Well there are only 7 Medic units available in all of Seattle, and we're a prettyyyy big city, so if every Pt was to see a medic... you can see how that just wouldn't work.
A novel idea would be adding medic units....
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Well there are only 7 Medic units available in all of Seattle, and we're a prettyyyy big city, so if every Pt was to see a medic... you can see how that just wouldn't work.
Well there are only 7 Medic units available in all of Seattle, and we're a prettyyyy big city, so if every Pt was to see a medic... you can see how that just wouldn't work.
They strongly oppose adding additional medics as they believe it will lead to dilution of the call volume of acute calls for the medics and degradation of skills.
My view of getting FD out of medicine, where it doesn't belong, is no secret and I don't try to hide it to make friends. Fire departments should not do medicine. Fire departments do medicine to boost their budget.
Generalizations? Sure. But generalizations backed up by the fact that darn near every single world renowned EMS agency is NOT run through a fire department but is infact, separate of them, despite that fact that 1/3 of EMS agencies in this country are fire-based.
Mind you firefighters do not generate revenues outside of inspection violations they can issue and the RARE parking ticket they write but you can't exactly not have a fire department whereas EMS is easily privatized and generally profits when it is vs costing massive amounts.
They strongly oppose adding additional medics as they believe it will lead to dilution of the call volume of acute calls for the medics and degradation of skills.
Small auxiliary FD with skeleton crews on duty, supplemented by volunteers, is what the vast majority of cities / towns can get away with, without any detrimental outcome.
I have always though that King County would be a perfect place for the AEMT to practice. COPD exacerbation that needs a neb would get one. Opiate ODs would get Narcan. Hypoglycemics would get Dextrose. If King County want to save the medics for the "bad ones", let EMS providers that can start immediate treatment get things moving.
Now, that would be a progressive move. Have a tiered system with first line providers able to make a definitive difference rather than just provide "the stare of life".
However, I think we'd quickly see the shine fade from the Medic One system if the paramedics aren't doing anything but RSI and Arrests.
I know the concept of supply and demand is hard to grasp, but I have a hunch that demand is outpacing supply significantly.
You guys are killing me :deadhorse:
I haven't intubated a dead person in over a month! I only had 4 tubes in Jan. All elective intubations, everyone lived. Also none of my patients have ever died in an ambulance. Let me think, I have put patients in the back of a BLS unit after giving: Dextrose, Narcan, Zofran, combivent nebs, and Adenosine. I have also left many patients home after giving those same meds. I was in contact with Medical Control Doctors on every single patient that I treat and they agreed with my treatment and transport decisions every time. I treat my Private Ambulance folks like GOLD because I was one and it's the right thing to do. I often will take an AMB crew with me to the hospital so they can experience sick patients and get a break from running transfers and posting. We do not bill for transports. The majority of ALS providers in our state, both public and private bill so they end up starting IV's on everyone because that is how they make $$$. As I have said before, we aren't perfect but we do a pretty great job overall. I realize some of you have experience working here and if it was negative let me be the first to apologize. Others here just seem to like to be arm chair QB's and trash talk everything on a constant basis. I got nothing for you. Enjoy your selves, regardless of what you say about me or King County EMS I'm going to go to work, have fun, see sick people, be nice to others and get paid very well. PEACE!
What demand? Some places such as Seattle/KC target paramedics to "sick" patients, like they were originally envisioned. Is there ANY evidence that there are more sick EMS patients? As far as I can tell, there are probably fewer (likely in almost every EMS system in the US), so why would they add more?
Why would ANY place add more?
Because the definition of sick does not equal dead. Most of the rest of the developed world recognizes that there are a variety of ALS interventions and medications that can either improve patient outcomes or ease suffering. Heaven forbid paramedics are wasted giving pain control for broken hips or CPAP and nitro for CHF or fluids in the septic patient.
Then you are either a)deluding yourself b)brand new (which would explain a lot) or c)working in such an urban area they don't have a chance to crump.Also none of my patients have ever died in an ambulance.
I can't even begin to describe the fail involved here. Try not buying a couple of hours of monitoring or even a 23 hour obs stay after adenosine in a hospital. From a clinical supervision and medicolegal standpoint the thought of leaving an SVT patient at home without a serious, serious AMA conversation leaves me....I'm not even sure how to articulate it.Let me think, I have put patients in the back of a BLS unit after giving: (edit) Adenosine. I have also left many patients home after giving those same meds.
Perhaps the rest of the state has realized that relieving pain and suffering is a worthwhile enterprise....We do not bill for transports. The majority of ALS providers in our state, both public and private bill so they end up starting IV's on everyone because that is how they make $$$.
Based on what? It's pretty easy to say "we're doing a great job" when you're the one building the criteria.As I have said before, we aren't perfect but we do a pretty great job overall.
The "haters gonna hate" attitude is not fooling anyone. You've yet to directly answer anyone's questions, starting with how you "KNOW" everyone who trash talks KCM1 was rejected from there.Enjoy your selves, regardless of what you say about me or King County EMS I'm going to go to work, have fun, see sick people, be nice to others and get paid very well. PEACE!
I'm talking about their definition. The greater Seattle area is so obsessed with their intubation and ROSC rate they save their medics for those calls. We're talking about 7 medic units for 620k people. That isn't enough medics to run 12 leads on all the legit chest pain calls, let alone address any of the other ALS calls that come out.