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Drawing up drugs, I will do too, or I instruct someone from the fire department (who show up to help us if needed) to do
By "drawing up drugs", I assume what you really mean is "putting the pre-filled Bristojet together"?
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Drawing up drugs, I will do too, or I instruct someone from the fire department (who show up to help us if needed) to do
I am nearly finished with class and after going on several ride alongs and talking with a number of EMT's,I have to wonder... why does this level of care even exist? In my area EMT's are regulated to stretcher fetchers and ambo drivers. It seems to me that doesn't require 4-6 months of training. In my area EMT's can't even do NPA or OPA, Pt contact is literally moving pt's on and off the truck. Why not have a person trained as an "Ambulance technician" drive the truck so medically trained personal can work on the pt in the back? Doesn't make sense to me. Also it seems to me that first responders can perform the same exact things that an EMT (at least in my area) can do, so why would someone bother to get the extra 3-5 months of training?
Isn't this statement a little unfair? I have two questions before I respond. First, are you being trained NATIONAL REGISTRY or state level. Second, Do you not realize how much of an impact a good EMT can have on a true emergency. I believe you discount how valuable your new certification will be. Start now learning interpersonal skills interviewing skills and for GOD sakes a little compassion.
How much impact DOES a good EMT really have on a true emergency?
Wouldn't a first responder who can do CPR and bleeding control have the same impact?
Wouldn't an "Ambulance Transportation Specialist" (ATS™) be better if the training consisted of extensive driver training, patient movement and interpersonal relations/communications skills? If we added the first responder curriculum to that ATS certification we'd have a much better trained group of ambulance drivers who were concerned less about life saving and more about delivering the patients and paramedics to the hospital safely.
I don't think it's a matter of want, it should become a mandated change.
The same way it's going to be when intubation is removed from the paramedic scope of practice.I kid.
But not really.
In my area, EMTs at the basic level can do:
CPR/AED
Oxygen
Blood Glucose Levels
Glucose Administraton
Assisted Nitro
Epi-Pen
Asprin
Albuterol
Epi-Pen for asthma patients when albuterol gives no relief with med control
Nasal Narcan
CPAP* on the way
OPA
NPA
Clotting Sponges
Tourniquets
plus all of the splinting, bandaging, patient movement stuff.
So EMTs in our area should give that all up, especially when paramedics can be coming from 10+ minutes out and become glorified drivers with "interpersonal relations training" hah?
EMTs have their place. It's not always feasible to train people up to paramedics in small towns or rural areas, and there's not always a paramedic around the corner. If it works for your area, more power to you. It's definitely not necessary everywhere, though.So EMTs in our area should give that all up, especially when paramedics can be coming from 10+ minutes out and become glorified drivers with "interpersonal relations training" hah?
Excluding CCT, it's entirely different.EDIT: This is in a 911 system. Maybe it is different in the commercial IFT world, I don't know, I don't work in that world
Also, whatever happened to BLS before ALS? Do we want to go to a system like I saw in a training video which showed a medic running an IV, EKG and O2 via NRB for a 16 year old with a dislocated shoulder?
CPR/AED
Oxygen
Blood Glucose Levels
Glucose Administraton
Assisted Nitro
Epi-Pen
Asprin
Albuterol
Epi-Pen for asthma patients when albuterol gives no relief with med control
Nasal Narcan
CPAP* on the way
OPA
NPA
Clotting Sponges
Tourniquets