Chapter 1 Flashcards
Advanced EMT (AEMT)
An individual who has training in specific aspects of advanced life support, such as intravenous therapy, and the administration of certain emergency medications.
Advanced Life Support (ALS)
Advance life-saving procedures, some of which are now being provided by the EMT.
Americans With Disability Act (ADA)
Comprehensive legislation that is designed to protect people with disabilities against discrimination.
Automated External Defibrillator (AED)
A device that detects treatable life-threatening cardia dysthymias (ventricular fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia) and delivers the appropriate electrical shock to the patient.
Certification
A process in which a person, an institution, or a program is evaluated and recognized as meeting certain predetermined standards to provide safe and ethical care.
Community Paramedicine
A health care model in which experienced paramedic receive advanced training to equip them to provide additional services in the prehospital environment, such as health evaluations, monitoring of chronic illnesses or conditions, and patient advocacy.
Continuous Quality Improvement
A system of internal and external reviews and audits of all aspects of an EMS system aiming at improving outcomes.
Credentialing
An established process to determine the qualifications necessary to be allowed to practice a particular profession, or to function as an organization.
Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD)
A system that assists dispatchers in selecting appropriate units to respond to a particular call for assistance and provides callers with vital instructions until the arrival of EMS crews.
Emergency Medical Responder (EMR)
A first trained professional, such as police officer, firefighter, lifeguard, or other rescuer, who may arrive first at the scene of an emergency to provide initial medical assistance.
Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
A multidisciplinary system that represents the combined efforts of several professionals and agencies to provide prehospital emergency care to the sick and injured.
Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)
An individual who was training in basic life support, including automated external defibrillation, use of definitive airway adjunct, and assisting patients with certain medications.
Evidence-based Medicine (EBM)
An approach to medicine where decisions are based on well-conducted research, classifying recommendations based on the strength of the scientific evidence; also called science-based medicine.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Federal legislation passed in 1996. Its main effect in EMS is in limiting availability of patients’ health care information and penalizing violations of patient advocacy.
Intravenous (IV) Therapy
The delivery of medication directly into a vein.
Licensure
The process whereby a component authority, usually the state, allows people to perform a regulated act.
Medical Control
Physician instructions given directly by radio or cell phone(online/direct) or indirectly by protocol/guidelines (off-line/indirect,) as authorized by the medical director of the service program.
Medical Director
The physician who authorized or delegates to the EMT the authority to provide medical care in the field.
Mobile Integrated Health Care (MIH)
A method of delivering health care that involves providing health care within the community rather than at a physician’s office or hospital.
National EMD Scope of Practice Model
A document created by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) that outlines the skills performed by various EMS providers.
Paramedic
An individual who has extensive training in advanced life support, including endotracheal intubation, emergency pharmacology, cardiac monitoring, and other advanced assessment and treatment skills.
Primary Prevention
Efforts to prevent an injury or illness from ever occurring.
Primary Service Area
The designated area in which the EMS agency is responsible for the provision of prehospital emergency care and transportation to the hospital.
Public Health
The branch of medicine that is focused on examining the health needs of entire populations with the goal of preventing health problems.
Public Safety Access Point
A call center, staffed by trained personnel who are responsible for managing requests for police, fire, and ambulance services.
Quality Control
Oversight by the medical director to ensure the appropriate medical care standards are met by EMTs on each call.
Secondary Prevention
Efforts to limit the effects of an injury or illness that you cannot completely prevent.