There are different specified qualifications in German EMS: the EMT level (
Rettungssanitäter), the Paramedic level (
Rettungsassistent,
Notfallsanitäter) and the emergency physician (
Notarzt). In German EMS system, the first level of pre-hospital emergency care is given by paramedics, in life-threatening situations backed up by an emergency physician on scene. Thus the paramedic scope of skills include a set of
advanced life support (ALS) treatments, they have to work until an emergency doctor is on scene. Then the paramedics (and other medical staff on scene) act under direct medical supervision of the physician. Other (non life-threatening) emergencies are handled solely by the paramedic ambulances without a physician on scene.
Emergency physician (Notarzt) The emergency physician, or ''
in German, must be a physician with a Notfallmedizin'' (Emergency Medicine) board certification, issued by the State Chamber of Physicians. In order to obtain the board certification, a minimum term of
residency in a specialty related to critical care medicine, additional training in techniques of anaesthetics and critical care medicine, and passing of a board examination is required. The position is technically open to any physician who completes the board certification process. Once on scene, the
Notarzt is responsible for all tasks associated with physicians in the field, acts as the
crew chief and provides medical direction to all subordinate EMS staff. Emergency physicians are dispatched along with a paramedic ambulance according to several standard dispatch criteria (indication catalogue,
"Notarzt-Indikationskatalog"), including
myocardial infarction,
dyspnoea, potential severe
trauma,
unconsciousness, life-threatening
intoxication and needed pain management. Non-physician ambulance crews may request assistance from a
Notarzt via dispatch as well. Usually, the emergency physician gets to the scene in a separate vehicle, a
Notarzt-Einsatzfahrzeug (abbr. NEF, emergency physician's vehicle).
Paramedic Level (Rettungsassistent and Notfallsanitäter) There are two non-physician emergency professions in Germany, which are regulated and protected by German federal law:
Rettungsassistent (two-year education, outdated since end of 2014) and
Notfallsanitäter (three-year education, effective since 2015). For detailed description see article "
Paramedics in Germany".
Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) Level Lower-level qualifications enabling a person to work in EMS are the
Rettungssanitäter (520-hour training) and
Rettungshelfer (not standardized, around 240 hours out of the
Rettungssanitäter curriculum). Both are not protected titles by federal law, but based on a national agreement of the German state ministry boards of 1977. The training of a
Rettungssanitäter is within a 520-hour program, including 160 hours theoretical classroom education, 160 hours hospital training, and 160 hours of ride-along in EMS, followed by a 40-hour final course with a state exam or an exam at a school accepted by the state. A
Rettungssanitäter with this exam is allowed to work nationwide. The
Rettungshelfer basically is a person on the way to the full trained
Rettungssanitäter. The level is not well-defined (varies from state to state or organization to organization), but mostly includes the 160-hour theoretical course and 80 hours of the EMS internship, but no state exam. Depending on the state in which they work, those in the
Rettungshelfer role are usually the drivers of non-emergency patient transports, with a
Rettungssanitäter acting as crew chief for the vehicle. In most German states, for emergency ambulance service, those in the
Rettungssanitäter role are often the drivers of emergency ambulances and act as an assistant to the
Rettungsassistent and
Notfallsanitäter.
Additional qualifications Some additional qualifications and roles closely connected to EMS include: •
Leitender Notarzt ("Leading Emergency Physician") – a
Notarzt with medical leadership responsibilities connected to mass casualty incidents. •
Organisatorischer Leiter ("Organisational Leader") and/or
Einsatzleiter Rettungsdienst ("EMS chief on scene") – a
Rettungsassistent or
Notfallsanitäter whose role is to organize tactical EMS aspects during mass casualty incidents (i.e. communication, staging, transportation). •
Lehrrettungsassistent or
Praxisanleiter Rettungsdienst ("Paramedic Instructor") – A
Rettungsassistent or
Notfallsanitäter responsible for the education and training. •
HEMS Crew Member – A
Rettungsassistent or
Notfallsanitäter who works as medical aircrew, responsible for assisting the pilot and the physician on a rescue helicopter. •
Einsatzsachbearbeiter / Leitstellendisponent – Someone who works in a dispatch center, most EMS dispatchers are obligated to obtain the level of
Rettungssanitäter or even
Notfallsanitäter as well as platoon or squad leader of the fire brigade, depending on local regulations. An additional dispatcher training course completes the skill set for dealing with emergency number calls and coordination of emergency and non-emergency responses. •
Wachleiter (station commander),
Schichtleiter (shift commander) and
Rettungsdienstleiter (EMS chief) are administrative roles, mostly requiring experience in the EMS field and additional administrative skills, often regulated by state laws. •
QM-Beauftragter (quality management representative),
MPG-Beauftragter (medical equipment representative) and
Hygiene-Beauftragter (hygiene representative) are other administrative roles, often required by laws and regulations.
Overview In the German system, not only Paramedics and EMTs, but also physicians have recognized roles and skill levels. The following table will give a brief overview about the major qualifications and their place within the German EMS structure. ==Vehicles==