Australia has MICA (mobile intensive care ambulance) and we have Intensive Care Paramedic (ALS).
Anyway, heres what you need to do:
- National certifying exam
- National scope of practice from the 21st century
- National union (look at how powerful the Teamsters, PBA and IAFF are)
- No more of this "Firefighter/Paramedic" crap
- Proper funding, so what if people pay a buck extra on thier house tax?
- National levels (I think EMT/A EMT/Paramedic wording works OK)
- National education standards
- Proper education; lets be realistic here, two semesters BLS, AAS degree for ILS and a Bachelors Degree for ALS all based at a college or university none of this tech mill back alley education.
Scope of practice could be something like this
BLS
- O2
- Entonox
- Nitrates SL
- Aspirin PO
- Ventolin nebules
- Glucagon IM
- Adrenaline auto for severe asthma, anaphylaxis and croup
- Anti emetic PO
- Obtain 3 and 12 lead
- ? IM Nalxone?
- Supraglottic airway
- CPAP
ILS
- Manual defib
- Cardioversion
- IV fluid
- Laryngoscopy and McGills forceps
- Adrenaline IV for severe asthma, anaphylaxis, croup, cardiac arrest
- Anti arrythmatic IV for cardiac arrest
- Opiod antagonist IM IN IV
- Benzo IM IN for seizures
- IV analgesia
- Anti emetic IV
- ? steriod IV for severe asthma, anaphylaxis
- ? pacing
- ? IO access
ALS
- Intubation
- RSI if approved locally
- Thrombolysis if approved locally
- Atropine IV
- Further IV analgesia eg ketamine, etomidate
- Pacing
- ? frusemide IV
- ? dopamine IV
- Anti arrythmatic for besides cardiac arrest
Forgive me for asking this, but why even have an ILS level? Or better yet, why even have a BLS level? The stepping stone process we have with Basic vs. Medic is already silly, why have a middle level and especially why give them all the capabilities you want with less education than a paramedic?
Registered Paramedic...
- O2
- Entonox
- Nitrates SL
- Aspirin PO
- Ventolin nebules
- Glucagon IM
- Adrenaline auto for severe asthma, anaphylaxis and croup
- Anti emetic PO
- Obtain 3 and 12 lead
- IM Nalxone
- Supraglottic airway
- CPAP
- Manual defib
- Cardioversion
- IV fluid
- McGills forceps
- Adrenaline IV for severe asthma, anaphylaxis, croup, cardiac arrest
- Anti emetic IV
Critical Care Paramedic...
- Laryngoscopy
- Anti arrythmatic IV for cardiac arrest
- Opioid antagonist IM IN IV
- Benzo IM IN for seizures
- IV analgesia
- Anti emetic IV
- steriod IV for severe asthma, anaphylaxis
- pacing
- IO access
- Laryngoscopy and Endotracheal Intubation
- RSI (TRUE RSI with succinylcholine, not poor man's RSI with fentanyl and midazolam)
- Thrombolytics (for STEMIs only)
- Atropine IV
- Further IV analgesia eg ketamine, etomidate
- Pacing
- furosemide IV
- dopamine IV
- Anti arrythmatic for besides cardiac arrest
- Intra-aortic balloon pumps
- Ventilators
- Opioid drips for continuous sedation
- Pericardiocentisis
I like the idea of thrombolytics in the pre-hospital setting, but there are inherent problems... for instance how do you differentiate between thrombotic and hemorrhagic CVA in the field?
And if you're going to give naloxone to basics, why in IM form? Intra-nasal atomizer would be much safer, easier, and quicker, especially with an EMT's education. They're already giving narcan atomizers to cops in some part of the country, why not EMTs?