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Well, Alfonso,

It will prevent your medical director from being able to determine what

skills you'll be able to perform.

Unless you have a Bachelor's degree specifically in EMS, you will not be able

to perform any advanced Paramedic skills such as RSI, surgical airways,

administering certain drugs, making a transfer with certain drips running,

employing a ventilator in your transports, or even no-riding a patient based

upon your

judgment.

You will be limited to performing those skills set forth in the scope of

practice rule, no matter what your medical director wants you to do, you will

not

be able to even teach skills outside the scope of practice, you will be

subject to NATIONAL control, not state control, if you step out of line in

teaching

or practice, you can lose your certificate or license, there will be no more

EMT-Intermediates in Texas, no more ECAs, and a lot more stuff that will impact

you.

Please go to the websites and read the scope of practice model in its

entirety. Then see if this is what you want to have in place in Texas. If it

comes into Texas, it will be a giant step backward for all of us.

We will in essence lose local control and be subject to control from

invisible folks living in places like Washington, DC, Pittsburg, PA, and who

know

where else.

I am, today, in Sacramento, California. California has always had a

legislated scope of practice. EMS service SUCKS in California. It is so tied

up

in bureaucratic bull that the kind of service we routinely supply in Texas

almost never happens in California.

Adoption of the Scope of Practice rule will put us squarely in the same place

CA is, with a bureaucratically mandated scope of practice, no local control,

and horrible service.

The people who are pushing this are basically fire department based EMS

people who are now and always have been providing lousy service. They want to

legitimize the level that they are providing and build a wall against having to

ever do better. They know who they are, and they never have the guts to

challenge me on this. They know they cannot make a case for state of the art

service. So they keep their mouths shut.

If the Scope of Practice comes into law in Texas, Paramedics will be doing

little more than EMT-Intermediates do now, and there will be a legal

justification for it.

Much has been said about this SoP providing an opportunity for folks to

achieve advanced degrees and be able to practice as an advanced level. Pie in

the

Sky. Ain't gonna happen. No money for it; no political support for it at

the levels that it's needed, namely, rural.

So those of us who are practicing advanced skills at the rural level will

have to stop, while the big city FD folks can crow that they're STATE of the ART

based upon the limited Paramedic practice they want to have put into place.

Some folks are gonna be awful mad at me for saying that. But believe me,

that's what's at work here. It's all about limiting the scope of practice for

big city fire department EMS services and legitimizing what they do. These

people couldn't care less about what happens in rural areas. It's politics,

son! And politics corrupts almost everybody who gets into it. Nuff said.

There are those who really believe that this is an opportunity for a new

level of paramedic practice to emerge, for us to branch out into primary care,

clinic care delivered on scene, Treat and Street! Utopian. Ain't gonna

happen. No political support for it among those who pay for our services.

Until that happens, SoP will never fly. Now, can we make Treat and Street

happen? Well, why don't you just pick up your phone and call the CEO of

Blue Cross Blue Shield and say, " Hey, buddy, why don't you let us treat patients

on the street, thereby saving you the hospital bills incurred when we

transport them? " Know what he's gonna say? " When the physicians and the

hospital

administrators tell me that's what they want, we'll talk to you. " Until then,

there's no reimbursement for Treat and Street. No reimbursement, it ain't

gonna happen.

They tried this in Red River, New Mexico. It was a resounding failure.

They couldn't figure out a way to get compensated for what they did. So it

went away.

Physicians who are out in front of their brethren tell me that eventually

this will come to pass. But it ain't gonna happen in my lifetime. Bet ya!

Show me one hospital or one physician who will tell you that they'd rather you

stitch up that little laceration, do that little test for strep and give 'em a

scrip for amoxicillin, so that they don't have to see them, and I'll buy you

the biggest steak dinner in Austin. Ain't gonna happen. Not now, not in 10

years. Maybe in 20 years.

So, you say, we have to start somewhere. OK, let's start, but let's not

throw the backstrap out with the guts. We must maintain the good things we

have going while we try to encourage the changes that need to happen.

The SoP Model is NOT the vehicle for that. Yes, it will be a great

improvement for New Jersey, Rhode Island, and some other places where they're

where we

were 20 years ago. But we don't need it.

Texas EMS ain't broke, at least as far as scope of practice is concerned.

Yes, it's broke in the regulatory system. Regulation is CTD (circling the

drain). We better get our own Board or Commission, or we'll be less respected

than the chicken pluckers.

DSHS is hanging on for us in the personages of Kathy, Mr. Janda, Terry B.,

and those remaining troopers who have a clue about EMS. But after the coming

legislature, look for even more wrenching changes. We're in extremis but most

don't know it.

The Great Guru of Scope of Practice, Greg Margolis, also the co-director of

NREMT, said that the STATE OF TEXAS had signed off on the SoP. Who did that?

Nobody will take the credit or blame. Where did that person, whoever it

is, get the guts and authority to do that? Answer that question and you'll

know and understand a lot more than I do about what's happening to Texas EMS.

We're not in a pretty situation. We're fighting for our lives, but only a

handful of us are even aware of it. Wake up. We're headed downhill at

breakneck speed.

The summary is to say to join an organization. But I won't because that

would be blatant spam. Figure it out for yourselves. If yer not a part of

the

solution, yer a part of the problem. Nuff said.

GG

So please think carefully about this. Please.

Best,

Gene

>

>

>

> > OK, back to the Scope of Practice for a few minutes.

> >

> > The impact of this document in its present form could be devastating to

> > Texas EMS, especially rural and frontier areas.

> >

>

> To play the devil's advocate for just a minute, or due to my sheer

> ignorance, how can this document be devastating to Texas EMS?

>

> -Alfonso R. ochoa

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Gene,

As much as I enjoyed reading your impassioned (yet cynical) tirade, I can't

say that I agree with most of what you said. Assertions such as " Paramedics

will be doing little more than EMT-Intermediates do now " really make me

wonder if you take us for illiterate fools or if you are just playing the

good demagogue. Unless you consider the only distinguishing characteristics

of paramedic practice to be RSI, surgical airways, and a whole bunch of

other things that you probably don't even do right now, that is patently

untrue. In an event, such tendency toward exaggeration doesn't help your

case one bit in my book. I see many positive things in the Scope of

Practice proposal, including more stringent educational requirements and

true licensure. On the other hand, I am concerned by the fact that a plan

for a smooth transition has not yet been brought forward, and that the

elimination of the EMT-I designation could have an adverse effect on rural

services.

On the whole, I think there is more good than bad. Let's face it. Right

now, there is absolutely no incentive for someone to get an Associates or

Bachelors degree in EMS if that person cannot then provide a higher level of

care. Why? Because as long as the local family practice M.D. signs off on

it, someone who went to class at night for nine months can do the exact same

thing. And in a world where librarians are getting Masters degrees... well,

don't even get me started.

I found the document to be very conciliatory, and it doesn't appear to me

like they are just trying to ram this through. In fact, they asked for

feedback as to whether there is a need for an advanced provider, whether a

resolution to the reimbursement issue is feasible, etc. " The National EMS

Scope of Practice Model Task Force intends for this document to be

'evolutionary' rather than 'revolutionary'. It is important to preserve the

best of what is working well within EMS practice as we move toward a scope

of practice model that more parallels other health care professionals. "

I get the sense that people are just so paralyzed with fear about this that

they make outrageous claims about the impending doom and gloom without

trying to take part in the process in order to shape something that is more

palatable to them. " That's the way things should be because that's the way

we've always done them. " I just hope that its not obstruction of progress

merely for the sake of obstruction.

Warmest Regards,

Lancaster

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I worked in a state with a scope of practice. It took 2 YEARS to get IO

infusion put in to the SoP, even though PALS was a common course. If

you did IOs before then the state police had full authority to arrest

you and imprison you. That very statement was in the 'preamble' of the

SoP. Let's say a medical director wanted CPAP.... can't do it, not in

the SoP - want to do it - see the 'preamble'.

I got my AAS in Parmedicine in 1983, and have a BS/MS in Health

Science. In 1983 it was thought that Paramedicine would keep pace with

nursing, resp. therapy, etc., as far as degree requirements and salary.

However, somebody forgot to tell health insurance providers, city

managers, fire chiefs, private service owners, volunteer administrators

and the like.

These folks need to be brought into the fold before we even conceive a

national SoP. I was at a national conference and heard one of the major

proponents of the national SoP state that it was a done deal - further

described it as a big locomotive on a big track screaming though the

nation.

It's up to the drivers of this locomotive to slow down and tell us all

DIRECTLY, not by www. what the true intentions of the national SoP are.

aloha,

mikey

>>> scotterems@... 12/2/04 4:32:01 AM >>>

Gene,

As much as I enjoyed reading your impassioned (yet cynical) tirade, I

can't

say that I agree with most of what you said. Assertions such as

" Paramedics

will be doing little more than EMT-Intermediates do now " really make

me

wonder if you take us for illiterate fools or if you are just playing

the

good demagogue. Unless you consider the only distinguishing

characteristics

of paramedic practice to be RSI, surgical airways, and a whole bunch

of

other things that you probably don't even do right now, that is

patently

untrue. In an event, such tendency toward exaggeration doesn't help

your

case one bit in my book. I see many positive things in the Scope of

Practice proposal, including more stringent educational requirements

and

true licensure. On the other hand, I am concerned by the fact that a

plan

for a smooth transition has not yet been brought forward, and that the

elimination of the EMT-I designation could have an adverse effect on

rural

services.

On the whole, I think there is more good than bad. Let's face it.

Right

now, there is absolutely no incentive for someone to get an Associates

or

Bachelors degree in EMS if that person cannot then provide a higher

level of

care. Why? Because as long as the local family practice M.D. signs

off on

it, someone who went to class at night for nine months can do the exact

same

thing. And in a world where librarians are getting Masters degrees...

well,

don't even get me started.

I found the document to be very conciliatory, and it doesn't appear to

me

like they are just trying to ram this through. In fact, they asked

for

feedback as to whether there is a need for an advanced provider,

whether a

resolution to the reimbursement issue is feasible, etc. " The National

EMS

Scope of Practice Model Task Force intends for this document to be

'evolutionary' rather than 'revolutionary'. It is important to

preserve the

best of what is working well within EMS practice as we move toward a

scope

of practice model that more parallels other health care

professionals. "

I get the sense that people are just so paralyzed with fear about this

that

they make outrageous claims about the impending doom and gloom without

trying to take part in the process in order to shape something that is

more

palatable to them. " That's the way things should be because that's the

way

we've always done them. " I just hope that its not obstruction of

progress

merely for the sake of obstruction.

Warmest Regards,

Lancaster

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As a side note , I would venture to say that if we adopt the SOP as

currently written, you will basically make the Flight Paramedic and the

off-shore medic without a BS the equivelant of an EMT-B with a few special

skills. We cannot lower the SOC for the sake of being politically correct and

playing nice with others.

Lee

Re: Re: Scope of Practice

,

With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your level of EMS

certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask only because I don't

remember you posting in the past and because your post is the only one I have

seen that half way supports the SOP. Generally, I just like to know who I am

listening to.

Henry Barber

scotterems@... wrote:

> Gene,

>

> As much as I enjoyed reading your impassioned (yet cynical) tirade, I can't

> say that I agree with most of what you said. Assertions such as " Paramedics

> will be doing little more than EMT-Intermediates do now " really make me

> wonder if you take us for illiterate fools or if you are just playing the

> good demagogue. Unless you consider the only distinguishing characteristics

> of paramedic practice to be RSI, surgical airways, and a whole bunch of

> other things that you probably don't even do right now, that is patently

> untrue. In an event, such tendency toward exaggeration doesn't help your

> case one bit in my book. I see many positive things in the Scope of

> Practice proposal, including more stringent educational requirements and

> true licensure. On the other hand, I am concerned by the fact that a plan

> for a smooth transition has not yet been brought forward, and that the

> elimination of the EMT-I designation could have an adverse effect on rural

> services.

>

> On the whole, I think there is more good than bad. Let's face it. Right

> now, there is absolutely no incentive for someone to get an Associates or

> Bachelors degree in EMS if that person cannot then provide a higher level of

> care. Why? Because as long as the local family practice M.D. signs off on

> it, someone who went to class at night for nine months can do the exact same

> thing. And in a world where librarians are getting Masters degrees... well,

> don't even get me started.

> I found the document to be very conciliatory, and it doesn't appear to me

> like they are just trying to ram this through. In fact, they asked for

> feedback as to whether there is a need for an advanced provider, whether a

> resolution to the reimbursement issue is feasible, etc. " The National EMS

> Scope of Practice Model Task Force intends for this document to be

> 'evolutionary' rather than 'revolutionary'. It is important to preserve the

> best of what is working well within EMS practice as we move toward a scope

> of practice model that more parallels other health care professionals. "

> I get the sense that people are just so paralyzed with fear about this that

> they make outrageous claims about the impending doom and gloom without

> trying to take part in the process in order to shape something that is more

> palatable to them. " That's the way things should be because that's the way

> we've always done them. " I just hope that its not obstruction of progress

> merely for the sake of obstruction.

> Warmest Regards,

> Lancaster

>

>

>

>

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As a side note , I would venture to say that if we adopt the SOP as

currently written, you will basically make the Flight Paramedic and the

off-shore medic without a BS the equivelant of an EMT-B with a few special

skills. We cannot lower the SOC for the sake of being politically correct and

playing nice with others.

Lee

Re: Re: Scope of Practice

,

With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your level of EMS

certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask only because I don't

remember you posting in the past and because your post is the only one I have

seen that half way supports the SOP. Generally, I just like to know who I am

listening to.

Henry Barber

scotterems@... wrote:

> Gene,

>

> As much as I enjoyed reading your impassioned (yet cynical) tirade, I can't

> say that I agree with most of what you said. Assertions such as " Paramedics

> will be doing little more than EMT-Intermediates do now " really make me

> wonder if you take us for illiterate fools or if you are just playing the

> good demagogue. Unless you consider the only distinguishing characteristics

> of paramedic practice to be RSI, surgical airways, and a whole bunch of

> other things that you probably don't even do right now, that is patently

> untrue. In an event, such tendency toward exaggeration doesn't help your

> case one bit in my book. I see many positive things in the Scope of

> Practice proposal, including more stringent educational requirements and

> true licensure. On the other hand, I am concerned by the fact that a plan

> for a smooth transition has not yet been brought forward, and that the

> elimination of the EMT-I designation could have an adverse effect on rural

> services.

>

> On the whole, I think there is more good than bad. Let's face it. Right

> now, there is absolutely no incentive for someone to get an Associates or

> Bachelors degree in EMS if that person cannot then provide a higher level of

> care. Why? Because as long as the local family practice M.D. signs off on

> it, someone who went to class at night for nine months can do the exact same

> thing. And in a world where librarians are getting Masters degrees... well,

> don't even get me started.

> I found the document to be very conciliatory, and it doesn't appear to me

> like they are just trying to ram this through. In fact, they asked for

> feedback as to whether there is a need for an advanced provider, whether a

> resolution to the reimbursement issue is feasible, etc. " The National EMS

> Scope of Practice Model Task Force intends for this document to be

> 'evolutionary' rather than 'revolutionary'. It is important to preserve the

> best of what is working well within EMS practice as we move toward a scope

> of practice model that more parallels other health care professionals. "

> I get the sense that people are just so paralyzed with fear about this that

> they make outrageous claims about the impending doom and gloom without

> trying to take part in the process in order to shape something that is more

> palatable to them. " That's the way things should be because that's the way

> we've always done them. " I just hope that its not obstruction of progress

> merely for the sake of obstruction.

> Warmest Regards,

> Lancaster

>

>

>

>

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As a side note , I would venture to say that if we adopt the SOP as

currently written, you will basically make the Flight Paramedic and the

off-shore medic without a BS the equivelant of an EMT-B with a few special

skills. We cannot lower the SOC for the sake of being politically correct and

playing nice with others.

Lee

Re: Re: Scope of Practice

,

With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your level of EMS

certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask only because I don't

remember you posting in the past and because your post is the only one I have

seen that half way supports the SOP. Generally, I just like to know who I am

listening to.

Henry Barber

scotterems@... wrote:

> Gene,

>

> As much as I enjoyed reading your impassioned (yet cynical) tirade, I can't

> say that I agree with most of what you said. Assertions such as " Paramedics

> will be doing little more than EMT-Intermediates do now " really make me

> wonder if you take us for illiterate fools or if you are just playing the

> good demagogue. Unless you consider the only distinguishing characteristics

> of paramedic practice to be RSI, surgical airways, and a whole bunch of

> other things that you probably don't even do right now, that is patently

> untrue. In an event, such tendency toward exaggeration doesn't help your

> case one bit in my book. I see many positive things in the Scope of

> Practice proposal, including more stringent educational requirements and

> true licensure. On the other hand, I am concerned by the fact that a plan

> for a smooth transition has not yet been brought forward, and that the

> elimination of the EMT-I designation could have an adverse effect on rural

> services.

>

> On the whole, I think there is more good than bad. Let's face it. Right

> now, there is absolutely no incentive for someone to get an Associates or

> Bachelors degree in EMS if that person cannot then provide a higher level of

> care. Why? Because as long as the local family practice M.D. signs off on

> it, someone who went to class at night for nine months can do the exact same

> thing. And in a world where librarians are getting Masters degrees... well,

> don't even get me started.

> I found the document to be very conciliatory, and it doesn't appear to me

> like they are just trying to ram this through. In fact, they asked for

> feedback as to whether there is a need for an advanced provider, whether a

> resolution to the reimbursement issue is feasible, etc. " The National EMS

> Scope of Practice Model Task Force intends for this document to be

> 'evolutionary' rather than 'revolutionary'. It is important to preserve the

> best of what is working well within EMS practice as we move toward a scope

> of practice model that more parallels other health care professionals. "

> I get the sense that people are just so paralyzed with fear about this that

> they make outrageous claims about the impending doom and gloom without

> trying to take part in the process in order to shape something that is more

> palatable to them. " That's the way things should be because that's the way

> we've always done them. " I just hope that its not obstruction of progress

> merely for the sake of obstruction.

> Warmest Regards,

> Lancaster

>

>

>

>

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i completely agree agree about the remarks about the

requirement for having a bach. degree to be a " paramedic "

under the " new SOP's " . when i read the article, there really

isn't must difference that the " advanced paramedic " and what

you can learn in the CCEMTP class. if i got a 4 yr degree, i

won't degrade myself to a job that only pays maybe $12/hr,

and that's only if you brown nose the right person. if i

worked my but off to get a 4 yr degree and wanted to work in

health care, i would go on to PA or Med school. EMS doesn't

pay enough to work as hard as we do just so we can

say " another day, another $0.25 " with a BS/BA.

________________________________________

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OF GOLDSTAR EMS

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also everyone remember; you could learn to do surgery in emt

school, but if your medical director won't let you do it, you

can't do it, and vise versa if your emsd wants you to do it.

so the new scope of practice will be as effective as the one

we have right now.

________________________________________

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OF GOLDSTAR EMS

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also everyone remember; you could learn to do surgery in emt

school, but if your medical director won't let you do it, you

can't do it, and vise versa if your emsd wants you to do it.

so the new scope of practice will be as effective as the one

we have right now.

________________________________________

THIS EMAIL DOES NOT REFLECT THE VIEWS

OF GOLDSTAR EMS

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also everyone remember; you could learn to do surgery in emt

school, but if your medical director won't let you do it, you

can't do it, and vise versa if your emsd wants you to do it.

so the new scope of practice will be as effective as the one

we have right now.

________________________________________

THIS EMAIL DOES NOT REFLECT THE VIEWS

OF GOLDSTAR EMS

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There are a couple things we should all remember. Firstly, the

document is a draft and thus may be modified. And secondly,

sensationalism serves little purpose. My suggestion is that we band

together under a unified banner, act rationally and try to add our

two cents worth to the final document. EMSAT seems like the most

likely unified banner.

On another point, there have been several very good responses to this

thread and I have really enjoyed reading them. My only complaint is

that several of the messages have been unsigned. Please, please sign

your message with a minimum of your name. I was told when I first

joined this group that an unsigned message hold little credibility.

Regards,

Larry Pacchioni

NREMT-P

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david.adler@... writes:

> Precisely right. It's funny how the docs and nurses seem to have

> intuitively understood this, and we still don't have a grasp on it.

Some years back a rather interesting fellow (Texan, of course) by the name

of Bob Kellow posited this perceived uniqueness to be the problem most

responsible for the lack of progress in EMS. Below is Bob's article in its

entirety. This is a good read.

Regards,

Donn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P

~~ Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo ~~

Don't Miss EMStock

www.EMStock.com

May 20 - 22, 2005

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Have you ever wondered why the EMS industry consistently fails to

develop, promote and achieve common objectives? Have you ever asked

yourself why there is so much conflict, divisiveness and parochialism in

EMS? I advance the following theory:

[The Illusion of Gorgeous Uniqueness] is the personal or organizational

belief that one's opinions, needs, abilities, structures, economies or

demographics are so unique, distinct or irreplaceable, that if the

person or organization were to disappear from the face of the planet

tomorrow, the future of EMS (indeed all of civilization) would be

irreversibly harmed.

In his landmark 1966 book entitled, " The Territorial Imperative " ,

Ardrey described territoriality (claiming exclusive rights over turf)

among similar and dissimilar animal populations. In this context, the

survival of a given species (the whole) is dependent on the ability of

its constituent members (like individuals) to identify, establish,

control and defend familiar boundaries. The like individuals appreciate

(genetically) that the survival of the species bears greater consequence

than the survival of any single or random grouping of like individuals.

The " Illusion " is a simple manifestation of human territoriality run

amuck, where our predisposition to create unique characteristics within

our EMS " species " has led to the destruction of our identicalness. That

is why there's not a single EMS identity, nor a rational strategy to

create one. It's also why EMS organizations are most often ineffective

and short-lived.

The " Illusion " promotes segregation and forces us to seek discreteness

(We vs. They), and is the antithesis of group identity. Perhaps this is

the result of three decades spent in the relentless pursuit of

acceptance and appreciation on the part of the public and our peers and

superiors in organized medicine. Who knows?

Regardless of the cause(s), today's EMS marketplace is so segmented and

driven by this " Illusion " that its constituent parts cannot be viewed as

a whole. We seem to be transfixed by the need to be different and to

defend our personal or organizational territories, even to the extent

that such behavior has and will continue to result in isolation and the

conspicuous loss of group identity - along with the inherent negative

consequences associated with same.

We are what we do - not who we work for. Imagine what it would be like

to attend a Texas EMS Conference where the wearing of duty uniforms and

all references to organizational affiliations was prohibited. Oh my God,

who and what would we then be? See my point? We would be forced to

confront our identicalness and common characteristics, rather than

strut, posture and impose ourselves along organizational lines. What if

we chose instead to ignore the " means to the end " , and see ourselves as

medical practitioners, who are organized around, and participants in a

growing body of scientific knowledge?

Somewhere along the way we have managed to suppress the gene at allows

us to recognize and work cooperatively with those of our own species.

This has resulted in our collective inability to identify, establish,

control and defend our boundaries, thereby leaving us susceptible to

influence by everyone and everything external to EMS.

In comparison to the rest of the animal kingdom, aren't we supposed to

be smarter than this?

Bob Kellow

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david.adler@... writes:

> Precisely right. It's funny how the docs and nurses seem to have

> intuitively understood this, and we still don't have a grasp on it.

Some years back a rather interesting fellow (Texan, of course) by the name

of Bob Kellow posited this perceived uniqueness to be the problem most

responsible for the lack of progress in EMS. Below is Bob's article in its

entirety. This is a good read.

Regards,

Donn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P

~~ Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo ~~

Don't Miss EMStock

www.EMStock.com

May 20 - 22, 2005

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Have you ever wondered why the EMS industry consistently fails to

develop, promote and achieve common objectives? Have you ever asked

yourself why there is so much conflict, divisiveness and parochialism in

EMS? I advance the following theory:

[The Illusion of Gorgeous Uniqueness] is the personal or organizational

belief that one's opinions, needs, abilities, structures, economies or

demographics are so unique, distinct or irreplaceable, that if the

person or organization were to disappear from the face of the planet

tomorrow, the future of EMS (indeed all of civilization) would be

irreversibly harmed.

In his landmark 1966 book entitled, " The Territorial Imperative " ,

Ardrey described territoriality (claiming exclusive rights over turf)

among similar and dissimilar animal populations. In this context, the

survival of a given species (the whole) is dependent on the ability of

its constituent members (like individuals) to identify, establish,

control and defend familiar boundaries. The like individuals appreciate

(genetically) that the survival of the species bears greater consequence

than the survival of any single or random grouping of like individuals.

The " Illusion " is a simple manifestation of human territoriality run

amuck, where our predisposition to create unique characteristics within

our EMS " species " has led to the destruction of our identicalness. That

is why there's not a single EMS identity, nor a rational strategy to

create one. It's also why EMS organizations are most often ineffective

and short-lived.

The " Illusion " promotes segregation and forces us to seek discreteness

(We vs. They), and is the antithesis of group identity. Perhaps this is

the result of three decades spent in the relentless pursuit of

acceptance and appreciation on the part of the public and our peers and

superiors in organized medicine. Who knows?

Regardless of the cause(s), today's EMS marketplace is so segmented and

driven by this " Illusion " that its constituent parts cannot be viewed as

a whole. We seem to be transfixed by the need to be different and to

defend our personal or organizational territories, even to the extent

that such behavior has and will continue to result in isolation and the

conspicuous loss of group identity - along with the inherent negative

consequences associated with same.

We are what we do - not who we work for. Imagine what it would be like

to attend a Texas EMS Conference where the wearing of duty uniforms and

all references to organizational affiliations was prohibited. Oh my God,

who and what would we then be? See my point? We would be forced to

confront our identicalness and common characteristics, rather than

strut, posture and impose ourselves along organizational lines. What if

we chose instead to ignore the " means to the end " , and see ourselves as

medical practitioners, who are organized around, and participants in a

growing body of scientific knowledge?

Somewhere along the way we have managed to suppress the gene at allows

us to recognize and work cooperatively with those of our own species.

This has resulted in our collective inability to identify, establish,

control and defend our boundaries, thereby leaving us susceptible to

influence by everyone and everything external to EMS.

In comparison to the rest of the animal kingdom, aren't we supposed to

be smarter than this?

Bob Kellow

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david.adler@... writes:

> Precisely right. It's funny how the docs and nurses seem to have

> intuitively understood this, and we still don't have a grasp on it.

Some years back a rather interesting fellow (Texan, of course) by the name

of Bob Kellow posited this perceived uniqueness to be the problem most

responsible for the lack of progress in EMS. Below is Bob's article in its

entirety. This is a good read.

Regards,

Donn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P

~~ Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo ~~

Don't Miss EMStock

www.EMStock.com

May 20 - 22, 2005

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Have you ever wondered why the EMS industry consistently fails to

develop, promote and achieve common objectives? Have you ever asked

yourself why there is so much conflict, divisiveness and parochialism in

EMS? I advance the following theory:

[The Illusion of Gorgeous Uniqueness] is the personal or organizational

belief that one's opinions, needs, abilities, structures, economies or

demographics are so unique, distinct or irreplaceable, that if the

person or organization were to disappear from the face of the planet

tomorrow, the future of EMS (indeed all of civilization) would be

irreversibly harmed.

In his landmark 1966 book entitled, " The Territorial Imperative " ,

Ardrey described territoriality (claiming exclusive rights over turf)

among similar and dissimilar animal populations. In this context, the

survival of a given species (the whole) is dependent on the ability of

its constituent members (like individuals) to identify, establish,

control and defend familiar boundaries. The like individuals appreciate

(genetically) that the survival of the species bears greater consequence

than the survival of any single or random grouping of like individuals.

The " Illusion " is a simple manifestation of human territoriality run

amuck, where our predisposition to create unique characteristics within

our EMS " species " has led to the destruction of our identicalness. That

is why there's not a single EMS identity, nor a rational strategy to

create one. It's also why EMS organizations are most often ineffective

and short-lived.

The " Illusion " promotes segregation and forces us to seek discreteness

(We vs. They), and is the antithesis of group identity. Perhaps this is

the result of three decades spent in the relentless pursuit of

acceptance and appreciation on the part of the public and our peers and

superiors in organized medicine. Who knows?

Regardless of the cause(s), today's EMS marketplace is so segmented and

driven by this " Illusion " that its constituent parts cannot be viewed as

a whole. We seem to be transfixed by the need to be different and to

defend our personal or organizational territories, even to the extent

that such behavior has and will continue to result in isolation and the

conspicuous loss of group identity - along with the inherent negative

consequences associated with same.

We are what we do - not who we work for. Imagine what it would be like

to attend a Texas EMS Conference where the wearing of duty uniforms and

all references to organizational affiliations was prohibited. Oh my God,

who and what would we then be? See my point? We would be forced to

confront our identicalness and common characteristics, rather than

strut, posture and impose ourselves along organizational lines. What if

we chose instead to ignore the " means to the end " , and see ourselves as

medical practitioners, who are organized around, and participants in a

growing body of scientific knowledge?

Somewhere along the way we have managed to suppress the gene at allows

us to recognize and work cooperatively with those of our own species.

This has resulted in our collective inability to identify, establish,

control and defend our boundaries, thereby leaving us susceptible to

influence by everyone and everything external to EMS.

In comparison to the rest of the animal kingdom, aren't we supposed to

be smarter than this?

Bob Kellow

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I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

draft. Now there are two.

Kenny Navarro

CE Coordinator

Emergency Medicine Education

UT Southwestern Medical School

Henry Barber wrote:

> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

SOP. <

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I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

draft. Now there are two.

Kenny Navarro

CE Coordinator

Emergency Medicine Education

UT Southwestern Medical School

Henry Barber wrote:

> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

SOP. <

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

draft. Now there are two.

Kenny Navarro

CE Coordinator

Emergency Medicine Education

UT Southwestern Medical School

Henry Barber wrote:

> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

SOP. <

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why wouldn't you be for it. Colleges and Universities stem to make a lot of

money and have job security for a while because of it. I would venture to say

that you have not operated an ambulance or taught a class in rural or fronteir

Texas.

Ron A. Derrick LP NREMT-P

Director of Emergency Services

City of Fredericksburg

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------

Reply-To:

Date: Fri, 03 Dec 2004 15:08:31 -0000

>

>

>I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

>will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

>draft. Now there are two.

>

>Kenny Navarro

>CE Coordinator

>Emergency Medicine Education

>UT Southwestern Medical School

>

>

>

>Henry Barber wrote:

>> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

>level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

>only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

>your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

>SOP. <

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why wouldn't you be for it. Colleges and Universities stem to make a lot of

money and have job security for a while because of it. I would venture to say

that you have not operated an ambulance or taught a class in rural or fronteir

Texas.

Ron A. Derrick LP NREMT-P

Director of Emergency Services

City of Fredericksburg

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------

Reply-To:

Date: Fri, 03 Dec 2004 15:08:31 -0000

>

>

>I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

>will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

>draft. Now there are two.

>

>Kenny Navarro

>CE Coordinator

>Emergency Medicine Education

>UT Southwestern Medical School

>

>

>

>Henry Barber wrote:

>> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

>level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

>only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

>your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

>SOP. <

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why wouldn't you be for it. Colleges and Universities stem to make a lot of

money and have job security for a while because of it. I would venture to say

that you have not operated an ambulance or taught a class in rural or fronteir

Texas.

Ron A. Derrick LP NREMT-P

Director of Emergency Services

City of Fredericksburg

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------

Reply-To:

Date: Fri, 03 Dec 2004 15:08:31 -0000

>

>

>I support the National Scope of Practice, although I do think there

>will be changes in the document by the time it reaches the final

>draft. Now there are two.

>

>Kenny Navarro

>CE Coordinator

>Emergency Medicine Education

>UT Southwestern Medical School

>

>

>

>Henry Barber wrote:

>> With total respect, I ask who you are affliated with and your

>level of EMS certification along with where in Texas you work. I ask

>only because I don't remember you posting in the past and because

>your post is the only one I have seen that half way supports the

>SOP. <

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

rderrick@... writes:

> Why wouldn't you be for it. Colleges and Universities stem to

> make a lot of money and have job security for a while because of

> it. I would venture to say that you have not operated an

> ambulance or taught a class in rural or fronteir Texas.

Ron,

There are those of us in favor of a national SOP who do not work for a

college and have indeed taught classes in rural and frontier Texas. I

understand where you are coming from, but do not agree that the answer is to

retain such low minimum standards as now exist.

Look at it this way. The document under discussion is a draft and is

ultimately modifiable. We have the ability to turn it into something we

need, want and can utilize to our benefit if we would just start looking for

improvement opportunities instead of ripping it to shreds. In its current

version this SOP would be a disaster for EMS in this state....... so lets

fix it and make it work for us.

Regards,

Donn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P

" The vanity of teaching doth oft tempt a man to forget that he is a

blockhead. "

~~ Saville, Marquis of Halifax ~~

Don't Miss EMStock 2005

www.EMStock.com

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Share on other sites

rderrick@... writes:

> Why wouldn't you be for it. Colleges and Universities stem to

> make a lot of money and have job security for a while because of

> it. I would venture to say that you have not operated an

> ambulance or taught a class in rural or fronteir Texas.

Ron,

There are those of us in favor of a national SOP who do not work for a

college and have indeed taught classes in rural and frontier Texas. I

understand where you are coming from, but do not agree that the answer is to

retain such low minimum standards as now exist.

Look at it this way. The document under discussion is a draft and is

ultimately modifiable. We have the ability to turn it into something we

need, want and can utilize to our benefit if we would just start looking for

improvement opportunities instead of ripping it to shreds. In its current

version this SOP would be a disaster for EMS in this state....... so lets

fix it and make it work for us.

Regards,

Donn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P

" The vanity of teaching doth oft tempt a man to forget that he is a

blockhead. "

~~ Saville, Marquis of Halifax ~~

Don't Miss EMStock 2005

www.EMStock.com

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