SAMU (Service d'Aide Médicale d'Urgence, "Emergency Medical Assistance Service") is the French hospital based emergency medical service. It was founded in 1968 by coordinating the existing SMUR teams (prehospital care units).
The name SAMU is also used by several French-speaking countries as well as Spanish-speaking countries such as Argentina, it then standing for Sistemas de Atencion Médica de Urgencias y Emergencias (sometimes SAME) and Portuguese-speaking ones such as Brazil, where it stands for Serviço de Atendimento Móvel de Urgência (Emergency Mobile Attention Service).
The French philosophy for medical emergencies allows the reanimation units to be dispatched only in life-threatening cases.
SAMU are also in charge for the training of emergency physicians.
All French Départements hold one SAMU (that is roughly one for 500 000 people), which makes a total of a hundred units, and 350 SMUR in the whole France.
Additionally, two SAMU have special tasks :
The main component of the SAMU is the dispatch, called Centre 15 (15 is the emergency number for medical emergency) or CRRA (centre de réception et de régulation des appels: calls reception and dispatch center). The CRRA received about 10 million calls in 2004, with a regular increase of 10% per year:
This doctrine also simplifies greatly the Emergency department of hospitals (eliminating the need for a "smaller hospital within the hospital"), and ensure that the stabilised patient will receive care from a specialist rather than an emergency generalist.
In extreme cases, heart operations have been performed on the street (resulting in surviving patients). Overall, the French SAMU is arguably one of the very best in the world, innovating in lots of areas (the French SAMU are the only emergency teams to have tested portable succion cardiopumps on scene) and inspiring equivalent services in other countries.
The French emergency system is very different from emergency systems from the USA and the United Kingdom, for instance : one notable difference is that intervention units (ambulance or SMUR) may decide to stay on the scene for a long time (much more than the typical 10 minutes that ambulances spend on a scene before picking up a patient in most other countries).
This is often described as stay and play, opposed to the scoop and run strategy performed in the United States and in the United Kingdom. This is not totally true as in most cases, the patient is at the hospital within the golden hour, the best description would be play and run.
This feature is often misunderstood among the American public or British public. For instance, when Diana, Princess of Wales died in Paris, some British tabloids took outrage that the patient had stayed on the scene for two hours, leaving the impression that the delay might have caused the death. Actually, the SAMU doctrine allowed the patient to receive extensive care during these two hours, including cardiac ressucitation in the ambulance *.
''See .22Scoop and run.22.2C .22stay and play.22 or .22play and run.22.3F for more details ''.
The emergency number for SAMU is 15, in addition to the 112 (European emergency telephone number), 17 (police) and 18 (Fire department).
SAMU should not be mistaken with SAMU Social, which is a service for rescuing homeless people.
Emergency services prehospital care | Healthcare in France
Service d'aide médicale urgente | Service d'Aide Médicale Urgente