Police departments offer additional training and sometimes have crisis intervention officers better suited to de-escalate a potentially violent person.
Is it too much to train EMS to do this? Heck, being able to deescalate is useful for non-psych patients who may be uppity.
Additionally, the person can be transported by the officer in a contained and safe environment in which he can be easily manipulated and or subdued should erratic behavior ensue.
Which is safer... chemical restraints or physical restraints?
Police officers also have the power to arrest/detain and place individuals on legal holds, therefore should remain in the custody of that officer.
...and it's relatively stupid that EMS can't make a medico-legal decision. (side note: In California, physicians can write the same hold and individuals designated by the county health department can also write holds... i.e. RNs on psychiatric evaluation teams).
98% of the psych patients I am called to are repeat offenders who say the right things to get to their 3 hots and a cot in the emergency room. Or they seek rehab or other non-emergency form of treatment. Some are just drunk :censored::censored::censored::censored::censored::censored::censored:s who say stupid things. Some are children who apparently are victims of bad parenting and lack discipline. Some guy who is sad who wants to kill himself because his computer froze, et. al.
...yet all of them are going to be evaluated by a psychiatrist...
Generally, all psych calls are code 3 lights and sirens as well, in which a fire apparatus and private ambulance respond. Even with an officer on a safe scene with a stable person.
That, in my opinion, is an uncalled for response, policy, and practice that wasted resources, finances, and time. As well as an unnecessary risk driving code 3 for what is not a true emergency... And most of the time not even an untrue emergency. As in most of the time is is BS as stated above.
So your system's dispatch protocols suck. That doesn't change the fact that it's a medical problem, not a law enforcement problem.
The EMS system, to include the EMERGENCY department(s), were not designed nor intended to service this type of person. It puts an unnecessary strain on the system from top to bottom. Not to mention most of these patients are on some form of public assistance which, in this country, is eating away and contributing to the erosion of the economy and state of the union. It is unsustainable as it stands now, as a provider I disagree with it and as a tax payer I disagree with it.
By "this person" do you mean acute psych breaks or people playing the system?
What does your opinion "as a tax payer" have to do with this? Do you think that emergency medical care should be provided based off of insurance or presumed value?
I am not saying that these people don't need assistance. They very well may. However, the assistance they need is rarely emergent and is not what our current system was designed for. Perhaps a special, as I stated, designated psychiatric facility that can offer the services needed would be a better suit.
I'm calling a spade a spade. You are assuming every "patient" who calls 911 is having a real emergency requiring advanced intervention beyond a good talking to and an ambulance ride. I don't judge my patients. I don't know their struggles. I don't treat them differently based on whether they are bleeding out or just a drunk fool. It is what it is. And I don't think it is a job for EMTs or paramedics. I am not a psychiatric professional, nor do I have any desire to be. That is why I went to paramedic school.
You actually just judged your patients a few paragraphs up...
Are every patient who calls 911 having a real emergency? No.
Are the etiology of every patient always obvious? No. It's relatively easy to dismiss the obvious meth psychosis until you get the elevated T4 indicating that the psychosis could easily be thyrotoxicosis. It's relatively easy to dismiss the patient with chronic schizophrenia... and then realize that his old records shows 2 large meningiomas putting mass effect on the frontal lobes that the patient was refusing surgery for the year before.
You say that you're not a psychiatrist, yet you're in a field that, by it's very nature, involves dealing with emergencies in all fields... including psychiatry. You can't pick and choose which fields you want to treat emergencies from.
To compare; it is in essence the same priciple of forcing FFs to be paramedics to be FFs. Forcing Paramedics to adapt and become crisis counselors.
Except FF isn't medicine. Psychiatry is medicine. Some psychiatry is emergency medicine.