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Air medical journal · Nov 2014
Paramedic specialization: a strategy for better out-of-hospital care.
- Sean M Caffrey, John R Clark, Scott Bourn, Jim Cole, John S Cole, Maria Mandt, Jimm Murray, Harry Sibold, David Stuhlmiller, and Eric R Swanson.
- Air Med. J. 2014 Nov 1; 33 (6): 265-73.
AbstractDemographic, economic, and political forces are driving significant change in the US health care system. Paramedics are a health profession currently providing advanced emergency care and medical transportation throughout the United States. As the health care system demands more team-based care in nonacute, community, interfacility, and tactical response settings, specialized paramedic practitioners could be a valuable and well-positioned resource to meet these needs. Currently, there is limited support for specialty certifications that demand appropriate education, training, or experience standards before specialized practice by paramedics. A fragmented approach to specialty paramedic practice currently exists across our country in which states, regulators, nonprofit organizations, and other health care professions influence and regulate the practice of paramedicine. Multiple other medical professions, however, have already developed effective systems over the last century that can be easily adapted to the practice of paramedicine. Paramedicine practitioners need to organize a profession-based specialty board to organize and standardize a specialty certification system that can be used on a national level. Copyright © 2014 Air Medical Journal Associates. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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