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Emergency Medical Services:
EMS medical direction is one of
the most common administrative responsibilities of emergency physicians.
In
order to prepare our residents for this responsibility, our residents function
as assistant medical directors of local EMS services during PGY2 and PGY3 years.
The residents are expected to do ride-alongs to familiarize themselves with
field issues. Also the resident is expected to participate in quality
improvement programs, protocol development, and EMS provider assessment. The
residents are expected to familiarize themselves with local regulations
pertaining to the provision of EMS services. The residents are also expected to
participate in the education of pre-hospital care personnel. Our residents can
serve with: the local city and county EMS service, the largest local private EMS
service, the hospital owned EMS flight service, the state paramedic training
academy, the state medical director's office, a local pueblo EMS service or a
neighboring county's EMS service.
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The Center for Injury Prevention Research
and Education: The injury
prevention programs at the Center concentrate on both intentional and
unintentional injuries. New Mexico has the second highest overall injury
mortality
in the country and leads the nation in traffic fatalities. Since UNM is the
principal academic medical institution in the region, it is well-placed to
assess the underlying causes of these high rates. Through the Center faculty,
staff and resident research, the department has conducted studies on a broad
range of injury prevention, causation, and treatment topics. Insuring that the
information obtained from these studies reaches the appropriate audience is a
goal of all Center activities.
The Center is actively working
with other state agencies and community groups dedicated to reducing injury in
New Mexico. Center staff participate in the state Domestic Violence
Advisory Council, the Inter-Agency Group, the Disability Prevention Advocacy
Task Force, the Child Abuse Prevention Committee of Albuquerque/Bernalillo
County, the New Mexico and American Public Health Associations, EMS Goals 2000
Committee, Child Fatality Review Team, the Pedestrian Technical Advisory Group,
and Lifesavers Planning Committee.
Funding for Center projects is
derived from federal, state and private sources which support five full-time
staff members with expertise in injury research and analysis, community action,
public information, and education. Three physicians from the Department of
Emergency Medicine are also part of the team.
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