Dictionary Definition
paramedic n : a person trained to assist medical
professionals and to give emergency medical treatment [syn:
paramedical]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An individual trained to medically stabilize people through various interventions, victims of trauma or medical events outside of a hospital setting and preparing them for transport to a medical facility.
- An individual who is licensed at the state or national level to practice medical interventions in an emergency pre-hospital setting.
Translations
- Finnish: ensihoitaja
Extensive Definition
A paramedic is a medical professional, usually a
member of the emergency
medical service, who primarily provides pre-hospital
advanced medical
and trauma
care. A paramedic is charged with providing emergent on-scene
treatment, crisis intervention, life-saving stabilization and, when
appropriate, transport of ill or injured patients to definitive
emergency medical and surgical treatment facilities, such as a
hospitals and trauma centers.
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
States and 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, certification, or license with a governing body. Even
in countries where the law restricts the title, popular media has
created a culture whereby lay persons may incorrectly refer to all
emergency medical personnel as 'paramedics', even if they
officially hold a different qualification, such as
emergency medical technician-basic.
Places of work
Paramedics are employed by a variety of different organizations. Paramedic can be employed by government agencies 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. Paramedics are also employed by private sector organizations (private hospitals, private ambulance companies, corporations, mines, air ambulances, racetracks etc.). Paramedics may also work on a volunteer basis, receiving no monetary compensation for their services (i.e. Volunteer Rescue Squad / Volunteer Fire Department and community response units)Examples of skills performed by paramedics
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:-
- Emergency Operations
- Emergency vehicle response
- Emergency scene operations
- Patient extrication and rescue
- Mass casualty triage and staging
- Emergency medical transport
- Radio communications and notifications
- Basic
Life Support
- Rescue breathing and CPR
- Obstructed airway maneuvers
- Splinting and bleeding control
- Cervical spinal immobilization
- Oxygen therapy and vital signs
- Medical and shock trauma assessment
- Advanced
Life Support
- Asthma and respiratory crisis intervention
- Treatment of anaphylaxis/severe allergic reactions
- Drug therapy for diabetic shock and seizures
- Pharmalogical stabilization of cardiogenic shock
- Chemical Sedation, Restraint, and Analgesia
- Intravenous fluid replacement therapy
- Drug therapy for pre-eclampsia/post-partum hemorrhage
-
Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) such as:
- Defibrillation;
- Synchronized cardioversion;
- Transcutaneous pacing;
- Cardiac monitoring and interpretation of EKGs, including 12-lead ECG;
-
- Thrombolysis (Clot busting Drug)
- Pediatric care, such as Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) or Pediatric Education for Prehospital Professionals (PEPP);
- Trauma care, such as Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) or Basic or Advanced Trauma Life Support (BTLS or ATLS);
- Medical Care, such as Advanced Medical Life Support (AMLS)
- Basic and advanced airway management, including:
- Visualization the airway by use of the laryngoscope
- removal of foreign bodies with Magill forceps;
- Endotracheal and nasotracheal intubation;
- Esophageal intubation using an EOA (now discontinued), LMA or a CombiTube;
- Rapid Sequence Induction (RSI);
- Surgical cricothyroidotomy or needle cricothyrotomy;
- Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP);
- Vascular access for medication administration and fluid
resuscitation via several routes:
- Central venous access (central venous catheter by way of external jugular or subclavian)
- Intraosseous (IO) cannulation (placement of needle into marrow space of a large bone)
- Pulse oximetry and capnography;
- Needle thoracentesis for tension pneumothorax;intercostal drainage
- Glucometry (testing blood sugar);
- Ventilator and IV pump management;
- Administration of medications via intramuscular, subcutaneous, intravenous, sublingual, endotracheal, rectal, oral, intranasal, intraosseous, inhaled.
Paramedics in most jurisdictions administer a
variety of emergency medications; the individual
medications vary widely based on physician medical director
preference, local standard of care, and law. These drugs may
include Adenocard (Adenosine) that will slow 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) and cardiogenic shock. Diabetics often benefit from
the fact that paramedics are able to give D50W (Dextrose 50%) to
treat hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). They can treat crisis and
anxiety conditions, as well as perform RSI with such
medications as Versed, Ativan or
antipsychotics like Haldol or Geodon. Medications
for treating respiratory conditions such as salbutamol are common.
Paramedics may also be permitted to administer medications such as
those which relieve pain or decrease nausea and vomiting. Nitroglycerin,
baby
aspirin, and morphine
sulfate may be administered for chest pain. Paramedics may also
use other medications and anti-dysrhythmics
like lidocaine and
amiodarone to treat
cardiac arrhythmias
such as ventricular
tachycardia. Paramedics also treat for severe pain, i.e. burns
or broken bone, with narcotics like morphine
sulfate, pethidine, or fentanyl.
Different qualification levels across the world
United States
In the United States, there are 4 levels of emergency 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). The paramedic is the most advanced level of EMT; however, in order to avoid confusion about the level of care, in practice the term "EMT" usually refers to Emergency Medical Technicians below the paramedic level. Official paramedic insignias and laws that designate level of care have codified 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 in an emergency situation outside of a hospital setting, the exceptions being physicians, and Registered Nurses, who sometimes operate with air ambulance services. EMT - P CCT (Critical Care Transport) is also a higher certification level for the paramedic. Usually will run interfacility calls, transporting the very sick patients from one hospital to another for further care and treatment. They are trained to read certain types of lab work, as well as have an expanded scope of practice allowing them to administer more medications than the normal EMT - Paramedic.Canada
In Canada there are 3 levels of Paramedics: the Primary Care Paramedic with limited pharmaceutical protocols, the Advanced Care Paramedic with full ACLS qualification, and the Critical care Paramedic with very advanced qualifications. Paramedics in Canada, provide the most advanced level of emergency medical care available to the general public outside of a hospital setting. Advanced Care and Critical Care Paramedics are able to perform more delegated medical acts than any other health professional besides physicians in the pre-hospital setting.Ottawa paramedics use a 12-Lead ECG to diagnose
ST-Elevated Myocardial Infarction (STEMI), a specific type of heart
attack. This procedure was recently a topic of an article in the
New England Journal of Medicine. Ottawa paramedics were the first
paramedic service to have this STEMI protocol which is now being
implemented across the world.
Europe
In many parts of Europe 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. Different from United Kingdom and Australia,ambulance service is run by Fire Services Department, Hong Kong.- St. John Ambulance in Hong Kong A charitable organization with
- Auxiliary Medical Service An independent government department
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). 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 only four institutions in the country to obtain the ECP qualification are the:Medicolegal authority
Paramedics usually function under the authority of a group of physicians charged with legally establishing the emergency medical directives for a particular region. Paramedics are credentialed and authorized by these physicians to use their own clinical judgement and diagnostic tools to identify medical emergencies and to administer the appropriate treatment, including drugs that would normally require a physician order. The authority to practice in this semi-autonomous manner is granted in the form of standing order protocols (off-line medical control) and in some cases direct physician consultation via phone or radio (on-line medical control). Under this paradigm, paramedics effectively assume the role of out-of-hospital field agents to regional emergency physicians, with independent clinical decision-making authority that is typically enjoyed only by expert clinicians within the hospital setting. In certain jurisdictions, such as the United Kingdom and South Africa, paramedics may be entirely autonomous practitioners capable of prescribing medications.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)
- US DOT
External links
paramedic in Danish: Paramediciner
paramedic in German: Rettungsassistent
paramedic in Spanish: Paramedico
paramedic in French: Secours paramédicaux
paramedic in Hebrew: פאראמדיק
paramedic in Norwegian: Ambulansearbeider
paramedic in Turkmen:
Paramedikleri