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1 ult specialists, dieticians, pharmacists and paramedics.
2 ng the process of endotracheal intubation by paramedics.
3  and adults in status epilepticus treated by paramedics.
4 e breaths along with a single 100-J shock by paramedics.
5 receive amiodarone, lidocaine, or placebo by paramedics.
6  minutes from collapse to The arrival of the paramedics.
7 f 22 emergency medical technicians (EMTs) or paramedics.
8 elevation-myocardial infarction diagnosed on paramedic 12-lead ECG.
9 ecember 2006 through July 31, 2011, in which paramedics, aided by electrocardiograph (ECG)-based deci
10 xternal defibrillators by persons other than paramedics and emergency medical technicians is advocate
11               Shared decision making between paramedics and primary care physicians can prevent trans
12 neurologist trained in emergency medicine, a paramedic, and a technician.
13 is a major public health problem, individual paramedics are rarely exposed to these cases.
14 d life support was then provided, simulating paramedic arrival.
15  minutes and who were still convulsing after paramedics arrived were given the study medication by ei
16 tion (0.8%, n = 60) were rarely performed by paramedics as final rescue airway strategies.
17 We defined exposure as the number of times a paramedic attended an OHCA where resuscitation was attem
18                                              Paramedics attended 15 113 OHCA patients of which 46.3%
19 community with police first responders and a paramedic-based emergency medical system.
20              A loading dose was initiated by paramedics before the patient arrived at the hospital, a
21  reported positive effects including reduced paramedic call outs, decreased unconscious episodes and
22     During the study period, there were 4151 paramedics employed and 48 291 OHCAs (44% with resuscita
23                               Over 12 weeks, paramedics employed by the city of San Francisco identif
24                                              Paramedics enrolled patients at 10 North American sites.
25  In this study, we examined whether previous paramedic exposure to OHCA resuscitation is associated w
26                                    Increased paramedic exposure was associated with reduced odds of a
27  are safe and effective when administered by paramedics for out-of-hospital status epilepticus in adu
28  intravenous benzodiazepines administered by paramedics for the treatment of out-of-hospital status e
29        Patients successfully resuscitated by paramedics from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest often hav
30 ntly increases with the number of OHCAs that paramedics have previously treated.
31 hospital cardiac arrest patients attended by paramedics in Seattle, Washington from 1988 to 1999 (n=1
32 er decontamination, either in the home or by paramedics in the field.
33  records of every cardiac arrest attended by paramedics in the network region) to identify all out-of
34 5% glucose placebo (n = 460) administered by paramedics in the out-of-hospital setting and continued
35                                              Paramedics in this system have the capability to adminis
36 ing County, Washington, were identified from paramedic incident reports from October 1988 to July 199
37 For faster and more reliable administration, paramedics increasingly use an intramuscular route.
38 her the administration of benzodiazepines by paramedics is an effective and safe treatment for out-of
39                     Therefore, rather than a paramedic, it will likely be a physician who is first fa
40 ients with severe sepsis were transported by paramedics (n = 7,114; 54%) or received pre-hospital int
41 urvival, we measured the association between paramedic OHCA exposure and patient survival to hospital
42 conds (range, 50 to 87 seconds) for the EMTs/paramedics (P<0.0001).
43 5 adult; Child and Mental Health Nursing and Paramedic Practice programmes.
44 33 child and 34 mental health nursing and 34 paramedic practice students).
45  child, mental health nursing, midwifery and paramedic practice students.
46          EMS advanced life support rescuers (paramedics, prehospital nurses, and EMS physicians) who
47                                              Paramedics providing emergency medical services followed
48 hat the addition of out-of-hospital ETI to a paramedic scope of practice that already includes BVM di
49 of registered AEDs (March 2015) from Toronto Paramedic Services.
50 terviews with parents, medical, nursing, and paramedic staff.
51 atewide STEMI referral strategy that advises paramedics to bypass local hospitals and transport STEMI
52 G and 80 min for patients who arrive without paramedic transport and a pre-hospital ECG.
53 anical compression device in cardiac arrest (PARAMEDIC) trial was a pragmatic, cluster-randomised ope
54                                              Paramedics used a rapid sequence intubation strategy on
55 tempted, the median exposure of the treating paramedics was 11 (interquartile range 6-17) OHCAs.
56                   The median exposure of all paramedics was 2 (interquartile range 1-3) OHCAs/year.
57 ehospital cardiac arrest and resuscitated by paramedics were eligible and 1359 patients (583 with VF
58                            Eleven percent of paramedics were not exposed to any OHCA cases.
59 g for age, sex, location, time to arrival of paramedics, whether the event was witnessed, and receipt
60 survival were higher for patients treated by paramedics with >6 to 11 (12%, adjusted odds ratio 1.26,
61            Compared with patients treated by paramedics with a median of </=6 exposures during the pr
62 n time is 60 min for patients transported by paramedics with a pre-hospital ECG and 80 min for patien
63                                              Paramedic years of experience were not associated with s

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