SAR-EMT40
Well-known member
Chip said:This is interesting. I know group leaders can get signed waivers, like school nurses do, if anyone is allergic, but there doesn't appear to be any requirement that a doctor does the injection.
You are correct. In Connecticut there is explicit protection in the state statutes for school nurses and I believe even teachers have legal protection.
Now, as well as not being a doctor, I am also not a lawyer. But, these protections are for mistakes. Not willful neglect or gross negligence. They can make mistakes but not do really out of the blue bizzare stuff.
On the other hand. If you are an EMT on an ambulance or a Nurse working in a ER. My ability to give an epi-pen or a PA to do minor surgery is because the supervising Doctor has allowed this to happen. He is attesting by his license that he has verified that the person doing this is competant to do so, as well as the state board. The state certifies that I have the basic skills to be an EMT (or a Nurse) but to "practice" I technically have to be under a doctors control. That doesn't neccesarily mean the doctor has to be in the same room. I can have doctors "standing orders" that allow me to do things depending on what situation I find myself in and I can always raise a doctor on the MED radio in a matter of seconds. There are also state protocols that I follow or the control doctor can modify those orders as he sees fit. He is the doctor.
Keith