Perhaps, but I'd respectfully submit that most things done in EMS are pretty inexpensive. The labour cost isn't that great to start with. There's a small chance that it might be driven up if the paramedics demand extra pay on the basis of having more responsibility -- but this argument has never worked that well in practice for any of us :lol: The drugs are cheap, as far as I know -- maybe there's some newer agents coming out that might cost more. I would think any cost in the ambulance would pale in comparison to the cost of just having someone sit in a bed in the ER with the correct wrist band on and have a couple of blood draws and an ECG done, each by someone with a union number.
Perhaps not the labor itself, but when you institute a standard of care, costs can add up quickly. In modern EMS (or other parts of medicine for that matter) When you instutute an ETI procedure, you need things like laryngoscops. While that device is basically nothing more than a battery pack with a piece of shaped metal (or plastic if you are unfortunate) and a lightbulb connected, the device manufacturers seem to think it is worth considerably more.
You are also going to need to have a method of cleaning/replacement. Extra parts, batteries, etc.
Then to live up to the quantitative standards of modern medicine you are going to have a capnograph. (and it's associated costs)
Multiply this by a couple of hundred units in a capital city, and that may cut into your public access AED fund quite a bit.
Let's be honest, if you were decidfing whether to have more public access AEDs or the ability for EMS to intubate, would you suspect that intubation after EMS response would save more lives or improve more outcomes?
There's another set of problems connected to this too. What's the goal of the EMS system? We tend to assume that it's to reduce disability and "early" death, etc. But that's more the role of the health care system. In many places the EMS system is being funded by a municipal tax payer. Does the city / county / urban service area, really want good clinical outcomes, or just the appearance of professional looking bodies when the citizenry calls 911?.
I think the goal of every EMS system is to do the most good for the most people. Similar to any healthcare system.
It may sound bad, but you have to pick and choose who is going to get what help. In that situation, some people will always lose out.
My point is, that in the population I cited, those who would benefit from ETI may be so low they might be considered "acceptable loses" in the overall system.
This is interesting. Did you come to any conclusions as to why this was the case? Were they simply not intubating patients who would have been intubated in the US, or another medical system, or was the acuity genuinely that much lower? Your response suggests the latter..
I think the volume of acutity compared to where I was in the US was exponentially lower.
Do you think it speaks to better access to primary care? Or social factors? Was the surrounding area perhaps more wealthy, with less social problems?
I'm genuinely interested. Obviously the incidence of firearm trauma is much lower than in the US, as is the rate of obesity (although I hear they're working very hard to change both of those). Just wondering what you put it down to.
I think it is a combination of several factors, most of which you included. Even the comparitive individual wealth is a factor. I spent many years working in inner-city US EMS/hospitals, the level of poverty I witnessed there was much more profound than many Western European nations I have visited.
Only in Central and Eastern Europe have I seen people with worse circumstances in terms of poverty compared to the US.
If I had to choose the most profound influences based on what I observed, I would say that individual health awareness coupled with easy access and effective primary care were the most significant.
(Despite being firmly entrenched in reacting to emergencies of critical illness and injury, I think it is obvious the best outcomes and focus of treating such is prevention.)
I have also noticed in my anecdotal observations, that European males seem to be more active in seeking out healthcare than American males. (with females about the same level)
I haven't been able to account for this phenomenon, as many European societies have a culture of males being "tough"/stoic. I continue to try to figure it out though. What is more vexing about it is at least in Central/Eastenr Europe, males seem to engage in more destructive behavior and more often than in America.
I welcome any insight you have on this matter.