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  2. Paramedicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paramedicine

    In the United States, paramedicine is the physician-directed practice of medicine, often viewed as the intersection of health care, public health, and public safety.While discussed for many years, the concept of paramedicine was first formally described in the EMS Agenda for the Future. [1]

  3. Blood, Sweat & Tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood,_Sweat_&_Tea

    Blood, Sweat & Tea is a book by ambulance technician Brian Kellett, writing under the pseudonym Tom Reynolds, about life in the London Ambulance Service.. The book is compiled from posts and correspondence from the blog Random Acts of Reality, one of the earliest high-readership blogs in England.

  4. Document file format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_file_format

    PDF — Open standard for document exchange. ISO standards include PDF/X (eXchange), PDF/A (Archive), PDF/E (Engineering), ISO 32000 (PDF), PDF/UA (Accessibility) and PDF/VT (Variable data and transactional printing). PDF is readable on almost every platform with free or open source readers. Open source PDF creators are also available ...

  5. Paramedics in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paramedics_in_the_United...

    In 1967, he began training unemployed African-American men in what later became Freedom House Ambulance Service, [4] [5] the first paramedic squadron in the United States. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Dr. Eugene Nagel trained city of Miami firefighters as the first U.S. paramedics to use invasive techniques and portable defibrillators with telemetry in 1967.

  6. Emergency medical technician - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_technician

    An emergency medical technician (often, more simply, EMT) is a medical professional that provides emergency medical services. [1] [2] EMTs are most commonly found serving on ambulances and in fire departments in the US and Canada, as full-time and some part-time departments require their firefighters to at least be EMT certified.

  7. Emergency medical responder levels by U.S. state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical...

    The use of the terms "EMT-Intermediate/85" and "EMT-Intermediate/99" denotes use of the NHTSA EMT-Intermediate 1985 curriculum and the EMT-Intermediate 1999 curriculum respectively. In addition, not all states use the "EMT" prefix for all levels (e.g. Texas uses EMT-Paramedic and Licensed Paramedic).

  8. Wilderness emergency medical technician - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilderness_Emergency...

    An wilderness emergency medical technician is an emergency medical technician that is better equipped than other licensed healthcare providers, who typically function almost exclusively in wilderness environments, to better stabilize, assess, treat, and protect patients in remote and austere environments until definitive medical care is reached.

  9. Emergency Care Practitioner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Care_Practitioner

    An Emergency Care Practitioner (ECP) generally come from a background in paramedicine and most have additional academic qualifications, usually at university, with enhanced skills in medical assessment and extra clinical skills over and above those of a standard paramedic or qualified nurse.