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Abstract

Some ambulance services believe that prehospital care belongs to paramedics, 1 but there is evidence that results are better in a rural setting if a trained general practitioner is called. 2 Arguments continue over who is the best person to provide care, and research is limited. Doctors also have an advantage in that they are allowed to give thrombolytic treatment, which improves the outcome of patients who have had heart attacks. 6 The relative advantages of different staff is unclear in the case of trauma, 7 and two American studies have shown that patients with penetrating injuries attended by either the police 8 or the public 9 had as good or a better outcome than those attended by trained ambulance crews.

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Copyright: 1996 (c) 1996 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.