A pioneer in establishing the paramedic emergency care system
Walter Samuel Graf (July 15, 1917 – October 18, 2015) was an American cardiologist. He was a pioneer in establishing paramedicemergency care, "one of a handful of doctors who created the modern paramedic emergency system".[1]
During the 1960s he created a dedicated coronary care unit at Daniel Freeman Memorial Hospital, thought to be the first such unit on the West Coast.[3] He became concerned about the lack of actual medical care being given to coronary patients during emergency transportation to a hospital. In 1969, while serving as president of the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Heart Association, he created a "mobile critical care unit", consisting of a Chevrolet Van, a registered nurse, and a portable defibrillator.[2] He was inspired in part by the work of Frank Pantridge, inventor of the portable defibrillator, who had established a mobile coronary critical care unit in Belfast, Northern Ireland.[3]
Also in 1969 his patient Kenneth Hahn, a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, persuaded the Supervisors to approve a pilot program to train county firefighters as "Mobile Intensive Care Paramedics". A change in state law was necessary to allow personnel other than doctors and nurses to render emergency medical care. Graf helped to write the Wedworth-Townsend Paramedic Act of 1970, which was signed into law by GovernorRonald Reagan on July 15, 1970, despite opposition from doctors, nurses, and attorneys.[3] Reagan first sought assurance from Hahn that paramedics would be allowed to cross city lines freely within Los Angeles County, recalling that his father had died in 1940 of a heart attack after a Los Angeles-based ambulance was restricted from entering Beverly Hills to attend to him.[2]
Paramedic training began the next month at the Freeman Hospital under Graf's direction.[4] It was the first nationally accredited paramedic training program in the United States.[5] A 1973 follow-up study of transported cardiac patients indicated that trained paramedic firefighters performed as well as nurses; that trained personnel performed equally well whether using the special coronary response van or a regular ambulance; and that response time was twice as fast when paramedics were called compared to when a physician was called.[6] The program he started at Freeman Hospital merged with the UCLA Center for Prehospital Care in 1999. Paramedic training was carried out at the old Freeman Hospital location, in a building known as the Walter S. Graf Center, before moving to 5220 Pacific Concourse Drive in 2015.[7]
Personal life
Graf was married four times and had nine children and stepchildren.[2] He died in Los Angeles on October 18, 2015, at the age of 98.[1] He is buried at the Hillside Memorial Park in Los Angeles.[8]
^Graf, Walter S.; et al. (October 8, 1973). "A Community for Emergency Program Cardiac Care: A Three-Year Coronary Ambulance/Paramedic Evaluation". JAMA. 226 (2): 156–60. doi:10.1001/jama.1973.03230020024006. PMID4740908.