will be a nurse, but it seems to me from my observations, the thought process of a paramedic is more like a doctor than a nurse. (especially when it comes to charting)
I left out other paramedics intentionally because there is a great discrepancy in paramedic providers. In the same agency you could get the finest prehospital provider ever one shift and a skills monkey the next. US paramedics are not at the level they need to be to exclusively train their own.
What do you think?
Looking back at my Paramedic clinical time, I was precepted primarily by RNs. My primary clinical preceptor was a very experienced RN who had been a Paramedic prior to becoming a Nurse. Prior to entering EMS, much of my precepting was done by an exceptionally good Ortho Doc. I learned more about the feel of injuries and diagnostic processes from him than under previous clinical preceptors.
I would have to say that Nurses and Paramedics have different modes of thinking, and that's a direct result of their usage in patient care. Many of the psychomotor skills are very similar, if not identical. It's highly beneficial to learn those things from the people that do them all the time. Once you have those skills down, then the real learning can begin... when and when not to use them. For that, a Paramedic will need to be precepted by a PA or MD because we will be out in the field, on our own, and have to come up with a working diagnosis so that we can then come up with an appropriate treatment plan. Even looking at the language we use, it's more in-line with medicine than nursing. Our patients who lack fluid volume are described as being hypovolemic, not in a fluid deficit.
In my "ideal world," a Paramedic would be more akin to a PA-Light than a very advanced Nursing-technician. That Paramedic would be able to function outside the supervision of Nurses as they're not Nursing personnel and would retain their full scope of practice from bedside to bedside (in the IFT environment) and would not "lose" any scope once in a hospital environment. Yes, this will require a LOT more education for most Paramedics. The Paramedic would then be able to "upgrade" to a PA by completing a Bridge course and an additional year of didactic and clinical time. In time, the Paramedic would evolve into what's essentially a Pre-Hospital/IFT PA.
I can already hear the howling beginning... It will take time, be expensive, and result in very competent prehospital providers as the general rule, not the exception. In the clinical setting, I see such a provider not replacing PAs or RNs... but rather complimenting both.
Big goal... but I doubt it'll happen any time soon, especially in times of more limited funding.