Emergency medical services in Spain
Emergency Medical Services in Spain (Servicios de Emergencias Médicas, SEM) (EMS) are public services usually provided by regional Governments.[1]
Contents
Organization
Spanish organization for medical emergencies is a Public Health Integrated EMS (IEMS) that has a network of SAMU/IEMS Medical Emergency Regulation Centers (MERC = SAMU in international appellation). Emergency Primary Care and GP are fully integrated in Spanish IEMS.
Spain has 17 autonomous communities with 17 regional Health Departments. The National Health System is the agglomeration of these 17 Health Departments. So each autonomous community has its own regional IEMS that depend on Regional Health Department. Some EMS have their own staff and vehicles, others outsource the vehicles and staff to private companies. Public EMS departments usually outsource the vehicles and BLS staff. ALS staff are usually government employees.
In addition, some cities have local EMS too (e.g. SAMUR-Madrid).
There are also Emergency Medical Services in some fire departments: cities of Barcelona, Sevilla, Valencia, Zaragoza, Malaga, Bilbao, and Catalonia community. In these EMS work doctors and nurses with firefighters in advanced life support (ALS) ambulances or helicopters.
Furthermore, non-profit organizations (Spanish Red Cross, DYA) and Civil Defense Groups provide ambulances (usually BLS) with volunteers for some situations (disasters, mass incidents, special events: sports, concerts,...)
Standards
National Minimum Staff Requirements
New legislation was published in June 2012.
Type | Old Royal Decree 619/1998[2] | New Royal Decree 836/2012[3] | Comments |
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Type A: Patient Transport Ambulance | A driver and an assistant(*), when the type of service so requires | A driver (and an assistant when the type of service so requires), both with a PCP(**) (Professional Certificate of Proficiency for Emergency Technicians) | (*)Before the new legislation was enacted each region had their own training requirements for drivers and assistants: Courses from 60 to 600 hours (TTS, ATA, TEM, first aid courses...) (**)This is a certificate for employees who worked before the development of the new national qualification of EMT-B (TES) |
Type B: BLS Ambulance (Basic Life Support Ambulance) | A driver and at least one other person with appropriate training(*) | 2 EMT-B (TES), one of them a driver | (*)Before the new legislation was enacted each region had their own training requirements for drivers and technicians: Courses from 60 to 600 hours (TTS, ATA, TEM...) |
Type C: ALS Ambulance (Advanced Life Support Ambulance) | A driver, an emergency physician and an emergency nurse | An EMT-B/driver and an emergency nurse (and a physician when the type of service so requires) |
Usual types of ambulances and their staff
Spanish EMS is a physician led system with physicians, emergency nurses and technicians in the field. It's a two-tiered response system (Advanced Life Support with physicians and nurses,[4] and Basic Life Support with technicians).
Type | Spanish term | Physician | Emergency Nurse | EMT (driver included) | Comments |
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ALS Ambulance (Advanced Life Support Ambulance or MICU) | Ambulancia de SVA / UVI móvil |
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ALS/ILS Ambulance (Advanced/Intermediate Life Support Ambulance) | Ambulancia de SVA / SVI / SVE |
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BLS Ambulance (Basic Life Support Ambulance) | Ambulancia de SVB |
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Non-Caring Ambulance | Ambulancia no-asistencial |
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HEMS (Helicopter Emergency Medical Service) | Helicóptero de Emergencias Médicas |
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In addition there are fast vehicles (non-ambulance) for emergency interventions:
- RRU (Rapid Response Units / VIR: Vehículo de Intervención Rápida), staffed by a driver/technician and a physician (sometimes an emergency nurse).
- Logistics and communications vehicles for disasters.
- Spanish EMS Ambulances
- Other EMS vehicles (non-ambulances)
- Non-profit organizations/volunteers
- Military Ambulances
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Military ambulance of the Spanish Army.
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MOWAG Piranha IIIC ambulance of the Spanish Marines.
Training
Profession | Level of education | Years | Postgraduate Education | Level of skills |
---|---|---|---|---|
Emergency Physician (Médico de Emergencias) | University (Degree in Medicine) | 6 years | Master of Emergency Medicine (1–2 years), Medical Specialty (4–5 years): Cardiology, Anesthesiology, Family Medicine, Intensive Care Medicine,... | ALS |
Emergency Nurse (Enfermero de Emergencias) | University (Degree in Nursing) | 4 years | Master of Emergency Nursing (1–2 years) -optional in several regions. Nursing Specialty (2 years) (currently developing): Community nursing, Medical/Surgical Nursing,... | ILS/ALS |
EMT/Emergency Medical Technician (EMT-basic) (TES/Técnico en Emergencias Sanitarias) | Vocational/Community college (since 2007) | 2 years | - | BLS+AED |
Patient Transport Assistant, Patient Transport Technician, rescuer, life guard (Auxiliar de Transporte Sanitario, Técnico de Transporte Sanitario, socorrista) | Non official education before 2007/Private courses/Red Cross Courses | 4–8 weeks | - | First Aids |
Before 2007 there was not a national standard for EMT (TES/Técnico en Emergencias Sanitarias) education, so each region had their own rules (courses from 60 to 600 hours or sometimes only a first aid course; no reciprocity between regions; different terms: TTS-Técnico de Transporte Sanitario, ATTS-Auxiliar de Transporte Sanitario, ATA-Auxiliar de Transporte en Ambulancia, TEM-Técnico en Emergencias Médicas,...). Since 2007 there is a 2 years training occupational course (vocational-Community College)[5]
- Spanish HEMS
Telephone number
The emergency dial is 112 (European Emergency Number).[6] in all regions. However, the emergency number for medical services, 061, is available in several regions.
In Spain, the emergency dispatch is a physician regulated system. Each region has its own emergency call center with phone operators (telefonistas), emergency medical dispatchers (gestores de recursos/coordinadores/locutores), medical-regulators (physician) and sometimes nurses.
Curiosities
In Spain, the law (motor vehicle code) only allows the police vehicles to use blue lights. Ambulances and fire engines have to use amber lights. However some ambulances use red/amber, white/amber, blue/amber, blue/red lights although this is illegal. In 2006, the Spanish Parliament approved a motion to amend the law, but the motor vehicle code has not changed yet.[7]
See also
Sources
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External links
- SAMU 061 de Baleares [1]
- 061 Aragón
- 061 Cantabria
- 061 Galicia
- 061 Murcia
- EPES 061
- SAMUR
- SEM sem.gencat.cat/ : (en:), (es:), (ca:) langs.
- SUMMA 112
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- ↑ Advanced life support units in Spain: the situation in 2008 E E.Pesqueira Alonso , P. Juliano Izquierdo http://www.semes.org/revista/vol21_4/6_ing.pdf
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