r/Paramedics Paramedic Jun 25 '25

US EMTALA and bypassing a hospital

So I had a pt today totally stable but she has an injury I know the local type 4 community hospital (20min) is not going to be able to fix. It was suggested by the clinic staff where I picked her up to go to the type 3, 1.5 hours away. But one of the ER drs for the community hospital happened to be there and looked at the injury and said no just take her to our hospital.

She said the type 3 couldn’t deal with that either and she would need to go to One 3.5 hours away so go and get her c spine cleared…

So we did and then I get chewed out by the ER drs on call saying I can NEVER bypass them based on EMTALA. I always have to stop and let them stabilize the pt and cat scan and such…

That’s not true is it?

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u/Dowcastle-medic Paramedic Jun 25 '25

That’s what I thought.

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u/MisterEmergency Jun 25 '25

Absolute trash. Closest appropriate. Stand your ground, you did what was best for the patient. I've had this same exact conversation with a doctor at a local band Aid station. The only thing they have there we don't have on the truck is imaging. I'll drive right past to get to a real level 1 trauma center, egos be damned.

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u/InstructionSalt360 Jun 27 '25

Imaging, chest tubes, thoracotomy tray, blood, basic surgery tray, invasive lines, antibiotics just to name a few things you don’t have lol

2

u/MisterEmergency Jun 27 '25

Our had a GP part time, and sometimes a NP. It's literally a band Aid station. They transfer out patients that require stitches.

2

u/InstructionSalt360 Jun 27 '25

Gotcha. Nevermind then. I strongly oppose family medicine in the ED and anything to do with midlevels. Emergency medicine is a specialist field that requires board certification regardless what non EM docs want people to think.