I am not an EMT/Paramedic. I work in an ER as an RN and have done so for the past 4 years. When I graduate nursing school i went straight into the ER and was greener than anyone should ever be. I learned very early on to listen to and respect the reports given by the first responders and was fortunate that 95% of time they were spot on and very informative. I was told that the EMT/Medics were to remain with the pt until the receiving facility's staff came to assume transfer of care and that anything else was, under the law, abandonment. Fortunately, in that time multiple ERs as a traveler, I never once had an issue where this was not done.
However, at my new job i am CONSTANTLY finding pts in the beds with no one there to give report. It is a semi-busy rural ER but i am talking about pts that have arrived 3 minutes prior and i have to go get the EMT/medics out of the truck, or out of the break room or off the computer. Today i had a pt that was alone, an obvious alzheimers sufferer and the complaint on the radio report was chest pain. I spent 5-8 minutes LOOKING for the ACLS crew to find out that in the 40 minute travel time they had given meds (ASA and nitro) started an IV and ran a 3 lead. A 3 lead?!? on a pt with an extended cardiac history - which i didnt find out about until the family arrived. They were unable to provide allergies or any coherent history on the gentleman.
I this was an isolated event i could possibly understand, but this is something that happens over and over.
The crappy report I can overlook for now. However, my main concern is having to SEARCH for the medical professionals that transported the pt, so as a community, can someone enlighten me on the actual laws or standard of practice that should be being follow? Thanks, and for the 99.9% of you guys that do your job well, thank you so much.