Interesting, I have a little exposure to ECMO in neonatesand heard of it in grown-up critical care, never heard of it being used in pre-hospital care. Do you have any literature?
ECMO is not initiated in the field but as I stated in my previous post, we can bring a doctor to initiate it in a local little general to get the patient back to a more advanced facility. H1N1 also brought about a renewed interest in ECMO with its flu associated ARDS.
Here is the Novalung that is getting a decent start in the U.S. Medtronic is currently popular in the U.S.
Article:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2811933/
Misc. Articles:
http://jtcs.ctsnetjournals.org/cgi/content/full/119/5/1015
Good article and several more listed:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/283/7/904
In the U.S., University of Michigan is the leader in ECMO/ECLS with Arkansas Children's ranking right behind them.
Now for the significance for EMS providers. It pays to get a strong educational background in the health sciences and don't skip the college level A&P, pharmacology, math and pathophysiology classes. Medicine is evolving and you will see many more VADs in the field as well as possibly having the opportunity someday to job a CCT, Flight or Specialty team that does do transports with advanced technology and high acuity patients. It involves a little more than just a speedy ride from point A to point B. These opportunities do exist and usually those that have gone the extra distance to enhance their education will be selected since these teams get an abundance of applications. Of course for every 200 applications, about 190 will barely meet the bare minimum to be a Paramedic.
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