Title of article
Toxicology training of paramedic students in the United States
Author/Authors
Colleen O. Davis، نويسنده , , Daniel J. Cobaugh، نويسنده , , Neil F. Leahey، نويسنده , , Paul M. Wax، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
3
From page
138
To page
140
Abstract
A 16-item survey was mailed to the directors of 618 paramedic training programs in the United States to determine (1) the number of lecture hours devoted to toxicology topics and (2) how often paramedic training includes a rotation in a poison control center. The response rate was 82%. Toxicology accounts for approximately 2% of paramedic studentsʹ total training. Cardiovascular drug toxicity and hazardous materials are discussed for over 60 minutes by more than 50% of paramedic training programs. Four paramedic programs have no lecture time on cyclic antidepressant overdoses and one program has no lecture time on carbon monoxide poisoning. Eighty-one percent (377 of 467) have access to a regional poison control center; 11% (42 of 377) use the poison control center as a paramedic training site. Some US paramedic training programs spend insufficient time covering topics that have significant out-of-hospital morbidity. Although poison control centers are often available, they are underutilized for paramedic training.
Keywords
Toxicology , toxicology training , paramedic , paramedic students , education
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Record number
779604
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