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Paramedic

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The Star of Life, a globally recognized symbol for emergency medical services

A paramedic is a medical professional, usually a member of the emergency medical service, who responds to medical and trauma emergencies in the pre-hospital environment, provides emergency treatment and, when appropriate, transports a patient to definitive care, such as a hospital, for further assessment or follow-up care.

The use of the specific term paramedic varies by jurisdiction, and in some places is used to refer to any member of an ambulance crew. In countries such as the United Kingdom, the use of the word paramedic is restricted by law, and the person claiming the title must have passed a specific set of examinations and clinical placements, and hold a valid registration with the governing body. Even in countries where the law restricts the title, popular media has created a culture where lay persons may refer to all emergency medical personnel as 'paramedics', even if they officially hold a different qualification, such as emergency medical technician.[citation needed]

Places of work

Paramedics are employed by a variety of different agencies: by government (as part of a public hospital system, as a separate municipal EMS service, or sometimes, especially in the United States, as part of a fire department) or by private sector organizations (private hospitals, private ambulance companies). Paramedics may work in other settings (e.g., emergency departments, hospital inpatient units, medical clinics, doctors' offices, air ambulances, oil rigs, steel mills, and casinos). Paramedics may also be seen as part of a volunteer based EMS provider (Volunteer Rescue Squad).

Examples of skills performed by paramedics

File:Ambulance-Unity.jpg
Paramedics transport the patient to the hospital via ambulance

Although there is a great deal of variation in what paramedics are trained and permitted to do from region to region, some skills performed by paramedics include:

A patient that is in respiratory failure and still conscious can be sedated and paralyzed using medications like etomidate, succinylcholine, pancuronium and versed. Then the paramedic is able to intubate the patient who needs a secured airway;

Paramedics in some places administer a variety of emergency medications; the individual medications vary widely based on medical director preference, local standard of care, and law. These drugs may include Adenocard (Adenosine) that will stop the heart for a short period of time to Atropine that will speed a heartbeat that is too slow, sympathomimetics like dopamine for severe hypotension (low blood pressure). Diabetics often benefit from the fact that paramedics are able to give D 50 (Dextrose 50%) to treat severe hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). Medications for treating respiratory conditions such as salbutamol, Solu-Medrol and albuterol are common. Paramedics may also be permitted to administer elective medications such as those which relieve pain or decrease nausea and vomiting like Reglan, Compazine, or Phenergan. Nitroglycerin, baby aspirin, and morphine sulfate may be administered for chest pain. Other medications are used to treat cardiac conditions such as a myocardial infarction and various dysrhythmias such as Lidocaine and Amiodarone. Paramedics are also giving the ability to treat severe pain, i.e. burns or broken bone, with narcotics like morphine sulfate, Demerol, or Fentanyl.

Different qualification levels across the world

United States of America

In the United States, there are 4 levels of prehospital care defined by the U.S. Department of Transportation, which regulates prehospital education. In order of their level of training, from the most basic to the most advanced, they are Medical First Responder, Emergency Medical Technician-Basic (EMT-B), Emergency Medical Technician-Intermediate (EMT-I), and Emergency Medical Technician-Paramedic (EMT-P). In order to avoid confusion about the level of care that is being provided, the EMT-P is generally called a "paramedic" or a "medic" in the field rather than an EMT. The official emblems and insignias that identify this level of care tend to reflect this custom. Paramedics in the United States, working independently and under the direction of emergency medical control physicians, provide the most advanced level of emergency medical care available to the general public outside of a hospital setting.

Canada

In Canada there are 3 levels of Paramedics: the Primary Care Paramedic with limited drug protocols, the Advanced Care Paramedic with full ACLS qualification, and the Critical Care Paramedic often employed in the flight paramedic role and having advanced delegated medical authority. The province of Alberta still uses the terms EMT and EMT-Paramedic.

Europe and Quebec

In many parts of Europe and in the Canadian province of Quebec (which follows the French system), a different paradigm is used for prehospital care in which doctors, nurses and occasionally medical students function as prehospital providers, either in conjunction with or instead of paramedics.

Hong Kong

Hong Kong is currently progressing toward a system staffed with paramedics. [1].

South Africa

All health practitioners in The Republic of South Africa are regulated by a standards generating body (SGB), the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA).

File:Successful Retrograde Intubation.jpg
Retrograde Intubation

The Department of Education has initiated the phasing out of short course training. This is to be replaced with a mid-level worker, and a prehospital clinician. The mid-level course is 2 years in duration, and exits on a level just above what many know as Intermediate Life Support (ILS), but below Advanced Life Support (ALS). They are placed on the Emergency Care Technician (ECT) register. The clinician qualification is a four year professional degree in Emergency Medical Care (Bachelor Emergency Medical Care), and is placed on the Emergency Care Practitioner (ECP) register. The ECP may perform some of the most advanced skills available to the worldwide prehospital setting, such as rapid sequence induction, Thrombolysis, and retrograde intubation. The only four institutions in the country to obtain the ECP qualification are the:

Medicolegal authority

Paramedics may function under the authority and indirect supervision of a physician (as is the case in the United States), both through standing protocols (off-line medical control) or through direct physician consultation via phone or radio (on-line medical control), or, as is the case in the United Kingdom, they may be autonomous practitioners, with their own clinical judgment, ability to diagnose and prescribe.

In the media

The 1970s television show Emergency! was a very popular series which centered on the work of paramedics in the Los Angeles County Fire Department, and the staff at the fictional Rampart Emergency Hospital. Emergency! has been widely credited with inspiring many municipalities in the United States to develop their own paramedic programs, and has inspired many to enter the fields of emergency medicine. The show was a top rated program for its entire production run (1972 - 1979), as well as in syndicated television reruns -- even inspiring a Saturday morning cartoon series.

Paramedics is also the name of a show on the Discovery Health Channel, which details the life and work of emergency medical squads in major urban centers in the United States. It is also the name of a 1988 Comedy which highlighted the lighter side of EMS.

Paramedic: On the Front Lines of Medicine (1998), by Peter Canning, is an autobiographical account of a paramedic's first year on the job. Rescue 471: A Paramedic's Stories (2000) is the sequel.

Bringing Out the Dead (1999), directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Nicholas Cage is one of very few films about paramedics. The main character is paramedic Frank Pierce who works in New York's Hell's Kitchen. He's become burned out and haunted by visions of the people he's failed to save including a little girl. The film is based on the novel of the same name by Joe Connelly, a former New York City paramedic.

Into the Breach: A Year of Life and Death with EMS (2002) Book written by J.A. Karam is the true story of paramedics, emergency medical technicians, and heavy-rescue specialists fighting to control trauma and medical emergencies. Into the Breach offers an unusual opportunity to bear witness to unimaginable suffering, heroic stoicism, and the inventiveness of American EMS workers fighting to save lives.

Parts of Third Watch (1999) were devoted to adventures of the fictional 55th precinct FDNY EMS unit, created by ER executive producer John Wells.

Saved (2006), a TNT series centered on fictional paramedic Wyatt Cole (Tom Everett Scott), his partner, and their chaotic lives on and off the job.

See also

References

  • American Heart Association (Jan. 2006)
  • Meisel, Zachary (2005-11-08). "Ding-a-Ling-a-Ling— Ambulances can be dangerous places". Slate. Washington Post.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC. Retrieved 2007-01-25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  • "Tribute to R Adams Cowley, M.D." University of Maryland Medical Center. Retrieved 2005-12-30.
  • US DOT "National Scope of Practice Model" (PDF). National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Retrieved 2007-04-16.