fireman0232:
I can say in Georgia the only time you can stopp CPR is a valid DNR, you call medical control ( Talk to Doctor not nurse ) or have no help and become to tired to perform proper CPR.
I have been a Paramedic in Georgia for 21 years, and in the event you can't continue CPR, then stopping is appropriate. However, as another poster stated, each State, county, and city can determine their protocols for CPR (which normally follows American Heart or Red Cross), and the service medical director may have protocols for stopping CPR without transport to a E.D. As with the service I currently work for, this is pretty straight forward. Persistent asystole(checked in two leads); must be intubated, two rounds of meds. (following ACLS protocol), and must not be in a public place, (meaning, you can't work the code in a mall, etc. with no change, and leave the body there).
Also, the hiring of pvt. ambulance services is the norm now because of promises the companies make the local government entities..."we can do it cheaper and better",
but this causes problems for all after several years. The pvt. ambulance services always put the dollar first, and the patient second. They swear they don't, but I have worked for several,and it never fails, the dollar wins.
Just thought you'd like to know.