1 / 31

Emergency Medical Services

Emergency Medical Services. EMS Overview & Medical Oversight. Introduction. History of EMS EMS System Levels of training and abilities Overview of system designs Local system design Medical control. History of EMS. 1917 Honolulu Police Department Ambulance. History of EMS. Before 1966

kiri
Télécharger la présentation

Emergency Medical Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Emergency Medical Services EMS Overview & Medical Oversight

  2. Introduction • History of EMS • EMS System • Levels of training and abilities • Overview of system designs • Local system design • Medical control

  3. History of EMS 1917 Honolulu Police Department Ambulance

  4. History of EMS • Before 1966 • 1966 - 1973 • 1974 - 1981 • 1981 - Present

  5. Before 1966 • Jean Dominique Larrey • Napoleon’s Chief Military Physician • wounded treated on battlefield and horse drawn carriages constructed to carry the wounded • Civil War • First organized pre-hospital system in U.S. • Joseph Barnes, Johnathan Letterman - Military physicians • Union Army trained corpsmen - first “medics”

  6. Before 1966 • Civil War • Developed a transportation system • Post Civil War • Cincinnati, New York, London, Paris • Horse Accidents, fires - need for transport • Edward Dalton • Former Surgeon in Union Army • 1869 began New York City Ambulance • Interns staffed ambulances

  7. Before 1966 • World War I • Improved communications - signal boxes • Electric, steam, gasoline powered carriages • Thomas traction splint • Ambulances now equipped • Post World War I • Radios to dispatch ambulances • Volunteer rescue squad • Interns still on ambulance

  8. World War II • U.S. Entrance into WWII • Removed interns from ambulance • Deterioration of care - untrained • Little care, mostly transportation • Half of ambulances operated by mortuaries • Post WWII • CPR, defibrillation • 1966 Belfast Ireland Mobile CCU

  9. 1966: A Turning Point • National Academy of Sciences - National Research Council • Described pre-hospital care and compared it to military pre-hospital in Korean Conflict • Described lack of communication, lack of helicopter services, archaic ED’s • Led to the National Highway Safety Act

  10. National Highway Safety Act • Department of Transportation as Federal Governing authority by finances • Funded Training programs and national minimum standards of skills • Communications programs and equipment • Funded Ambulances, equipment, • Personnel and administrative cost • 1968 - 1979, $142 Million

  11. Other Federal Initiatives • Health Services and Mental Health Administration • Lead Agency for EMS within Department of Health, Education and Welfare (DHEW) • Physician Responder Programs • metamorphosed into “paramedic” programs • close physician supervision • mostly on-line medical control • Telemetry programs begun

  12. Public Law 93-154, 1973 • Goal to improve EMS on National Scale • 15 Elements flawed - idea of chain of survival • State control of EMS efforts • BLS and ALS Terminology spread • Communications • 1 in 20 ambulances voice communication • advocated 911 access and central dispatch

  13. EMS System • Access • First Responder • EMT / Paramedic • Medical Control • Transport to definitive care

  14. 911 System • Centralized access number • >90% of country covered • Enhanced System provides name, address, telephone number • Abuse of system

  15. Providers - Scope of Practice • First Responders • CPR • First Aid • Basic Airway Management • Emergency Delivery • Spinal Immobilization • Oxygen Administration • Assisted Ventilation

  16. Scope of Practice EMT - A • Scope of First Responders • On Scene Triage • Fracture Splinting • Extrication and Transport • MAST

  17. Scope of Practice EMT-I • Scope of EMT-A • EOA, Combi-tube • Orotracheal Intubation • Peripheral IV cannulation • Basic determination of death (obvious) • Defibrillation (AED)

  18. Scope of Practice - Paramedic • Needle cricothyroidotomy • Needle Decompression of pneumothorax • Defibrillation, Cardioversion • Administration of most drugs, antiarrhythmics, benzodiazepines, and narcotics

  19. Georgia EMS • No registered First Responder • EMT (Basic EMT) - national EMT-I • D50, Epi-pen • Cardiac Technicians - Closely approximates National Paramedic • Paramedic - Expanding Curriculum

  20. System Structure • Municipality • City or County run organization • Fire Department based • Hospital Based • Hospital owned and operated • County 911 provider • Private and volunteer • Combination and Tiered Response

  21. Response Systems • BLS EMS • ALS EMS • BLS EMS with ALS Back-up • Tiered Response • Fire BLS or ALS Response • ALS Transport Service • Police, Fire and ALS

  22. Medical Control • Direct (On-line) Medical Control • Direct physician to medic contact • Radio • Telephone • Off-Line Medical Control • Writing and approving protocols • Quality Assurance

  23. Protocols • Written standards • Do not require physician contact • Require a physician signature • Governed by local EMS council • Sparingly used in Region 6 EMS • Liberally used in most of U.S.

  24. Direct Medical Control • Telephone and Radio contact most common • Radio • “Key-up” 1-2 seconds before speaking • Speak clearly and slowly • Its not a telephone - most radio systems are Simplex not duplex • Break-up common making understanding difficult

  25. Medical Control Scenarios - 1 • “Medical Control this is Rural Metro 416 - Basic EMT Johnson. I am on the scene with a ***STATIC*** year old male who is complaining of shortness of breath, he has a history of asthma and has used his albuterol inhaler with some relief but is still short of breath. The patient is refusing treatment and transport… What do you advise ?

  26. Medical Control Scenario - 1 • Vital Signs BP 116/76, HR 110, R - 20, No wheezing noted, noted to be using some accessory muscles • Alert and Oriented answering questions appropriately

  27. Medical Control Scenario - 2 • Medical Control this is Horizon Medic 6. I am enroute to you with 67 year old female patient who was complaining of substernal chest pain, and is now is cardiac arrest. She is intubated. Has been defibrillated X 3 and remains in V-fib. I have an IV initiated of normal saline. What do you advise?

  28. Medical Control Scenarios - 3 • Medical Control this Rural Metro 702 at incident command. I am on the scene of a chemical release and have a multiple casualty incident. We approximate 45 patients have been exposed to an unknown gas believed to be sulfur trioxide. I have 6 category I patients, 10 category II, and the remainder are category III. I need destination orders. All 45 patients are “requesting your facility”

  29. Medical Control Scenario - 4 • Med Control this is Smith County EMA Medic 2. Paramedic Davis. I am enroute with a driver of high speed MVC with massive damage to the vehicle. The patient is c/o CP and leg pain, Vitals are stable. The patient is requesting transport to St. Joseph’s hospital and refuses transport to the trauma center… What do you advise?

  30. Medical Control Scenario - 5 • Medical Control this is Horizon Medic 6. I am on the scene with a 14 y/o female. Bystanders witnessed a GTC seizure and called EMS. The patient is now alert, oriented and following commands but refuses treatment and transport. We have attempted to contact the parents without success. What do you advise ?

  31. Medical Control Scenarios - 6 • Medical Control this is Rural Metro 413. I am on the scene with a 48 y/o female. EMS was called by a friend whom the patient told in a phone conversation that she wanted to commit suicide. On our arrival the patient admits to the statement, but states that she is not “really suicidal” Bottles of medications including TCA’s are in the home. What do you advise?

More Related