pghboy2011
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So, this is was a scenario thrown out, and the conversation is actually getting a little dumb, it's similar to a dog chasing its tail....
Here's the situation....
An EMT-B, who is not employed by any service, comes across a woman laying on the ground. ABC's are good, and she has a good mental status, etc, etc, the only issue is that her face is bloody from a fall (she was beat up by her domestic-partner, and left there). The EMT pulls a towel from his car trunk, and has her hold to the wound.
He tells the patient that he'd like to call for an ambulance, and she says, "No, I'll figure out a way to get to the hospital, I'll take the hospital bill, but I'd like to avoid the ambulance bill, I don't have a lot of money."
Fearing she won't be able to get there, he takes her to the hospital in his own vehicle, and they both go about their lives....
Was the EMT acting out of his scope of practice for transporting without direct medical command because he wasn't working, or was he covered because she met none of the criteria for requiring ALS back-up, or for needing to call medical command? (If anyone needs quick reference to these protocols, BLS 210, and 901)
(One argument was, he's wrong because he couldn't stablize C-Spine, but the counter argument was...she refused to allow an ambulance to be called, so, c-spine was compromised regardless)
with that being said, can anyone provide me with some kind of reference for off-duty scope of practice for EMT-B's, or would it just stick with our standard protocols?
Here's the situation....
An EMT-B, who is not employed by any service, comes across a woman laying on the ground. ABC's are good, and she has a good mental status, etc, etc, the only issue is that her face is bloody from a fall (she was beat up by her domestic-partner, and left there). The EMT pulls a towel from his car trunk, and has her hold to the wound.
He tells the patient that he'd like to call for an ambulance, and she says, "No, I'll figure out a way to get to the hospital, I'll take the hospital bill, but I'd like to avoid the ambulance bill, I don't have a lot of money."
Fearing she won't be able to get there, he takes her to the hospital in his own vehicle, and they both go about their lives....
Was the EMT acting out of his scope of practice for transporting without direct medical command because he wasn't working, or was he covered because she met none of the criteria for requiring ALS back-up, or for needing to call medical command? (If anyone needs quick reference to these protocols, BLS 210, and 901)
(One argument was, he's wrong because he couldn't stablize C-Spine, but the counter argument was...she refused to allow an ambulance to be called, so, c-spine was compromised regardless)
with that being said, can anyone provide me with some kind of reference for off-duty scope of practice for EMT-B's, or would it just stick with our standard protocols?