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EMS

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Title: EMS


1
EMS
PAST
PRESENT
FUTURE
2
EMS PAST
3
Pioneers of PrehospitalTrauma Care
  • AMBROSE PARE
  • French surgeon in 1500s
  • Wrote first book on trauma care
  • Condemned use of boiling oil for GSW and
    reintroduced use of ligatures for amputations
  • No organized evacuation of wounded at this time

4
History of PrehospitalTrauma Care
  • No organized medical care for injured patients
    before 19th century
  • On the battlefield no organized evacuation of the
    wounded and no field hospitals to treat them
  • Generally women camp followers provided nursing
    care
  • Organized prehospital care began with the efforts
    of military surgeons to treat battlefield
    casualties

5
Pioneers of Prehospital CareEarly 1800s Baron
LarreySurgeon General, Napoleons Army
Baron Larreys Flying Ambulance
6
Crimean War 1854-56
  • Modern nursing care introduced by Florence
    Nightingale
  • Casualties begin to be evacuated by railroad

FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE THE LADY WITH THE LAMP
7
  • Note a pattern developing the faster the injured
    arrived at a hospital, the better the survival.
    This principle has not changed

8
Linda Richards
  • Americas first trained nurse
  • Traveled to England to learn from Florence
    Nightingale who had started a school for nurses
  • On her return to the U.S Richards pioneered the
    founding of nursing training schools across the
    nation.
  • In 1885 she helped to establish Japan's first
    nursing training program

9
Air Evacuation
  • First began in Paris in 1870 when hot-air
    balloons were used to evacuate 160 soldiers
  • Did not become common until the second world war

10
BEGINNINGS OF EMS IN THE U.S.
LOAD AND GO
ORIGINAL AMERICAN AMBULANCE AND ORIGIN OF THE
TERM HAUL ASS
11
American Civil War
12
Civil War
  • Railroads continue to be used to evacuate
    casualties
  • Army still used ambulances much like Napoleon
  • Death rate very high because germs were unknown
    as the cause of infection barns used as
    hospitals
  • U.S. Army set up the Medical Corps
  • System-wide approach with ambulances on the
    battlefield transporting to system of hospitals
  • Aid stations
  • Field hospitals
  • Rear general hospitals
  • This model was used until the Vietnam war

13
WORLD WAR I
14
WORLD WAR I
  • Poor planning (no field hospitals) caused
    excessive evacuation times of 12-18 hours
  • High mortality rates gt20
  • Most died of hemorrhagic shock
  • No antibiotics so sepsis common
  • Blood transfusions just beginning to be used
  • Thomas half-ring femur splint was considered the
    greatest advancement in trauma care at this time

15
WORLD WAR II
  • Evacuation time for wounded decreased to 4-6
    hours
  • Antibiotics developed
  • Plasma and blood transfusions common
  • Hospitals closer to the front to decrease time to
    surgery
  • Fixed wing air transport
  • Mortality rate 3.3

16
KOREAN WAR
  • Evacuation time averaged 2-4 hours
  • Helicopter evacuation of wounded introduced
  • More use of electrolyte solutions
  • Better antibiotics
  • Surgical hospitals closer to front lines
  • Mortality rate 2.4

17
VIETNAM WAR
  • Casualties taken directly from front lines to
    surgical hospital by helicopter
  • Average evacuation time 35 minutes
  • Average time to surgery 1-2 hours
  • Mortality 2.3
  • Civilian systems have never matched this

18
IRAQ WAR
  • Rediscovered tourniquets
  • Development of hemostatic agents
  • Developed concept of CAB for patients with
    exsanguinating hemorrhage

19
Civilian Prehospital Medical Care
  • Before Vietnam War
  • A few large hospitals provided ambulance services
    (transport only)
  • Bellevue Hospital began horse drawn ambulances in
    1869
  • No trained providers
  • Rural areas used hearses for ambulances
  • This went on until the 1970s

20
ORIGINAL VOLUNTEER RESCUE
  • Good Samaritan was much like volunteer rescue
    folks
  • Considered 2nd class citizen
  • Cared deeply for his fellowman and was willing to
    go out of his way and furnish his own ambulance
    to help him
  • Set a standard we all have to live up to today

21
Beginning of EMTs
  • First prehospital training course taught to
    Chicago Fire Department in 1957
  • Prehospital training did not catch on until the
    late 1960s and with few exceptions paramedic
    training did not begin until the 1970s

22
PARAMEDICS WERE INVENTED TO REPLACE DOCTORS IN
TREATING PREHOSPITAL CARDIAC PATIENTS
  • AT THAT TIME CARDIAC PATIENTS REQUIRED CAREFUL
    DELIBERATE CARE
  • SPEED WAS NOT NEEDED
  • THAT PRINICPLE IS NO LONGER TRUE

23
Frank Pantridge, MD1916-2004
24
Frank Pantridge, MD
  • Called the grandfather of prehospital ALS
  • In Belfast Ireland, in the 1950s he began using
    the new CPR system for cardiac resuscitation but
    realized he needed to get the treatment into the
    field
  • Developed the first portable defibrillator and
    then the mobile intensive care ambulance

25
Peter Safar, MD 1924-2003
26
Peter Safar, M.D.
  • Intensive care specialist who pioneered the
    ABCs of CPR including mouth-to-mouth
    resuscitation
  • Worked with Laerdal to develop the Resusci Anne
  • Helped develop the first ALS ambulances
  • In 1966 trained some of the first paramedics by
    taking 44 unemployed African-American men and
    giving them 3000 hours of training (doctors got
    3500)

27
Nancy Caroline, MD1944-2002
THE MOTHER OF PARAMEDICS
28
Nancy Caroline, MD
  • She was influenced by Dr. Safar to believe that
    nonphysicians could be trained to perform
    physician skills
  • She worked in the field with Dr. Safars original
    paramedics
  • Was the original author of the DOT national
    standard curriculum for paramedics in 1974
  • There were no paramedic textbooks so in 1975 she
    wrote the original textbook Emergency Care in the
    Streets
  • Now in its 6th edition

29
Milestones
  • In 1968 the American College of Emergency
    Physicians was formed. This led to the
    development of residency training programs and
    eventually to the recognition of emergency
    medicine as a specialty in 1979..

In the House of Medicine, the light that is never
turned off
30
R Adams Cowley 1917-1991
31
R Adams Cowley, MD
  • In the 1960s Dr. R Adams Cowley, a cardiovascular
    surgeon, did pioneer work in trauma care and
    helped bring about special training in trauma
    care for surgeons.
  • Developed the concept of the Golden Hour
  • He was responsible for the development of the
    Maryland Institute for EMS Systems (MIEMSS), the
    first statewide EMS system

32
EMERGENCY 1972-1977
RAMPARTS
33
Milestones
  • 1968 St. Vincents Hospital in New York City
    began first mobile coronary care unit
  • 1969 Miami, FL Fire Department began the nations
    first paramedic program under Dr. Eugene Nagel
  • 1972 The television show Emergency! Began
  • Soon every town wanted their own Ramparts
  • There were 12 medic units in the country at the
    time
  • Four years later at least 50 of the population
    was within 10 minutes of a medic unit
  • 1973 St. Anthonys Hospital in Denver starts the
    nations first civilian aeromedical transport
    service (Flight for Life)

34
Rocco Morando
35
Rocco Morando
  • Was instrumental in establishing the National
    Registry of EMTs in 1970 and became its first
    executive director in 1971
  • He retired in 1981 and the headquarters building
    was named after him
  • Was also instrumental in establishing the
    National Association of EMTs in 1975
  • He and Dr. McSwain helped keep NAEMT afloat
    during the early years when support (and funds)
    was sparse

36
Milestones
  • 1975
  • First paramedic textbook written by Nancy
    Caroline
  • National Association of EMTs is formed
  • 1978 American Heart Association begins the
    Alphabet Courses with ACLS
  • 1980 American College of Surgeons begins the ATLS
    course for physicians
  • 1982 Alabama Chapter of ACEP begins BTLS course
  • 1983 NAEMT and ACS begin PHTLS

37
James O. Page1936-2004
38
James O. Page
  • Probably best known of all those mentioned so far
  • Untiring speaker who was always ready to tell
    people about EMS
  • A man of many parts, Fire chief, lawyer,
    technical consultant for Emergency!, first EMS
    director for North Carolina, prolific writer and
    speaker, founder of JEMS, most recognized
    spokesman for EMS until his death in 2004

39
Norman McSwain, MD
40
Norman McSwain, MD
  • Dedicated trauma surgeon and educator
  • Supporter of EMS for over 30 years
  • Founding father of NAEMT
  • Founding father of PHTLS and continues to serve
    as medical director
  • Gentleman and scholar
  • But dont ever let him drive

41
EMS PRESENT
42
WE ARE AT THE END OF THE BEGINNING IN EMS
Ray Fowler, MD
43
EMS at Present
  • Except for isolated instances, the whole country
    is within a reasonable distance of an ALS
    ambulance
  • EMS systems continue to vary widely with few
    states having centralized management of the
    system
  • Some states dont even have a State EMS Medical
    Director
  • Many states do not require that their EMS
    training programs be accredited

44
Standardization of the Profession
  • In process of finally standardizing levels of
    prehospital EMS providers
  • EMT
  • BLS including AED and CPAP
  • Only a committee could have come up with the
    brilliant idea to take a generic term (EMT) that
    applied to all levels of providers and make it
    refer to only one level, thus rendering all
    previous references confusing
  • Advanced EMT
  • Above Rescue airway, IV fluids limited
    medications
  • Paramedic
  • Above intubation Monitor Defibrillator more
    meds

45
Have Yet to Prove to Everyone that Paramedics
Make a Difference
  • EMS is the largest hoax ever foisted on the
    American people. There is no data, not one
    study, which shows that anything beyond the
    intermediate level basic EMT with a
    defibrillator capabilities does anything in the
    long run to change the health care of the United
    States
  • Gregory Henry, MD
  • Dr. Henry is an expert in risk management, not
    EMS, but he strikes a nerve

46
EMS
FUTURE
47
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?WE FACE SOME
CHALLENGES
48
Must Recruit More EMTs
  • There is a critical need for competent,
    professional EMTs
  • Prehospital EMS is an exciting career that should
    be emotionally and financially rewarding
  • Somewhere we got the idea that only older
    men/women should be EMTs
  • Students just out of high school are too
    immature to be EMTs
  • Bill Brown, National Registry
  • Tell that to the nursing profession
  • We must begin recruiting students while they are
    in high school

49
Paramedics Must Change How They Define Themselves
  • At present too many define themselves by what
    procedures they can do
  • Too many dishonor the profession by being more
    interested in doing invasive procedures than
    caring for the patient
  • The worth of a prehospital provider is not in
    what procedures they do but how many people they
    save
  • Less may be more
  • Patient care must come first
  • In most instances this means Load and Go with
    most interventions done in the ambulance
  • ALS is almost impossible when there is only one
    EMT in the back of the ambulance

50
Critical Care Systems (STEMI, Stroke, Trauma)
will allow Paramedics to prove their worth
51
Volunteers will Continue to be Needed
  • They are critical in many rural areas
  • Local, state, or federal funding is not likely to
    provide enough funding to replace them
  • They are capable of providing the same level of
    care as the best municipal or private services

52
Must Introduce Science to Prehospital Care
  • Must scientifically prove what saves lives in the
    prehospital environment
  • Should do only those things that are proven to
    help
  • If there is no scientific data that a procedure
    helps people, we should stop doing it
  • This reflects positively not negatively on our
    worth
  • If the data shows a procedure decreases survival
    it MUST be stopped or changed to make it safer
  • At present the data shows rapid transport to the
    appropriate hospital is the most important role
    of prehospital medicine
  • Scientific studies are difficult in the
    prehospital arena but must be pursued if we are
    to be accepted as a profession

53
Quantitative Capnography Must Become a
Requirement for Intubation
  • Has been standard of care for anesthesiologists
    for over 10 years
  • Became standard of care because it essentially
    eliminated unrecognized esophageal intubations
  • If Doctors who specialize in intubating patients
    cant always recognize an esophageal intubation
    without capnography, why do we think we can?
  • Scientific studies show we have too many
    unrecognized esophageal intubations in the field
  • Quantitative CO2 devices are now under 1000

54
(No Transcript)
55
Device that Reads Out Rate of Ventilation and CO2
levelSOMETHING LIKE THIS MUST BE USED IF WE DO
INTUBATION IN THE FIELD (OR THE E.D.)
56
CPAP WILL ELIMINATE MOST INTUBATIONS EXCEPT
FORTRAUMA CASES
  • It is non-invasive and can be used for many
    medical causes of dyspnea

57
Must Better Define the Roleof Helicopter EMS
  • Helicopter EMS is a critical service but is
    frequently being misused
  • It should be reserved for critical cases in which
    the use of the helicopter will SIGNIFICANTLY
    reduce the transport time
  • In Alabama the average response time is 22
    minutes and the average transport time is 17
    minutes
  • On average the patient is not delivered for one
    hour after the initial call to the helicopter

58
FINAL THOUGHTFUTURE EMS WILL BE BETTER OR WORSE
DEPENDING ON WHAT WE DO, BUT IT IS NOT GOING
AWAYTHE AMERICAN PEOPLE LOVE EMS, WARTS AND ALL
AND RIGHTLY SO
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