without getting into the whole slanging match....and I'm certainly not defending nurses...heaven forbid, but...
In terms of medications, paramedics, AOs, ICP and yes, even ECPs are in exactly the same boat as Nurses regards medications. They (the green types) are operating under a Medication Standing Order, underwritten by a Medical Officer (the big H in the case of SAAS). They do not have autonomous prescribing authority, they respond within a set of parameters (call them, oh I dont know - Clinical Guidelines or Protocols, depending on your flavour). Nurses; Enrolled, Registered and even the super Practitioner types, do exactly the same - it's just a more visible presence of the MO. Visit the RAH in emerg and see what the senior nurses there are giving....without referring directly to a MO, just like we do.
For my part....I just see it as a waste for an ambulance service to train and equip an ICP and then lose them again to learn nursie stuff, and have them cost the system double the price of a RN when they are working. Sure they are sometimes available to respond to Cat A's or sometimes Bs....but if they are being utilised efficiently, they will be up to their armpits in Grandpas catheter and drainage bag. Why would you pass that up for a run of the mill SOB?
If SAAS want to organise the system, great...dont care, but seriously, why dont we control the world and include dispatch and coordination for RDNS, and the whole ancillary home help network in the equation? The one stop home help shop....include key cutting and haberdashery and we will corner the market
At some stage....maybe we should concentrate on being the best Ambulance Service....goodness knows theres a few places to work on there first.
If you want to get seriously serious, and make real inputs into out of hospital outcomes, ....train them as Physician's Assistants but leave the nurse stuff to the nurses