rationtin440 wrote:When I was a medic we could give IVs in the field if someone ate a bad MRE or MCI, but if we responded to a case of food poisoning off base we had to get a paramedic or someone who was civilian trained to give IVs. It was very confusing because I had taken an EMT course that was a regular civilian EMT-basic, and we were not qualified to give IVs, but as medics responding to a call ON the base we were allowed to.
The thing over here is, who is the provider of public EMS. EMS (over here) is a public service, even the private run organisations must play by our rules means you are not allowed to make profit (EMS over here is non-profit).
The military has it´s own EMS, but they are not allowed to participate into civilian EMS (except for 2... 3... exceptions)
Also say there is some kind of major event, natural or man made, in your part of the world, would Bundeswehr medics be permitted to give civilian victims IVs and intubate them or could they only work on other soldiers? Here it all depends on the situation, for example we had a severe winter storm here in Massachusetts several years ago, and my unit was activated. Eventhough we were deployed with all our ambulance vehicles and medical gear, we were told that if we responded to a civilian situation we had to wait for paramedics to show up if the patient needed IVs or intubation, eventhough we were fully trained for both procedures. Pretty confusing, but it was to avoid lawsuits....no lie, that was the major concern.
Pretty similar over here.
Actually as we have the (civilan) EMS and the civil protection, the military is not involved in EMS. The military EMT/Paramedics come to our stations as interns to keep in training on real patients under our supervision (I´m a senior medic and medic CPR trainer).
When such a major event happens, it´s up to us, the civil protection, to ask the military for help and they do.
The biggest natural disaster I was was the flood in 2002. At the first day, I was commanding 70 ACLS ambulances

to evacuate hospitals and nursing homes.
In civil protection, we EMS divided into units like a military platoon.
That was my unit:

Command car with local Red Cross guy that lead us.
Two (Red Cross) civil protection ambulances. Equiped like BLS ambulances, but 4 stretchers like the military. One ACLS ambulance, me + EMT as driver.
We "patrolled" in a allotted area to administer medical care to the peoples but also the civil protection workers.
We slept inside/besides our ambulances
Here we were on our own. I could call an ER Doc for back up, but we had to evacuated 3.500 patiens in the first day out of hospitals and nursing home so we couldn´t call a Doc for each emergency if we could deal with it at our own.
We got fed from mobile kitchen trailers
One unit had to convert the airport terminal into a 150 bed field hospital with 8 ICU beds
We brought the patiens to the field hospital, they were treated from Doctors. Next step was, we brought them on the airfield. The German Army (Airforce) took them over and flew them out all over Germany to be treated
The Bundeswehr didn´t send any medical units, we were plenty. At least we were at the first ~600 Ambulances. But we needed the military for the real "big business".