el Murpharino
Forum Captain
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the only benefit i can see from your call was i gather from the arguments on scene that there were a number of people from your agency about. at the very least you can swap out the guy doing compressions frequently enough to ensure good cpr.
other than that, wait on scene for als for 25 min? no sir not in my world. thats 25min closer to the er. 25min closer to transfer of care. 25 min closer to marking back in and maybe helping somebody i can actually save.
im sure R/r has the stats on bls codes. if als coded are statistically almost pointless, were do bls codes rate?
I understand the point of getting patients to definitive care, but if you've watched ER personnel work a code, it's no different from what we do prehospital - in most cases. Heck, most of the times they work it about 5 minutes, and call it. True, this is after we've worked the code for 20+ minutes...most ER docs would call it in that case.
Additionally, while you're trying to get your patient off the ground and on the backboard or stretcher, you're either stopping compressions, or at best performing inadequate compressions. How much time does that take? That could be time better spent performing proper CPR, perfusing the tissues, and at giving your patient some chance. Most of the new CPR/ACLS guidelines are advocating proper compressions as well.