- Ricardo Quinn,EMT-P FDNY
- 1967: Freedom House revolutionized emergency care
- Marc Sullins, Cabrini Medical Center
- Splint: Thomas Half-Ring
- 9/11 Patch Collection
- NAEMT EMT Oath
- 1800's: Ambulance: Horse Drawn-(rear view)
A horse drawn ambulance-(Rear View) - Dominique-Jean Larrey, Baron; "Flying Car" ambulance
Dominique-Jean Larrey, Baron ''Flying Car (ambulance)'' French military surgeon, born July 8, 1766, BaudA?AŠan, Hautes-PyrenA?AŠes; died July 25, 1842, Lyons. Biography: Napoleon's war surgeon "Larrey was the greatest military surgeon in history." (Garrison-Morton) - Eugene Nagel, MD
At a 1964 meeting of the International Rescue and First Aid Association, Dr. Eugene Nagel met some rescue officers who told him that despite their good CPR, all their patients kept dying. Mobile intensive coronary care units combining CPR, resuscitative drugs and early defibrillation were being tried in a few American - R. Adams Cowley, MD
Cowley was a pioneer in the field of open-heart surgery in the U.S., performing operations before the heart-lung machine was widely used. Despite his expertise and the success of the operations, patients were still dying from shock, not always immediately but sometimes within days or weeks. Cowley referred to shock as "a - Karl William Edmark, MD
Karl William Edmark, MD, was a cardiovascular surgeon and lifelong inventor who was committed to improving outcomes for patients undergoing cardiac surgery. His best-known contribution was to defibrillation science. In the early to mid 1950s, defibrillators used alternating current (AC), which was unreliable and used a |
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