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The study is based on the premise that ultrasound is not commonly used in an ambulance. There are some departments that do deploy it into the field, but of those departments there is almost no data collected about its use. Currently Paramedics are not recognized by insurance companies as health care providers capable of performing ultrasound. If there were more data on the subject that may eventually change. We are hoping to prove that not only is ultrasound useful in an ambulance, but that paramedics are good at interpreting the results. We will save images, the paramedic's diagnosis and some basic information about the call. We will not save any protected health information (PHI) or any information linking the subject to the study. The data collected will be sent to a non-biased ultrasound reviewer to grade the images for the accuracy of diagnosis and the quality of the view obtained. This data will be used to formulate a report and statistics on paramedic's ability to perform ultrasound in the field.
Full description
In the last 30 years ultrasound has contributed greatly to many fields of medicine, emergency medicine has been no exception. In fact emergency medicine is currently one of the fastest growing uses of ultrasound technology. Just as the 12 lead machine was becoming widely popular in many ER's 25 years ago and found its way into the prehospital environment. There were many doubts as to the ability to train paramedics to read 12 leads and the necessity of the prehospital 12 lead. However a recent study showed paramedics to be on par with physicians in their ability to interpret STEMI's. And many paramedics now could not fathom a system without 12 leads. If a paramedic can be trained to interpret something as complex as a 12 lead, then it should be possible to train a paramedic to interpret an ultrasound. With the advances in ultrasound technology creating lighter, smaller, cheaper, and more durable machines, there is no reason not to put this valuable technology into the prehospital field. With its expanded role in the prehospital field, the 12 lead has moved from being a convenience to becoming a real tool with the ability to activate an emergency heart cath team from the field and bypass the ER saving precious minutes in door to balloon times. The ultrasound could soon do the same by alerting the surgical team of positive internal bleeding, ruptured ectopic pregnancy, or operable AAA and bypass the ER to go straight to surgery. This intervention could be life saving in the presence of these injuries. And to add to its usefulness, ultrasound can also help to gain intravenous access, determine endotracheal tube placement, detect pacemaker capture and determine a myriad of other less acute disease processes.
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30 participants in 10 patient groups
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Jason P Bowman, EMT-P
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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