If the pt. is going to / possibly have blood drawn for labs at the hospital during their course of care. How is vascular access prior to arrival, fraud? It's for an actual purpose. Prehospital vascular access allows blood to be drawn faster.
Now I know what some are going to say, " they don't use our line becaus it's a "field line" ". I call BS, I couldn't tell you how many times I see RNs draw blood out of my line upon arrival after aspirating a good 10cc of blood first.
A sizable portion of ALS pt.s have the potential to deteriorate, wouldn't you like to have a line already in place if that happens?
Most hospitals in my area do not draw from at IV site, due to the fact that it may have already had meds and Saline passed through it may "error the results" they will do a Lab draw. and if they are after an ABG its a no brainer that they are going after an artery and not using the established. And yes if the patient does deteriorate its nice to have a patent IV site established for use
I don't buy that starting unnecessary IVs is justified for practice. If you truly believe you need more experience, work to schedule yourself with some ED time to get access on patients who do need it, and are sick, or pick up a side job as an IV tech for nursing homes, or a phlebotomist. The answer is not to perform unnecessary procedures.
Not everyone has this option, around here ER techs are BLS only and IV starts are not part of the protocol for ER techs. Getting ER time is like pulling teeth, even if your medical director is part of the ER. trust me many have tried already to get their profficency up and the hospital gives the long story about why you can't. warranting HIPAA or the Campus policy
And how many of you protested in medic school when you had to do multiple IV 's on each other for PRACTICE?
A few students in my class moaned and groaned about this, They wanted to stick everyone else licking their chops. But when it was stick and be stuck the bawled their faces off.
Again I am not advocating starting IV access on every single person. However if you only initiate IV access on people
you are giving IV medications to that number will be very small to maintain IV skill proficiency.
Let's say we go with "because I might need it later" approach.
Would you object IV access on these patients?
1- Postictal patient, who is now A&OX3 not seizing on your arrival. Family states has hx of epilepsy and had a seizure 20 minutes ago prior to your arrival. If you start IV on him now what IV medicine are you giving? Do you advocate not starting IV access?
2- Chest pain 8 (1-10), has cardiac history, 12 lead no elevations or depressions looks normal, sinus rhythm. You protocols do not have IV meds to be given for this call. If you start IV on him now what IV medicine are you giving? Do you advocate not starting IV access.
etc...
here is a study utilizing nurses
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16157191
"A total of 77% of the IV insertions were successful. Nurses who were older, had more years of experience, were certified in a specialty, and rated themselves higher in insertion skill had significantly more successful insertions than their younger and less-experienced and less-skilled counterparts (P < .001)."
So more experience and more iv sticks = more successful insertions.
Both patients can warrant IV access. the first since they have a hx of epilepsy, and 1 seizure PTA, establish access and monitor if they have another seizure benzos can go right in that site.
the second. you are giving NTG, and possibly fentanyl or morphine after the 3rd nitro if pain exsists and blood pressure warrants. So your giving your patients Vasodilators, if their pressure takes a dump, You have IV access to compensate.
IMHO I believe its going to come down to Local protocol, paramedic experience and general impression of the patient. I know the ED around here gets themselves in a tuff if the patient comes in ALS with no IV access, not even an attempt. The big thing that's pushed as an ALS provider is everyone gets IV O2 and Cardiac monitor. which in a perfect world that's great. Yet its not required. So when you have a borderline call whether or not you want to start IV access, some do just as a safety net.
comes down to symptoms and complaints. If the patient you are treating complains of nausea vomiting x 2 days. limited PO inputs. hanging an IV bag to combat dehydration maybe push some Zofran if its warranted.
your respiratory distress patient. give a duo neb. Start an IV maybe some solu Medrol if the the patient can benefit from it. Granite takes 4-6 hours to work but your ahead of the game.
In Pa I'm not too sure about other states ALS is an all inclusive rate, you pay a flat fee of ALS rate, or BLS rate, plus mileage billed in tenths of a mile. so if your mileage rate is 10.00/mile you take the patient 10.3 miles they pay 103.00 for transport mileage.
to the poster who stated that ECG monitors are going to become a BLS thing is hogwash. In a round about way if you have Cardiac monitoring a BLS skill, Yes BLS can obtain a strip. but who will interpret it. Pass it along to the ED via Wireless transfer for interpretation Ok fine. now you have to tie up a doc to read ECG strips amongst other duties he will have to perform as a physician. If your stating that EMT basics will learn to interpret ECG's how will they treat any abnormalities? It will also drive the cost of BLS services up since you are now adding another skill that a BLS provider can perform.
IV access vs no IV access to start a line on somebody because you "need to practice the skill" is unethical, However if based on your experience and you look at your patient and say well he/she could probably benefit from IV access for some Fluids or cause I might just end up giving so and so med. its justifiable, In the end it will be up to the QA manager to read your reports and see if your patient required access. and if so did you justify why?