Cops arrive first on scene for all Cardiac arrest here and start CPR, they are usually there for about 2-3 minutes before us and FD, wouldn't that be splended if they had an AED, BVM, and maybe some basic meds.
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Cops arrive first on scene for all Cardiac arrest here and start CPR, they are usually there for about 2-3 minutes before us and FD, wouldn't that be splended if they had an AED, BVM, and maybe some basic meds.
I don't think that there's much research that clearly shows better outcomes with tiered response ALS versus all-ALS.
I think the "dumbing down" of our occupation has been done at the educational level, by a lack of demanding enough standards, a willingness to accredit programs with minimal clinical and academic hours, and a general lack of any concerted efforts by paramedics and EMT to demand better education.
I don't think having more paramedics is necessarily a bad thing. But we do need to identify which skills are most critical and vulnerable to deterioration over time, and develop strategies to either limit these skills to a select group of practitioners or provide adequate training to keep them competent.
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While there is little evidence to help answer the tiered response vs. all-ALS response (the the very little that exists supports tiered response).
There is a lot of research that shows that a physician, nurse, PA, etc. who performs certain procedures or sees certain patients more often see fewer complications, shorter lengths of stay, and lower mortality.
There is evidence that medics who intubate more frequently and more likely to be successful.
There is evidence that frequent experience with cardiac arrest is associated with improved survival.
The only way to increase sick patient contact in the prehospital setting is to limit the number of paramedics.
Based on evidence from other areas of medicine, it isn't hard to imagine that paramedic experience influences patient outcomes.
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PD has to arrive anyway to every death
No... they don't. Not every death is a coroner's case.
Yes they do, because it is up to PD to decide if it is going to be a Coroner's care or not. I have never been on any type of death that PD did not arrive at. Even the 102 y/o who died in their sleep, PD shows up does an investigation and determines if a Coroner needs to be invovled.
So you've never seen a death in a health care facility.
So you've never seen a death in a health care facility.
No, but PD does need to respond to every unattended death. at a home with a hospice nurse, for another example, typically does not get a cop either.Now obviously PD does not respond to Codes in Hospitals, not unless the Hospital request them for a criminal investigation.
No, but PD does need to respond to every unattended death. at a home with a hospice nurse, for another example, typically does not get a cop either.
but 99 year old granny who is found dead in her bed in the AM does need a cop, to determine if she died of natural causes or because her husband smothered her with a pillow because he wanted a divorce and she wouldn't give him one.
Nursing homes/SNF's are a gray area. I've been involved in investigations at them (detectives called me while i was on vacation in vermont), and others where they didn't. but I would wager 99% of unattended deaths, with the person being unattended by a health care professional (RN or higher) should require a PD presence.
BTW, lots of volunteer/rural/suburban EMS systems have PD as the first responder; it typically makes more sense than the FD, since PD is already on the road, usually closer to the scene, and can initiate CPR and Defib in less than 8 minutes. Not so much for the urban areas though.
Now obviously PD does not respond to Codes in Hospitals, not unless the Hospital request them for a criminal investigation.
...so PD doesn't always show up for all codes...
The reason I brought it up is every prehosptial code I've seen brought into the ED where resuscitation failed had the ED staff make the decision based on preset criteria on whether they could release to a funeral home or had to call a coroner.
Again, it depends on the circumstances. Not every original scene is going to occur on the street, and I highly doubt that the average cop knows enough about medicine to make even an uneducated guess as to whether a patient at a non-hospital health care facility was suspicious or not unless the staff beat the patient to death. So, again, the police routinely show up to cardiac arrests at health care facilities outside of the hospital?
The question is, how many hats can one person wear especially if EMS is to become a profession? There's a reason you don't see many neuro-cardio-thoracic-orthopedic surgeon psychiatrists around.