Your Logic is questioning at times....
If you want to look at individual fire departments then how about Big Bear. They have a total of 6 ambulances with normally at least 2 of those being staffed. When they get a medic call they roll out one ambulance and their fire engine. They only hire fire medics there. So you will have 2 medics in the ambulance and then 2-4 medics on the engine.
The reason that fire has a good response time is because they don't have to transport. They can be on a medical call for under 5 mins before they go back in service. Ambulances transport which normally means they are out of service for a longer time unless the patient AMAs.
Let’s set the golden rule down… On a medical call, you will need every time, an ambulance to TRANSPORT the patient to the hospital, every time.
You say Big Bear has 6 ambulances and 2 of them are being used at any given time. By the numbers, 4 of them are collecting dust, while the engine crew with 2-4 medics on board goes out with the 2 In-service AMBULANCES and does….. an assist with the ambulance. (Not Needed)
These 2-4 Medics are doing what on that engine that they couldn’t being doing on an ambulance???
You must realize that this is like the example I provided in my previous post. The Fire Engine that is for Fire Fighting Operations staffed with capable ‘Medical Medics’ is redundant. These 2-4 medics are rolling out in an engine while leaving 4 capable AMBULANCES back at the fire house….
“Well You Need A Fire Engine Available Always/Anyways for Fires” argument….
All of this because the Fire Engine(staffed with Medics) needs to be available not for *600 or so Medical transports but for the *17 or so fires that pop up year to year…… ready with medics……. On a Non-transporting vehicle….. with medics…….
*Figures aren’t available for the exact Medical vs. Fire calls ratio for Big Bear, so I will still use the Montclair Fire Dept. figures as a baseline, as the outnumbering medical calls are typical with every fire dept.
Please Note: This is almost implying that preparing for a fire is more important that preparing and adequately staffing for Medical calls, which are significantly more probable and occurring with 30:1 odds…. Almost Emphasizing: A Salvage Property before Life philosophy.
The reason that fire has a good response time is because they don't have to transport.
Did the ambulances that came from the same fire house as the engine not get there at the same time and transport?! Please enlighten me…. Why did the engine roll out again??? If there is an ambulance staffed with a competent Medic that is able to run the call with or without the Fire Engine, Once again why oh why is a Fire Engine responding to a Medical Call???
They can be on a medical call for under 5 mins before they go back in service.
The Fire Engine can. The ambulance that transported cannot. So now you have an engine rolling around the city with 2-4 medics (Please Note: 1 medic needed per ambulance to provide ALS care, with 4 ambulances with transport capabilities sitting in the fire house somewhere in the dark). The engine is going to get a call, and these 2-4 medics are going to respond without the capability to transport the patient, almost as if to say after waiting for upwards of 20 minutes, Completely munsoned on scene looking around waiting for a transport to arrive, “Wish we had an ambulance right now.” Not to mention they are out of service for other calls that pop up while they wait!
So does it make sence to have an ambulance crew waiting at the hospital to drop off a patient while having another 911 call on hold? Or would it make sence to have that same ambulance crew waiting at the hospital while a perfectly capable ALS engine crew respond to that 911 call?
Are you talking about the Fire Engine that we left alone back in Big Bear that is going to get to the call and have to wait for an ambulance??? That’s weird you would think they would need an AMBULANCE UP THERE ASAP…. Like 2-4 of them….. But where would we find such resources???...... hmm…
Yes having an ambulance crew with 3-5 min response times to every place would be nice. But it's extremely hard when an ambulance gets taken out of service for a long time to have that response time. You would have to have a really overstaffed company for that to happen.
Any company that has 2-4 medics driving around on a non transporting Fire Engine in my mind is overstaffed or dumb staffed. One medic per ALS call is adequate, everyone else is just an assist. Those ambulances you talk of that sit there doing nothing can serve more purpose than that fire engine that roles around providing professional first assessments. Its cheap in its holistic capabilities. You bring up your family member that benefitted so much from the Fire Engine coming to your house. Let me ask you, and be honest. Next time, if there was an AMR ambulance available and Fire Engine available up in big bear with the same en-route time as either, which would you prefer to show up at your door? The Fire Engine or a transporting ambulance with load and go capabilities, the same drug box, a gurney, and a generic Medic?