The role of the law in the professionalisation of paramedicine in Australia
Abstract
The paramedic discipline has developed over time from its humble
beginnings as stretcher bearers and ‘drivers’ to now carrying
out high-risk, highly skilled, life-saving interventions.
Paramedics in Australia have not traditionally been regulated in
the same way as other comparable health practitioners, despite
performing similar tasks and playing a unique and essential role
in healthcare delivery however they have undertaken a concerted
campaign over the past 10 years to change their professional
status and have looked to the law to facilitate that transition.
This change is now underway. Despite the ambition of the
paramedic discipline to be regulated as professionals, there has
been relatively little analysis or discussion in the paramedic
literature of the effect the discipline believes regulation as a
profession will have on shaping the discipline in the future.
This study examines how structural and legislative reform of the
Australian healthcare workforce has coincided with the Australian
paramedic professionalisation project to provide an opportunity
for paramedics to gain professional status. It further analyses
what the role of law could be in fostering a culture and ethos of
professionalism in the discipline.
This socio-legal study investigates whether or not paramedics
have the characteristics of a profession; how best the law can
facilitate their transition to professional status; and why that
matters. The analysis utilises a sociological framework informed
by the work of sociologist Eliot Freidson in particular to define
what a profession is and establish whether paramedicine is a
profession according to common criteria. It will map those
criteria against the primary piece of Australian legislation that
regulates health professionals in Australia, the Health
Practitioner Regulation National Law Act 2009 (Qld). The study
uses the same analytical framework to compare the Australian
legislation to similar legislation in the United Kingdom (UK)
where paramedics have been regulated as professionals for over a
decade. The study analyses the implications of any significant
differences between the two regulatory schemes for the UK and
Australian paramedic professionalisation projects.
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