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Scope of Practice, Floor Skills, and Optional Modules 
- Describes what interventions a licensed individual legally can and cannot do.
- Idaho’s SoP is established by the EMS Physician Commission (EMSPC).
Learn More: EMSPC Standards Manual
- Four separate but related activities:
- Education (trained to do)
- Certification (certified as competent)
- Licensure (state licensed to practice)
- Credentialing (agency medical director)
- The skills and interventions that all personnel of a certain license level can perform.
- The fundamental skills at each level that define the minimum standard of service.
- Floor skills are marked with an “X” in the SoP grid.
Learn More: EMSPC Standards Manual
- Optional skills that can be authorized by an agency’s medical director.
- Optional modules are marked with an “OM” in the SoP grid.
Learn More: EMSPC Standards Manual
- The agency medical director chooses to incorporate OMs.
- Agency must: report patient care, submit addendum to medical supervision plan MSP) indicating which OMs will be implemented, and submit verification of OM credentialing to the EMS Bureau.
Learn More: EMSPC Standards Manual > pg 14
Idaho EMS Webpage > Education > Optional Modules
- OMs are independent of the scope transition.
- Transitioning does not automatically give an agency authority to implement OMs.
- Even if currently authorized to use OMs, providers will still have to transition before practicing the new SoP.
- There are some select OMs that will become floor skills in the new scope (see below).
- EMT-2011: Pulse Oximetry, Asprin, Epi Auto Injector
- AEMT-2011: Pulse Oximetry, Intraosseous-Adult, IM medication admin, Subcutaneous medication admin, Aspirin, Epi Auto Injector, Glucagon
- Paramedic: BiPAP, CPAP, PEEP-Therapeutic, Blood Chemistry Analysis, Maintenance of Blood Admin
Learn More: EMSPC Standards Manual > SoP Grid, Appendix A
Scope Transition Basics
- Yes, for EMR, EMT and Paramedic providers.
- Optional, for AEMT providers.
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Curriculum
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Idaho Standard Curriculum (ISC)
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Idaho EMS Curriculum (IEC)
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License Level Designation
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EMR/FR 94
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EMR-2011
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EMT/EMTB 95
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EMT-2011
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AEMT/AEMT-85
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AEMT-2011
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Paramedic/EMTP 98
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Paramedic-2011
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- Complete your transition education
- Competency assessment (for AEMT-2011 this includes NREMT exams) This is determined by the assigned course physician. At the BLS level (EMR/EMT) the course physician can delegate a designee to assess competency.
- State Licensing
- Submit a Transition Application and receive a new, updated license. New licenses will identify providers that have transitioned.
- Credentialing from your agency medical director
- The Idaho EMS Bureau keeps a list of transition courses on the EMS webpage
Learn More: www.IdahoEMS.org > Education Page > Training Opportunities - Transition Courses
- This can vary depending on the educational medium you choose.
- Many agencies are doing transition courses during their monthly training meetings. This would keep costs at a minimum.
- Other providers are choosing to go through educational institutions and pay for their course. This is a more costly approach.
- Transition Courses count as CE. The EMS Bureau provides a tracking tool on the website to monitor CE hours during a transition course.
- If 75% or more of your required CE hours in a single license cycle are spent in a transition course, venue requirements no longer apply. Note: This only applies if you intend to transition.
- CE requirements do not change with the new scope: EMR-24hr, EMT-48hr, AEMT-54hr, Paramedic-72hr
- EMT: No, there is new knowledge and skills at both the EMR and EMT levels.
- AEMT: Yes, you can revert to an EMR-2011. You cannot revert to an EMT-2011 without an EMT transition course.
- Paramedic: Yes, you can revert to an EMR-2011, EMT-2011 or AEMT-2011 without any transition course.
- EMR, EMT, and Paramedic transition courses do not have a required exam associated with them. If the course physician uses an exam to determine competency, then they determine who gets access to that exam.
- AEMTs must complete a Transition or Initial IEC course to get access to the NREMT written and practical exams.
Timeline
- The 2011 Idaho EMS Curriculum (IEC) is competency based, so there is no minimum or maximum classroom hours required.
- Course will be successfully completed when student can demonstrate competency to the course physician in the new information and skills.
***Remember: If transition education makes up 75% or more of your required CE hours, the venue requirement no longer applys during that cycle.
- EMR/EMT: May begin practicing at the new SoP after July 1, 2012 upon completion of:
- Transition education
- Competency assessment
- Licensing at the 2011 level
- Medical director credentialing
- AEMT/Paramedic: May begin practicing at the new SoP after January 1, 2013 upon completion of:
- Transition education
- Competency assessment (NREMT exams for AEMT)
- Licensing at the 2011 level
- Medical director credentialing
Emergency Medical Responders (EMR) and Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT)
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Effective date of initial license
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Date transition requirements
MUST be completed
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April 1, 2011 – September 30, 2011
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September 30, 2014
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October 1, 2011 – December 31, 2011
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March 31, 2015
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Effective date of renewed license
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Date transition requirements
MUST be completed
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April 1, 2011
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March 31, 2014
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October 1, 2011
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September 30, 2014
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April 1, 2012
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March 31, 2015
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October 1, 2012
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September 30, 2015
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April 1, 2013
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March 31, 2016
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October 1, 2013
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September 30, 2016
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April 1, 2014
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March 31, 2017
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Paramedics & Advanced EMTs (if the AEMT chooses to transition)
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Effective date of initial license
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Date transition requirements
MUST be completed
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April 1, 2012 – September 30, 2012
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September 30, 2014
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October 1, 2012 – December 31, 2012
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March 31, 2015
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Effective date of renewed license
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Date transition requirements
MUST be completed
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April 1, 2012
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March 31, 2014
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October 1, 2012
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September 30, 2014
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April 1, 2013
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March 31, 2015
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October 1, 2013
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September 30, 2015
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April 1, 2014
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March 31, 2016
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- If you transition early, your new license will have same expiration date, but new effective date.
- The CE completed since your original effective date will continue to count toward renewal requirements. In other words: you will have your full two or three year cycle to complete your CE.
- EMRs and EMTs have 3 years from the day they start their transition education to finish.
- AEMTs and Paramedics have 2 years from the day they start their transition education to finish.
- It is OK if the education carries over into another license cycle.
Education
- Students trained in the old scope ISC curricula must be successfully tested and licensed by certain deadlines:
- EMR/EMT by Dec. 31, 2011
- AEMT/Paramedic by Dec. 31, 2012
- Students trained in the new scope IEC curricula must successfully pass state designated exams based on new scope standards to be licensed.
- It is competency based, so the course is complete when competency is demonstrated to the course physician or designee (BLS level).
- No minimum/maximum number of hours.
- No, for EMR, EMT and Paramedic providers.
- Yes, for AEMT providers transitioning to AEMT-2011. They will take the NREMT written exam and 10 station practical exam.
- Yes, though it will still require competency assessment by the course physician or designee (BLS level).
- Educators may consider managing initial and transition courses concurrently.
- Extrication Awareness - Course available at: www.IdahoEMS.org > Education Page > Scope of Practice Transition, Transition Education Materials > Extrication Awareness
- No, there are components of an EMR transition course that will not be included in the EMT Transition Course.
Instructors
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Transition
courses do not require approved Idaho EMS instructors. Rather, any health care provider or educator
with qualifying credentials, education or experience can teach portions of a
transition course.
- Example:
Paramedics, Nurses, MD/Physicians, FNP, PA, RT, etc.
- All transition instructors must be approved by the course
sponsoring physician.
Instructors
teaching at their same license level must be transitioned prior to teaching a
transition course.
- Example:
An EMT instructor must take their transition education before teaching any
other new scope EMT courses.
- If required, obtain necessary education (transition course for your license level)
- Update your instructor status at the new license level with the EMS Bureau.
- Stay current with Instructor Orientation (required every two years)
- EMR/EMT: After 12/31/2011
- AEMT/Paramedic: After 12/31/2012
***Remember to leave your students enough time to complete their exams and apply for licensure before those dates if currently teaching ISC courses.
AEMT
- Maintain and renew your AEMT-85 license indefinitely.
- Complete an AEMT-2011 transition course, NREMT exams (written & practical), and license as an AEMT-2011.
- Complete an EMT-2011 transition course for supplemental knowledge and skills but maintain and renew your AEMT-85 license.
- Complete an EMT-2011 transition course and revert to EMT-2011.
- Revert to EMR-2011 (no transition required).
- ATV- non-intubated, Pulse Oximetry, Aspirin, Epi Auto-Injector, Atropine Sulfate auto injector
- No, you would be required to transition or revert to reinstate your license.
- Currently licensed AEMT-85s can maintain their license at that level until they retire.
- New graduates will only be licensed at that level until December 31, 2012
- After Jan 1, 2013 you may apply for the new license if you hold either a current National Registry I-99 card or state licensure at the I-99 level.
Medical Directors/Course Physicians
- This is determined by each individual MD/Course Physician.
- Examples of methods to verify competency:
- Observation
- Exams (written, practical, oral, etc)
- Field Internship/Clinical Hours
- Consider current licensure or certifications for skills evaluated
- Transition Courses: All license levels now require a designated course physician for Transition courses.
- EMR and EMT Initial IEC Courses: They require a designated course physician, but the physician can identify designees that are authorized to determine competency in their stead.
- AEMT and Paramedic Initial IEC Courses: They require a designated course physician.
Important Links
a. www.emspc.dhw.idaho.gov
b. EMSPC Standards Manual
c. Scope of Practice Grid (Appendix A of EMSPC Standards Manual)
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