Experts

Elizabeth Melton

Elizabeth Melton

Faculty

“I am inspired to bring health care to rural and Tribal communities through the use of emergency medical services (EMS). EMS can be the first, and sometimes only, point of contact for many people on their health care journey. EMS can keep communities healthy.”

Elizabeth Melton, MSN, AGACNP, NRP, is a Nurse Practitioner with the Department of Emergency Medicine at University of New Mexico, where she serves as EMS Faculty.  She is part of the UNM Center for Rural and Tribal EMS. She is board certified as an Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner and specializes in Emergency Medicine, Acute Care Medicine, and in EMS Medicine.  She completed her Nurse Practitioner training and Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, USA, and is a Nationally Registered and State of New Mexico certified Paramedic.  Elizabeth currently serves as Deputy EMS Medical Director for Navajo Nation EMS, Pueblo of Zuni Fire and EMS, Cibola County Emergency Medical Services Office of Emergency Management, Pine Hill Emergency Medical Services, Pueblo of Isleta EMS, and the City of Grants Fire Rescue.  Her areas of research interest is in rural, frontier, and Tribal EMS, community paramedicine, and acute care interventions and procedures.

Emergency Medical Services ECHO Program

Elizabeth is faculty for the EMS ECHO Program, which is designed to effectively integrate and optimize first response, basic/intermediate/and advanced life support services and treat patients locally with holistic, culturally appropriate care.

Interested in receiving free treatment recommendations or technical assistance from one of our experts? Contact us at echo@npaihb.org.

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