The Making of EMS: Three Decades of Change

It's a dark and stormy night. You drive your ambulance to the scene
of the accident. As you step out into the rain, the police officer says, "There's only one, but he
looks pretty bad." You look for a cervical collar, but can't find any. There's no KED. There is a
backboard, so you take that to the crumpled vehicle. You and your partner carefully remove the
patient and try to stabilize his spine, as best you can. There's a lot of blood in the vehicle, and
you decide to apply the MAST, but you can't find that, either. You try to call Medical Control,
but there's no radio in your vehicle. In fact, your vehicle seems awfully small -- there's no room
to stand up.
Suddenly, you wake up and realize it was all just a dream. But wait -- was it?
Thirty years ago, this was what EMS was about: get the patient into the ambulance and get to the hospital as fast as you can. We've come a long way.
Emergency care in the mid-20th century was inadequate and chaotic. Station
wagons or hearses often served as ambulances, staffed by untrained personnel and dispatched by
municipal hospitals, fire services, private services, or funeral homes. Patients arrived at hospital
emergency wards staffed at most by a nurse or intern with no formal training in emergency care.
No guidelines existed for training or equipment for emergency personnel.
toronto moving Ambulances in the 1960s were often called horizontal taxicabs. They were
designed to carry patients to the hospital in a horizontal position but did not allow room for
attendants to perform CPR or other medical procedures. Many ambulance services were run by
morticians, and few vehicles carried any medical supplies or equipment. At night, many hospital
emergency wards were dark and the doors were locked, forcing ambulance services -- even those
with critically ill patients -- to ring the bell and wait for admittance.

In 1966,
most ambulance attendants had little or no medical training. The emergency medical technician
first came into being in 1969 with the introduction of an 81-hour training course by the National
Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons. The EMT is trained
for basic life support (BLS) procedures: maintaining airways, treating shock, immobilizing
patients for transport to the hospital, and administering CPR.

In
1966 the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council released a report on trauma
that initiated the modern era of emergency medical services systems. The report, titled
Accidental Death and Disability, the Neglected Disease of Modern Society, found that accidental
death resulting from Trauma was the fourth leading killer in the United States, and the leading
killer between ages 1-37. The authors estimated that a person's chances of being killed were
higher on American roads than in the battlefields of Vietnam.
This report was instrumental in the passage of the Highway Safety Act of 1966,
which established the cabinet level Department of Transportation and placed it in charge of
emergency medical services improvement through its National High Traffic Safety
Administration. The act authorized the DOT to develop national standards for EMS and to grant
funds for research and development of EMS systems.

At
the same time, cardiologist J. F. Pantridge and his colleagues discovered that patients' chances of
surviving cardiac arrest were significantly greater if they were resuscitated in the field, than in
the hospital. The mobile cardiac care unit created by Pantridge inspired physicians in New York, Seattle, Los Angeles, and elsewhere, to begin prehospital cardiac care services, ushering in the
era of advanced life support.

In the
late 1960s, systems were developed that could transmit a patient's electrocardiogram to the
hospital emergency department by radio, in addition to allowing EMS personnel to speak directly
with a doctor in the ED. When these telemetry systems proved successful, EMS systems around
the country began using radio for telemetry and for ambulance dispatch.

With the development of paramedic units and mobile intensive care
units, rescue personnel could administer drugs, defibrillate patients, and perform other medical
procedures in the field and en route to the hospital.
In 1974, President Gerald Ford signed the first National Emergency Medical
Services Week proclamation. The observance has grown to include events in every state and
territory in the U.S. honoring emergency personnel and educating the public about the EMS
system.

Community marketplace The past thirty years have brought widespread change in the
availability and quality of emergency care in the United States. Due to the efforts of EMS
providers and the support of the American public, we have seen the development of a nationwide
system for delivery of emergency care by trained individuals using specialized equipment.
Emergency care has developed into a medical specialty and a professional
occupation.
Back to Index