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Jason, excellent topic for discussion.
You said the RN called 911, yet there was a valid DNR. So let me ask this, with the valid DNR, and you being provided the DNR, you said this should have been an ALS call, yet what beyond the BLS level would you have been able to do? I agree that it was an ALS call and the Medic should have teched instead of the EMT for legal reasons, and without the DNR in hand and/or verified through Med control, It would have been run as an ALS call. Yet, with the DNR you can not provide recusicitative care.
Regardless of who techs it, after the run, Med Control, and supervisors would have been informed of the situation as IMO that's an abuse of the 911 system.
We had a somewhat similar run a couple of years ago. I was on a 911 truck that got dispatched to a home for an elderly male with difficulty breathing. When we got to the home, the home health tech said there was a DNR, yet was unable to provide it. She told us that the hospice nurse had been called and that she (the hospice nurse) had a copy of the DNR with her. We contacted our Med Control who told us without the DNR in possession we had to work it. Needless to say the DNR was delivered to the ER later, but that was out of our hands.
Exactly, transfer to hospice or not I myself think it should have been teched by a medic.The medic should be smacked for inappropriately downgrading care. A DNR does not mean Do not treat.
In addition, should this patient pass away, then the medic must pronounce.
I agree that the medic should have taken this call, if nothing else, to be able to give pain meds or IV if the pt needed it. I have more of a problem with the nurse calling 911 though. I have worked with Hospice several times. Both with family members and with pts of mine. I have never heard of them calling 911 and they informed us NOT to call 911 unless we had talked to them. Why did she have a problem with the pt dying at home? Usually that is why they are at home with hospice, to die at home and in peace. That just doesn't make sense to me.
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