VentMonkey
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@Remi what's your spin on having them in fly cars similar to the UK with a paramedic assistant/ driver/ attendant?
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@Remi what's your spin on having them in fly cars similar to the UK with a paramedic assistant/ driver/ attendant?
My old CCT ground nurse is from across the pond, and is notorious for going on and on about European prehospital medicine, with examples such as the ones you've listed (e.g., "Princess Di").I don't know. On one hand it seems intuitively like it'd be a great thing, but OTOH, I can't think of too much that most EM docs are going to realistically be able to do in the field that a well-trained RN-EMTP crew can't do. Maybe if you are cracking chests and deploying ECMO on the street corners, but those things will always be really rare prehospital interventions, I think.
I don't doubt this, and again, TMK, and the last time I got to talk with one of our trauma attendings, he all but summed it up to it being a very selective patient (single stab wound with the high index of tamponade suspicion) demographic being able to be successfully resuscitated from such a high-risk procedure."cracking" chests is becoming more and more uncommon, because the risk is far out weighing the benefit, even for training purposes. Odds of survival having that done is next to zero and risk of provider injury and infectious disease transmission (sharp, broken ribs) is just too high.
I do find it fascinating how it does seem quite the opposite and wonder how these European models who embrace this approach fair in regards to patient outcomes. Maybe @EpiEMS has some stats he can dig up, or share.
"cracking" chests is becoming more and more uncommon, because the risk is far out weighing the benefit, even for training purposes. Odds of survival having that done is next to zero and risk of provider injury and infectious disease transmission (sharp, broken ribs) is just too high.
Don't be such a #ResusWanker
i agree for the most part, but im curious as to how putting them on a helicopter would have any effect on a city. I know where I am (albany NY) helicopters don't fly in the cities because it's utterly useless. I get if your flying 300 miles to the middle of the woods sure, but not the city. I personally think the answer is what albany is doing right now. Have the physicians have their own fly cars if need be. Get all ER doctors to agree that: hey this is something we can try, so that way if their time to shine does come out and one doc has to leave the other ones aren't annoyed and what not at the other for leaving. The doctors also have discretion as to going out into the field or not. It's not like a paramedic being dispatched where it's an obligation to go. The paramedic calls the hospital says we need a doc and here is why. In the time that we needed to use a doctor I actually called. I got the nurse, said i need a doctor now, she put one on. I said "we have this giant MVA out here tons of critical patients, we need you for xyz reason", within 2 minutes he was en-route. I think the parts that really makes this whole program is 1: all the docs agreed to do it. 2: It's discretionary on their end, the physician i talked to could have very well said "your on a critical care rig, your CC-P could handle it", given on line MO's and that was that. Could we have.... probably. Same end result, i'd be willing to bet the barn no.So its really about trying to find the sort of patients who would most benefit from a physician on scene AND making sure you could identify that patient and get a doc there in less time then it would take for EMS to just transport to the ED. I guess the semi-obvious answer is to put them in a helicopter,
Short video on a similar subject. Some impressive stuff surrounding this.Don't be such a #ResusWanker