Essay On Emergency Medical Services

920 Words2 Pages

Emergency Medical Services are a system of emergency services committed to delivering emergency and immediate medical care outside of a hospital, transportation to definitive care, in attempt to establish a efficient system by which individuals do not try to transport themselves or administer non-professional medical care. The primary goal of most Emergency Medical Services is to offer treatment to those in demand of urgent medical care, with the objective of adequately treating the current conditions, or organizing for a prompt transportation of the person to a hospital or place of greater care.
Philosophically the term emergency medical service has developed to represent a transition from a simplistic system of vehicles delivering only transportation, to a system by which certified medical care is provided on scene and during transport. However in some less developed regions, emergency vehicles are still fundamentally a means of transportation to the medical facility that will provide care.
Commonly throughout most countries of the world, citizens of the society at large establish the system for Emergency Medical Services. In the case that the public is not willing or capable of summoning such a service, the country often finds other emergency services, businesses, or the government and authorities who act to employ a system. In other parts of the world, the emergency medical service additionally takes on the role of transporting patients from one medical facility to an alternative one. This occurs with some frequency because once a patient is analyzed and provided care at the immediate hospital; it may be more appropriate for a variety of reasons the patient needs to move to another facility. As one can see, the relat...

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... the same model of Emergency Medical Service, they have responded to the health related issue of gunshot injuries in very similar ways. They each follow the methods as described earlier in order to handle trauma situations such as severe gunshot wounds. The difference lies however in each doctors assessment of the harmed individual. It is up to the doctor of physician’s discretion to decide the type of medical treatment on the scene and when the person is stable or ready to for transport. There is no direct evidence that shows each country’s doctors have been trained differently to assess these types of situations, so it is difficult to determine if one country is more successful than the other in there Emergency Medical Services system. It is more likely that each country has a similar success rate as they are employing a fundamentally similar system of care.

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