Not sure if this is the proper location for such a question but I'm just trying to find out the answer to a grey area that wasn't really touched on in class. I know that on an ambulance, EMT-IVs are held to protocols and such concerning what medications they can and can not administer but what if they're working in a hospital setting? During one of my ER clinicals, an RN drew up a syringe of XYZ medication and instructed me to administer it to a patient via IV bolus. I complied but was it technically permissible? Are EMT-IVs allowed to administer different medications if they're given orders to do so by someone higher up on the totem pole?
There are laws in TN governing your scope of practice while in-hospital. While you are in the hospital, your oversight is the attending physician, unless a medical director has been otherwise designated. As an EMT-IV, you can push that medication so long as,
A. You were not the one who drew it up, dosed it, etc.
B. The physician in charge has verified that you have the knowledge and the training necessary for administering said medication (This all falls under Continuing education and standards compliance)
C. The physician has signed off to allow EMT-IVs in your facility to administer meds.
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HOWEVER,
If a nurse looks at you and says, go to the med room, draw up 2 of morphine, and administer it to John Doe in curtain 3, you cannot do this.
If you have any more questions regarding in-hospital scope of practice for EMT-IVs, I would suggest that you get in contact with the TN Board of EMS, specifically our state licensing director, Ms Donna Tidwell who oversees the board meetings and works to create the committees who establish these scopes for the state of TN. If there was one person in TN who could tell you every regulation involving EMTs in the state of TN, Miss Tidwell would be your person.