Medic One

Medic One can refer to the emergency medical service program (paramedics/EMTs) in King County, Washington, USA; to the approach to emergency medical service developed beginning in 1968 by Seattle's Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington Medical Center, and the Seattle Fire Department; or to various other emergency medical service programs that operate under the Medic One name. This article is about the King County programs and the approach that led to their founding.

In 1968, Michael Copass, M.D., a neurologist, Leonard Cobb, M.D., a cardiologist, and Seattle Fire Chief Gordon Vickery instituted a research program to determine the effectiveness of training firefighters as emergency-care medics and sending them in ambulances to the scenes of accidents, heart attacks, strokes, and other such medical emergencies. By 1970, ten Seattle firefighters had received this training, and all Seattle firefighters had been trained in CPR. The first Medic One call was on March 7 of that year. A 60 Minutes story on the success of Medic One that aired in 1974 called Seattle "the best place in the world to have a heart attack." Today, Seattle is said to have more people trained in CPR per capita than any other city in the world.

Medic One service was extended throughout King County in 1976.

External links

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by [ expanding it].






Google
Home   Alphabetical Listing   Quote


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.