The following words and phrases, as used in this division, shall have the following meanings:
Interlocal agreement.A mutual aid agreement between one or more municipalities of ambulance service whereby the signing parties agree to provide backup ambulance service to one another under conditions and pursuant to terms specified in the agreement.
Medical control.That direction given EMS and mobile intensive care unit personnel by a base station physician through direct voice contact, with or without vital sign telemetry, as required by applicable medical protocols promulgated by the medical control board and by chapter 773, Texas Health and Safety Code, or its successor.
Medical director.An emergency physician, expert in the pre-hospital practice of emergency medicine, appointed by the ambulance service contractor.
Medical protocol.Any diagnosis-specific or problem-oriented written statement of standard procedures, or algorithm, promulgated by the medical control board as the proper standard of pre-hospital care for a given clinical condition.
Mobile intensive care unit.A vehicle which is specially constructed, equipped, staffed and employed in the inter-facility transport of patients whose requirements for en-route medical support are likely to exceed the clinical capabilities of a paramedic level ambulance.
Paramedic.A person qualified as a certified “paramedic emergency medical technician” as defined by chapter 773, Texas Health and Safety Code, or its successor.
Person.Any individual, firm, partnership, association, corporation, governmental entity or other group or combination acting as a unit.
Service area.The geographic area encompassing the city limits or as provided by interlocal agreement.
System standard of care.The combined compilation of all priority dispatching protocols, pre-arrival instruction protocols, medical protocols (i.e., for first responders and ambulance personnel), protocols for selecting destination hospital, and standards for certification of pre-hospital care personnel (i.e., telephone call takers, first responders, ambulance personnel and on-line medical control physicians), developed and adopted by the medical control board, as well as standards governing requirements for on-board medical equipment and supplies.
(2002 Code, sec. 5.602)