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  • I don't know where you live,but as you are mentioning 911 I guess it's the US - there are a shitton of ambulance services that use nurses as BLS or ALS providers around the world. (The netherlands, sweden, Italy, Spain, just to name a few. I intentionally do not name the US here,see below)

    For the US, UK and to a lesser extent Germany there is a simple reason: You guys did fight tooth and nail not to do so.

    But let's go back a bit further: If you look into the history of EMS it's not like that the fire departments were that happy to do so (and to this day I am a staunch opponent to them doing so. It's an all around bad idea) and in many parts of these countries police, cab services and funeral homes did provide the first ambulances, other than charity organisations.

    When it became clear that prehospital care was needed in these countries the fire departments or independent "transport only" ambulance services had become the norm in most areas and there indeed were some people that pushed for nurse staffed ambulances - as nurses during the war had shown to be beneficial in that role.

    But they were basically scolded, often even publicly insulted, by nursing associations:

    • Nursing back then was far from an independent profession like it is today. Back then actual medical skills were largely dependent on doctors orders with very little leeway for interpretation. (From a nursing book in 1958 "if the blood pressure of a patient is too high or too low must,under all circumstances,be decided by the doctor and it's not upon the nurse to decide this.") Asking someone who is fully dependent on another profession for decision making to now make independent decisions without that profession and in the worst possible environment and use skills that the same person wouldn't be allowed to use in their regular workplace understandably was a major cause for concern, dissent and resentment back then. And to some extent this is understandable.
    • The second factor was based on the issue of gender and "morals". Nursing back then was a mostly female profession. Putting them to the scenes ambulances need to respond to (brothels, crime scenes, etc.) would, according to a female nursing director in a UK hospital "corrupt my girls". Additionally, due to the fact that heavy lifting would be required(see below) and the ambulances would need to be driven by someone, the "poor nurses" would need to work alongside male ambulance drivers and that would also lead to immorality. (Their words, not mine. In case of the UK somewhat insulting to their Queen,imho)
    • Another factor was surely the fact that "transport only" ambulances already existed and that (also due to the lack of proper equipment) it was (rightfully so) considered backbreaking work - patients did need to be lifted far more than today, lifting equipment was primitive and medical equipment was far heavier. (I remember defibrillators that had 40kg...and I am not that old). So adding a third person would mean extra cost while you still need men (according to their reasoning back then). And as the first paramedic provides little more than BLS+ it was not that resource intensive to teach the people already doing the job.

    Nowadays nursing has developed a lot. But so has paramedicine and it is an independent health care profession in the more professional systems (CAN,UK,IR,AU,NZ,GER,POL,etc.). Because skills,mindset and approaches towards patient care are different. The US with it's abhorrent EMS system uses nurses in some roles,but tbh, the main reason is a lack of proper paramedic training standards, standardisation and oversight and the results are, well, underwhelming.

    And why are nurses not named in line with other first responders in the US and similarly in a lot of other countries?

    Because they aren't first responders. The issue with being a first responder is not the level of care, it's the "unknown". Hospitals are, to a certain extent a controlled environment. Even in the ED you most of the time know what's happening next, even if the next patient is a multi system trauma and comes in without prior notification it's still your playing field. You have light, it's warm/cold, you are rarely alone, you have your equipment where it was the day before and the day before. On scene it's different. The next call might be a mansion. Or in a ditch. Or a methlab. It's the same people you see in the ED, but now it's their home turf. I have resuscitated an almost naked 12 year old in -20° C alone (as a in "single responder") in a park known for it's shady people. That's different.

    Don't get me wrong: Nursing has it's own challenges - I worked both sides long enough to know that I sure as hell won't ever work another hour in nursing. As a para you have 1 patient most of the time. Not 25. Once you know your call,you can be almost sure that you won't have another patient until you complete the call there won't be another patient suddenly taking away your attention. You can leave the patient after like an hour max. And you rarely see them again.

    All these things are different in nursing. Multiple patients, changes in priorities, seeing patients day after day - it is its own beast. But it's different.

    I am happy for everyone who does nursing. So am I for every midwife. Or every guy and gal that takes up paramedicine. We all have our place in this hellish trade.

    (Source: Working as a paramedic -critcare nowadays - for almost 25 years now, worked inside hospitals for 7, mainly anaesthesia, critcare and ED, now consulting hospitals and EMS)

  • Originally, fire departments only dealt with fires. In the 1960's and 1970's it became clear that a rapid response health service would be beneficial. Rather than create a whole new system from scratch, that function was tacked onto the existing fire service by having EMTs and paramedics on staff. And the initial focus was primarily on providing rapid transit: delivering the victim to a hospital as quickly as possible. Response time was the dominant metric used to grade emergency medical providers. It took more decades to fully appreciate that treatments applied at the accident scene or in transit could be as important as, or more important than, response time.

    There's an argument to be made that fire departments are somewhat obsolete. They spend most of their time dealing with medical and mental health issues, not fighting fires. We would probably benefit as a society by replacing a lot of firefighters with house call nurses to help manage people's long-term health issues before they become emergencies.

    • Keep in mind most firefighters in the USA are volunteers who just drive to the station when there's a fire - not paid professionals.

      My station just hired our first full time paramedics, we have a few part time paid firefighter+EMTs, and some volunteer firefighter+EMTs.

      While we're not getting that many fire calls, the few we get are pretty bad. Like, would burn down a neighborhood bad, because everything is now made from fast burning plastics. Sofas, carpets, house paint, siding, roofs, furniture, and clothes are all pretty much petroleum based. And will burn extremely hot and fast when it catches, spreading to all the surrounding exposure buildings.

      My buddy works at Underwriters Laboratories and was saying they just did a burn test that showed the typical house today will catch neighboring houses on fire just from the infrared radiation through their windows. Even if the neighboring houses are soaking wet, the insides can still catch fire through the windows.

      So we're in a jam - we hardly ever have real house fires, but they are extremely dangerous and will burn the whole town down if we don't get there asap.

      Not to mention all the car crashes, hazmat spills, EMS lift assists. I'm sure there's a way we can improve the situation, but I honestly don't know what it would look like. The US is a huge place that's very spread out, I don't think we're ever going to fully go away from volunteer firefighters, as much as I think it would be more efficient.

      Long story short, if you're able to lift a 30lb box overhead, the volunteer fire service is desperate in most places. Volunteerism is down like 90% from it's peak. But most fire stations are entirely volunteer. So there's a very real need for more folks to pitch in. I'm happy to chat with anyone who is curious and wants to get into it. I highly recommend it, it's done wonders for my personal life.

  • The special provisions that exist or have been proposed are for first responders because they breathed in dust and were exposed to various health hazards during the response.

    What above and beyond taking care of do people who weren't exposed to any of that in the backend need?

    • Just kind of thinking out loud

      All of those people who were brought into ERs from ground zero and the people, vehicles, etc. that brought them there would have been covered in that same dust that's causing health issues for first responders, that means doctors and nurses probably also received some level of exposure to that dust because I doubt all of those people showered on the way.

      I don't know how their exposure level stacks up against the people who were on-scene, I'm sure it's an order of magnitude less, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was still significant enough to cause some health problems. IBM pretty sure I've seen some evidence of people who live with firefighters developing health issues from secondhand exposure like that.

      On top of that, there's also the psychological burden that always gets overlooked. I'm sure that took a hell of a toll on healthcare workers.

      And there's a recognition aspect, because for all of the people who died, there were also many more who were injured, and more than a few of them owe their lives to the doctors and nurses who treated them just as much as to the first responders who got them to the hospital.

  • They’re the roadies at the music festival. Everyone forgets they’re the ones who make it all possible.

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