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First Aid Newsletter

June 24, 2026 · 06:02 Uhr

1

Health Reform Threatens Emergency Care in Rural Areas

@E_Boeminghaus (X, Score: 78)

Rescue experts warn of massive cuts to emergency care through planned health reforms that could prevent structural developments in rescue services. ADAC air rescue and industry associations report threatening cuts to locations and operations. This significantly endangers the accessibility and quality of pre-clinical care in rural regions.

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2

Financing Gap of Up to 1 Billion Euros in Rescue Services

S+K Verlag für Notfallmedizin (Web)

The planned GKV Contribution Rate Stabilization Act creates a significant financing gap in the rescue service structure and jeopardizes the goals of emergency care reform. Municipalities and health insurance funds have been disputing cost responsibility for months without finding a viable solution. This blocks necessary modernization and staffing of rescue services nationwide.

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3

Bureaucracy Slows Emergency Paramedics – Competency Issues Unresolved

Tagesschau Investigativ (Web)

Emergency paramedics nationwide criticize that they may only administer limited medications without mandatory physician presence, which delays patient care. The regulations do not match the expanded care services of modern rescue services. This leads to care gaps and frustration among qualified professionals.

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4

ERC Guidelines 2025 Revolutionize CPR and AED Practices

erste-hilfe-kurs-online.de (Web), @msangellouiseg (X, Score: 80)

New ERC guidelines establish updated CPR techniques, new infant compression technique, and strengthened AED focus in resuscitation training. High-engagement posts demonstrate practical applications and improved survival chances through immediate CPR and AED deployment. First aid courses at DRK, Johanniter, and Malteser must adapt training content.

5

Continuing Education Reforms: Physician Leadership No Longer Mandatory

@Algorithmus22 (X, Score: 88)

New regulations eliminate the requirement for physician leadership of training providers and significantly reduce physician requirements on examination committees. This modernizes first aid training structures and lowers organizational barriers for providers such as DRK, Johanniter, and Malteser. The change could expand course offerings and improve accessibility.

Situation Report

German emergency and rescue medicine is in a critical transformation phase: planned health reforms threaten to create a multi-billion euro financing gap and structurally endanger emergency care, while simultaneously regulatory obstacles (physician dependence, physician leadership requirements) hamper efficiency. New ERC guidelines and training reforms have a positive effect, modernizing CPR/AED standards and making first aid courses less bureaucratic. The industry must prove itself between cost-cutting measures and necessary investments in skilled personnel and infrastructure; critical is the undersupply of rural regions.

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