Been a while since I have posted. I have been kinda out of ems for a while then got back in - worked for a jacked up private service - yada yada. But my interest level is coming back (thankfully).
I have been debating this for a while locally here and want everyones opinion.
Let me set the scene. Our fire district is diverse. We have a US highway, and dirt roads with steep cliffs and hairpin turns. Our dispatch comes through the local state police post. (We don't have a "county dispatch" per se`). I have worked there as a dispatcher before and let's just say things always don't go as they should. But the accepted protocol is to dispatch the private ambulance service to the scene of an accident BEFORE sending your local fire departments. In our district, EMS is around 15-20 minutes out. Our FD response time is on average 5(ish).
In one instance, I heard EMS clearing en route to an accident in our area BEFORE we were even notified. This means the call had to come in to dispatch, the dispatcher get the information, 911 dispatcher hang up with the caller, pick up the phone, call the ems service dispatcher, give them the information, the ems service dispatcher picks up the phone and calls the closest ems station, gives the crew the information, the crew gets out of the station into the unit and gets on their way and then keys up the radio and says they are all in route. ALL of this happens THEN we were notified to go to the call.
My point is this. Fire departments have the ability to effect the outcome of the scene more than any other agency. As ems, we can't do anything if the car is on fire, victim trapped. If fire is not an ems agency (such as our case), the least they can do is stabilize the scene, remove any obvious hazards and prevent other accidents.
The extra time it takes to notify the ems agency, is the amount of time you are delaying the first agency to be on scene. And in my opinion anything you can do to delay the first agency arriving on scene is a wrong decision.
If you guys don't care, let me know what you think and give me some examples.
THANKS!!!
Sean
EMT-B
AHA CPR Instructor
Firefighter I
I have been debating this for a while locally here and want everyones opinion.
Let me set the scene. Our fire district is diverse. We have a US highway, and dirt roads with steep cliffs and hairpin turns. Our dispatch comes through the local state police post. (We don't have a "county dispatch" per se`). I have worked there as a dispatcher before and let's just say things always don't go as they should. But the accepted protocol is to dispatch the private ambulance service to the scene of an accident BEFORE sending your local fire departments. In our district, EMS is around 15-20 minutes out. Our FD response time is on average 5(ish).
In one instance, I heard EMS clearing en route to an accident in our area BEFORE we were even notified. This means the call had to come in to dispatch, the dispatcher get the information, 911 dispatcher hang up with the caller, pick up the phone, call the ems service dispatcher, give them the information, the ems service dispatcher picks up the phone and calls the closest ems station, gives the crew the information, the crew gets out of the station into the unit and gets on their way and then keys up the radio and says they are all in route. ALL of this happens THEN we were notified to go to the call.
My point is this. Fire departments have the ability to effect the outcome of the scene more than any other agency. As ems, we can't do anything if the car is on fire, victim trapped. If fire is not an ems agency (such as our case), the least they can do is stabilize the scene, remove any obvious hazards and prevent other accidents.
The extra time it takes to notify the ems agency, is the amount of time you are delaying the first agency to be on scene. And in my opinion anything you can do to delay the first agency arriving on scene is a wrong decision.
If you guys don't care, let me know what you think and give me some examples.
THANKS!!!
Sean
EMT-B
AHA CPR Instructor
Firefighter I