Skip to content

Animal Oxygen Masks Donations Continue- Charleston SC Area Depts Latest Beneficiaries

By Dave Munday – The Post and Courier

CHARLESTON — “It would be sad enough to lose a home to a fire; to lose a pet would be unbearable.”

That’s the slogan on Janet Fincannon’s Web site. She’s a self-described cat lover who values her five felines more than her West Ashley house.

She started the Web site last month to raise money to buy oxygen masks designed to fit over animal snouts. It’s called Oxygen Masks for Pets. She raised enough in a couple weeks to donate 51 sets of animal oxygen masks to local fire departments.

“She needs to be commended,” Charleston Fire Department spokesman Mark Ruppel said. “She did an incredible job. She is truly an amazing individual, taking this on single-handedly.”

Charleston got 15 sets of pet masks, one for each station. Ruppel said the firefighters will use them.

North Charleston, Johns Island, Folly Beach and the Old Fort fire departments also got some.

Fincannon raised $1,500, and Invisible Fence of Coastal Carolinas matched it. Invisible Fence, which sells systems to keep pets safe, will continue to match donations up to $3,000, said Lisa Swayne Proud, the company’s donation coordinator.

Fincannon said she’s thrilled with the response so far.

“My long-range goal is for every fire truck in America to have oxygen masks for pets,” she said.

Few, if any, fire departments use tax money to buy oxygen masks for animals. Those who use them say the masks fit better than devices designed for people.

They come in three sizes. The smallest can handle little dogs, cats or even ferrets.

Each set costs about $65 wholesale. None of the local fire departments has spent any tax money on them. All have been donated.

Mount Pleasant and North Charleston started using them last year, followed by James Island, St. Andrews and Hollywood. Goose Creek got the masks in September.

Fincannon started her Web site and fundraising effort after reading an article in The Post and Courier last month about fire departments that use special oxygen masks for animals trapped in house fires.

Charleston Fire Chief Thomas Carr said in the article he was not using the masks but would be glad to if somebody came forth with the money. That’s when Fincannon went into action.

She recently watched a video of firefighters reviving a dog rescued from a house fire in Daytona Beach, Fla.

“If that doesn’t bring tears to your eyes, I just don’t know, when that little dog starts wagging its tail,” she said.

From TheSunNews.com

Posted in Change, News

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogger Jeremy Black Canned- John Mitchell Takes the Helm at FireDaily.com

“I’m looking forward to spending more time with my family,” Jeremy Black told a hastily created press conference early this afternoon.  “I’m proud of my involvement in the genesis of FireDaily, and will always look back with fond memories of my short time here”,” he told the completely empty room.

After less than one hundred days, Black was relieved of his post as Executive Editor and Chief Blogmeister at FireDaily.com, an upstart blogging venture experiencing rapid growth.  It became clear last Friday that Black would not be a part of the future of FireDaily.  Black left a comment on FireEMSblog.com partner Mick Mayer’s Firefighter Nation Blog that was the final straw.

“Even if he didn’t mean it the way it came across, his comment was unnecessary and just plain out of line,” crowed John Mitchell.  “Chief Mayers is a highly respected firefighter and champion blogger.  He was put into an awkward situation, and that’s not what FireDaily.com is all about.  We finally realized that his services were no longer needed here.”

Formerly the Vice President of Media Relations and Senior Assistant Blogmeister, Mitchell has tapped himself to replace Black effective immediately.

“We tried to be nice, but he just wouldn’t take the hint.”  Mitchell had to resort to more serious tactics to get the point across.

“First, we took his red stapler.  That usually works, ya know.  Next, we moved his office into the basement.  That’s where the girls like watching Pokemon,” Mitchell explained.  “We were convinced that would do the trick, but his psychiatrist just upped his meds and, to his credit, he hung firm”.

Black smiled wryly at the visual image from Mitchell’s metaphor.

With the holidays approaching, a rash but effective decision was made to avoid a confrontation during a time when interactions with extended families already created a hostile environment. The entire FireDaily staff (of one) met this weekend behind closed doors and came up with a plan.

“How many times did we have to tell him to ‘step away from the comma’?  He had become a comma-holic, dropping them everywhere and anywhere,” Mitchell related, rolling his beautiful blue eyes in disgust as he sprayed the last of a Costco 3-pack of Fabreze into the area around the executive desk.

“We tried getting him to read Frank McCourt’s Eats, Shoots & Leaves countless times, but we knew that would could never tear him away from Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue, especially how painfully slowly he reads, asking for help with the big words all the time.”

So, realizing the comma remained Black’s Achilles Heel, Mitchell sabotaged his laptop this morning by reassigning a happy-face emoticon to the dirty and stained comma key on the keyboard.

“I wish we did that a long time ago, his posts would have made more sense,” Mitchell ripped.

That did the trick.

Comma-less, Black left immediately after the press conference- sans stapler.  He will continue to receive a small percentage of the Adsense profits from the site if they eventually are earned.

As he continued de-lousing the office, Mitchell whined that he hadn’t heard the last from Black.

“We know he’ll land on his feet, he just needs to learn to keep them out of his mouth.”

Posted in Change, Just For Fun, News

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thanks for increasing the chance that my wife and children will get a visit from my Chief and a Chaplain.

Hey, elected official!

I know the economy is in the dumps, the teabag revolution is morphing, and it is politically rewarding to slash the budgets across the board, no matter the true cost.

Quick question for ‘ya:  What will it take to find a way to bring costs down without killing us, your so-called heroes?

Let’s review what you’ve accomplished for us so far:

In order to save money, you have cut mandated the closure of one of our stations, meaning that I now arrive a little later then I used to, and my help may be a little farther out than it used to be.  The fire has a head start, the dangers of a catastrophic fire event occurring while I’m inside has increased with the delay.  And when I need help in getting out, or help in getting one of your constituents out, my assistance will be running just a tad later than usual.

Thanks for increasing the chance that my wife and children will get a visit from my Chief and a Chaplain.

In order to save money, you have taken one person away from my crew, depleting my immediate manpower needs by 25-50%.  I have to do the job of 1 1/2 people just as quickly as before.  What are the chances I will have to take shortcuts or make a mistake in order to perform outside my abilities due to your cuts?  I am now less protected, and we are all less effective on the fireground.

Thanks for increasing the chance that my wife and children will get a visit from my Chief and a Chaplain.

In order to save money, you have postponed the replacement of my 13-year old apparatus, you’ve refused to replace retiring personnel, and you’ve frozen funds for training.

Thanks for increasing the chance that my wife and children will get a visit from my Chief and a Chaplain.

You’re a politician, but I am a firefighter. I fight fires, I protect property and I save lives. I am asked to do more and more with less and less. And I’m just barely hanging in there as you continue to cut and slash.

It sucks.

I’m doing all I can in my power to make sure my Chief and a chaplain don’t knock at my door. All I want is to fight fires, protect property, save lives and go home to my wife and kids after my shift has ended.

God help you if I don’t, because my wife and kids will come knocking at yours.

Posted in Change, Funding & Staffing, Staffing, WTF?

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dancing Firefighter Robot Helps Protect Chief’s Boot Tassles

The fire service has always been able to look toward the military as a source of methods and ideas in meeting the challenges both face. What’s next on the horizon?

Enter “Big Dog”.

Big Dog is the newest entry into robotic assistance to the foot soldier. Imagine the possibilities for such a buddy on the fireground:

1. Big Dog could hump the supply line while the firefighter who forgot to tag the hydrant can run ahead and prepare for connection.

2. When it comes to RIT activities, Big Dog can be pre-supplied with all the equipment necessary whilst staging close to the potential entry point.

3. Four Big Dogs together can each hold a corner of a rescue net to catch jumping fire victims, constantly adjusting their position based upon facial recognition technology of the terrified occupant readying their decent.

4. Fitted with a “Chief Seat” ala Captain Kirk’s on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise, Big Dog can give the Incident Commander or Safety Officer complete mobility around any fire scene, effectively negotiating the pile of spaghetti hose, hard-working firefighters, piles of dog crap, and those annoying puddles of water that are so damn destructive to fire chief’s bunker boots with tassels.

5. Back at the station, during those slow times when firefighters get bored and invariably turn to a video camera for merriment, Big Dog can join in as firemen try to improve what they think are their best dance moves as they prepare for the new NBC show “So, You Want To Dance With a Firefighter?”

Like some firefighters, Big Dog might currently be too slow, too large, and in need of constant manipulation by his crew. It still takes Big Dog a long time to get dressed up in all his gear, rarely making the 60-second threshold of his peers.

He seems to let off plenty of gas, too.  He’ll fit right in!

But he is already advanced enough to be able to mimic some firefighters by the sheer noise he  emits when pressed into action at “the big one.”

Help me, I can’t stop- there are so many possibilities!

Care to offer more?

-Stay stoked!

-J

Posted in Change, Firefighting Operations, Just For Fun, Technology & Communications, Tips and Tricks

Tagged , , , , , , , ,

The Latest Chirp on Twitter Lists

Twitter’s new Lists feature is all the rage right now.

Essentially, a list is just a grouping of Twitter users, all of whom may be followed in one click. They may be created by any user, although Twitter is currently limiting a user to 20 lists and capping the number of tweeters on a list at 500. So, if I create a list called “Best Firefighters on Twitter,” I could group a few players into a list, and blam-o, if anyone wants to follow that entire list located on my Twitter page, he or she may do so.

There are probably already millions of lists, and that number is growing by the minute (or second). So what are people using all these lists for? Are people creating lists just for the sake of creating lists? Savvy individuals are looking for ways to use lists to further their personal/professional agendas, and while we are all still learning how to harness the power of this new feature, here are a few ideas to get the creative juices flowing.

1. Firefighting (or Paramedic, EMS, Rescue) Topics- Check those you already follow and pull out the ones that fit into your specific category. Once you have developed your list, offer to share it with others. Feel free to link to my list in case you’re not into reinventing the wheel.

2. If you’re an expert at a certain topic, say, truck work, create a list of fellow experts on twitter and name it “expert truckies”. Not only do your fellow twitters gain online visibility, but you gain credibility as leader in that field as well by creating the list and offering it out to your peers.

3. Location Based links- Create a list of everyone in your geographical area with similar interests. Again, you will have created a valuable resource to utilize for things important to your area, as well as having something of value to offer your partners.

Need more information? Check out this article. Also, FireCritic recently posted a blog on the site WeFollow. I’ve found another great site called Listorious that is useful for finding lists that already exist.

Posted in Change, Just For Fun, Tips and Tricks

Tagged , , ,

Today’s Web Scanner 11/3/09

Man Killed After Being Struck By Ambulance

53- year old John Dollar of Jacksonville, AR was killed Saturday night after being struck by a MEMS (Metropolitan Emergency Medical Services) ambulance. According to an Arkansas State Police preliminary fatal crash summary, Dollar was attempting to remove an injured dog from the roadway at about 9:45 p.m. when he was struck by the ambulance’s right front fender. The ambulance driver swerved to avoid Dollar, but was unable to prevent the collision. The ambulance crew was enroute, non-emergent, to the hospital with a stable patient and was able to immediately begin treating Dollar. He was airlifted to Baptist Medical Center where he was pronounced dead. A full report will be released later this week by the Arkansas State Police.

Thanks, Michael

In today’s ‘Bad Apple” segment, we share the story of Michael Dunn, an 18-year veteran of the Milwaukee Fire Department, who is accused of lacing his wife’s tea with a prescription antidepressant. It has been reported that his wife had shared the some of the tea with the couple’s 3-year old son. Whether or not he is guilty, the damage is already done. The public unconditionally anoints us with admiration and hero status, requiring us to hold ourselves to the highest standards of morality and decency. Unfortunately, each time a story like this gets press, the public perception of firefighters drops yet another notch with the report of his arrest.

Thanks, Jack

We are all aware of the many tough moments we face in our careers. Among the most difficult is hanging up the leather for the last time.  For 45 years, Tuscaloosa Fire and Rescue Service has been the second home of Jack Thompson. Today is his last day. Here is a guy that was around before SCBA’s (they fashioned their own from diving gear!) and has been a part of the steady evolution of the fire service to where it is today. In a report on TuscaloosaNews.com by Stephanie Taylor, Tuscaloosa Fire Chief Alan Martin said, ‘He was one of those who helped adapt and move the department forward . The Fire and Rescue Service has a long tradition of doing things the right way, and he’s partly responsible for that.”  Way to go, Jack!

Stay Stoked!

-J

Posted in Change, News

Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,

30 Minutes of Training Per Week is Unfair and “Unreal”

Running Against The Wind

Running Against The Wind

I had just finished reading a depressing thought I found on facebook by Christopher Naum:

“There’s an awful lot of time, energy and resources being committed and directed towards fire service safety. Is anyone really listening? Does anyone really care?” Are we just running against the wind?

Almost immediately after reading that, I find out that a downstate Illinois fire protection district has a problem. Some of their firefighters do not have the proper qualifications for responding to and working a structure fire.

“I see there are firefighters with zero hours in training,” one trustee said. “Either you are a firefighter or you’re not.”

Most were the older guys, retired, and unable or unwilling to commit the time and energy needed to meet the requirements set forth by the state of Illinois.

According to the Illinois Fire Protection Act, firefighters are required to meet a minimum of 24 hours of training per year.

I did some quick math. My 3rd grade daughter confirmed my calculations. That’s two hours a month. 30 minutes a week.

Tell me there aren’t firefighters out there that are donning equipment with which they are not completely familiar, advancing the wrong size line with the wrong nozzle into a ‘burning box’ just waiting to collapse, unable to recognize the deadly warning signs of a catastrophic fire event for which their equally untrained buddies will have to come in and effect a rescue they are ill-prepared to attempt potentially killing them all.

Please tell me this is a unique situation. TELL ME!

Recognizing the liability of untrained firefighters on the fireground, the trustees of this fire protection district are considering their chief’s proposal to form a second tier of membership- call it an auxiliary role.

Keep the guys active, but don’t put them into a position where they could hurt themselves or others.  There are other things these guys could do in a support role.

Sounds like a great idea, right?

You’ve read this far, you earned your payoff:

After the news of the proposed change appeared on the FireRescue1 website, one lonely comment appeared. It’s so bizarre; I’m not quite able to accept that it wasn’t posted as a facetious remark. Here it is, by ‘tommy517’:

“I think it is unreal what law makers are trying to require volunteer firefighters training for responding to calls. I know they feel it is for firefighter safety they come up with some of the stuff, and anything to make it safer is better. However, someone who has done it for years should be given some credit for years of service. I’m a volunteer and I love it. There isn’t anything much better to me than running on fire and rescue calls. I took all the required classes I needed at the time. Now they are wanting to come up with new stuff all the time. When I started I was a student in high school. Now I have a family and work full time. Its hard to get all the “new” trainings that are out there. I wish I had the time to go and take all the new classes and find out what is new in the fire service. With a job and family now its hard to respond to calls sometimes let alone run here and there for classes. Really what has changed? We still gear up get on the truck and put the wet stuff on the red stuff…”

Like he said, “Really, what has changed?’”

Seriously, folks. How many line of duty injuries and worse do we have to endure before this kind of mindset changes?

30 minutes a week…

Posted in Change, Firefighters, News, Training, Training & Development, WTF?

Tagged , , , , ,

360 Burn Around The Fire Web

Up where I live, we had no real spring this year. Last winter lasted about 8 months, seriously. Now I noticed that the leaves that had just started falling last week are almost completely gone from all my trees. Welcome back to winter in Chicagoland. As nature changes her seasons, we enter a new season as well: our busy season.

It’s no accident that our public education kicks into high gear this time of year, either. What we say and do out there in the public makes a tangible difference. Mark my words; we will be hearing a story about what some kindergartner did to save his family after having learned it from a friendly local fireman who stopped by his school this month.

I hear firefighters that originally don’t look forward to school talks come back afterward bubbling about what a great time it actually turned out to be. Not only have they performed a great service, they had a blast interacting with the kids. Kudos to all of you who devote your time and energy to this important aspect of fire service.

To Serve and Reset

One type of call we’ll see more often now are the responses to sprinkler system alarms and activations. In our department, we’re relegating valuable space previously occupied by grass fire brooms and assigning squeegees in their spots for the burst pipe calls. BC Michael Lee posted a great resource called A Response Guide for Sprinkler Systems. It’s a comprehensive step-by-step plan of attack that you can refer to when planning your responses. If you need a starting point for an SOG, or just want your officers and crews to have a quick refresher, take a look!

Your Cheatin’ Heart

Earlier this week, Chief Reason Art addressed cheating. He continues his thoughts in the second verse of “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and reveals just how rampant cheating has become in the fire service. When it makes the press, it is devastating. Art gives numerous links that show just how widespread it has become. He lists several questions that make us look inward to see if our actions (or inactions) actually contribute to the current climate.

The bigger issue involves each of us. Do we accept and condone such activity? If we allow it to continue, we risk losing the public admiration so freely given to us. That would be a heavy penalty to pay. Don’t let it happen.

The Reach of Brotherhood

For 17 years, Greg LaRue was a proud Fort Worth, TX firefighter. “I had my dream job,” he said. But his life unraveled about two years ago. Instead of a firehouse, he found himself waiting in line at shelters, living off free meals, without a penny to his name.

Read the story of his journey back from rock bottom in Monday’s Star-Telegram. You’ll find a perfect example of the “reach of brotherhood” as exemplified by the warm hearts of his brothers at Station 33. Joe Lowrey, an engineer at Station 33, said: “Even though he’s not here, he’s still like one of our own. He’s a good friend to all of us, and we’re all pulling for him.”

Stay stoked!

-J

Posted in 360 Burn, Change, Firefighting Operations, Training, Training & Development

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

A Special Note to the Bloggers at the New FireEMSblogs.com

Wow. New digs!

It’s reminds me of the last time I moved into a newly-opened fire station. No, not that temporary piece of crap renovated warehouse ‘station’ in the industrial park with the loading dock and a bay door 2 ¾ inches wider than the mirrors on the engine it housed, and the rickety stairs leading to the open loft day room on top of the kitchen’s ceiling…

If I sound bitter about that rat hole, it’s because I am.

No, this one is the shiny and new kind. You remember: the “new construction smell” and plastic still on the recliners. The kitchen cabinets and drawers full of new pots and utensils. The bay floors that will never be that clean again despite your efforts, and the johns that will.

As I check out all the new features on FireEMSblogs.com, I compare it to going into each room of the new station; touching everything everywhere as ideas on how to customize begin to float around in my head.

To the builders (Chris, Dave, and the crew) congratulations, it’s truly amazing. Your hard work so far has clearly paid off. I join the others with eager anticipation in what lies ahead. Thanks!

To my new partners, thanks for taking me aboard and your hospitable welcome. Although I’ll be entering my fifth decade in the fire service next year, this makes me feel like the young probie all over again (this time I’ll do things right). I hope I can earn your respect as we move forward together with our common purpose.

Finally, as I visited each of your sites tonight, I noticed the graphics and design features you all implemented with the rollout They are really impressive, and I’ve got my work cut out for me. Great job everyone!

Even with our new “station” we’ll still all be “running calls”, so the work won’t change. But the new digs seem to have an invigorating effect, don’t you agree?

Stay stoked!

-J

Posted in Change, Fire Rescue Topics

Tagged

UK Paramedics to Prescribe Medications?

Gaze into the crystal ball.

Have you been hearing rumblings of an expanding role for first responders- again? Community-based medical services such as oxygen tank maintenance and catheter replacement continue to be floated. Any guess on who will perform these tasks?

Alaska is already utilizing Community Health Aides/Practitioners (CHA/P) in rural areas to provide focused primary care, health education, health surveillance, emergency care, and other activities where such services are badly needed.

Now, across the pond, paramedics in England could be given greater powers to dispense drugs under an initiative to redesign emergency services and keep patients at home and out of the A&E (ER), according to a report from The Guardian yesterday. The proposal would look to arm paramedics with a greater skill set that would be utilized to keep patients from admission to the hospital, saving a boatload of bucks for the financially-strained Department of Health.

“The system isn’t working as well as it should… The government is looking at whether it’s right for paramedics to be able to prescribe medicines, something that would help keep patients in the community,” says said Liz Kendall, the director of the Ambulance Service Network at their group’s first-ever convention this week. The ASN is part of the National Health Service (NHS) Confederation.

Expanding the role for first responders is nothing new here in the States. Change has been constant, and there’s every reason to believe that our service will continue to evolve.

What do you see you and your crew doing differently in the next five years?

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Posted in Change, EMS

Tagged , , , ,

Can You Be Forced to Take The H1N1 Vaccine?

New Challenges Pose New Questions for First Responders

Brett Brett is a firefighter/paramedic on a suburban Chicago fire department. He normally doesn’t get the regular flu shot because he feels it makes him sick. To date, Brett has yet to decide if he should get the H1N1 flu vaccine being offered up this month.

With all the H1N1 press lately, Brett has some new-found concerns. Many of them affect each of us employed as first responders:

1. Can Brett’s employer force him to take the vaccine- in other words- is there a point where his employer can dictate Brett’s personal healthcare decisions?

2. If Brett refuses, might he face disciplinary consequences up to and including termination?

3. Will Brett’s employer-provided insurance carrier have a say as well?

4. What happens if Brett refuses the vaccine and gets sick on the job?

5. Will worker’s compensation be available to him if he refuses the vaccine??

6. What liabilities do Brett and his employer accept should he contract the H1N1 flu?

7. What happens if Brett contracts the virus and passes it on to his co-workers or patients?

H1N1 globe mask Another interesting aspect to the story is there is nothing to fall back on in the area of precedence.  These are new times full of new challenges.  It’s possible that Brett’s employer doesn’t yet have the answers to these questions and will have to make some decisions soon to enact the next time around.  The way his agency handles these situations may be quite different than the way yours does.

There will invariably be a labor-management aspect which will have to be reconciled as well.  Freedoms that Brett may enjoy under his current contract may have to be negotiated the next time around.

So many questions, so little time.

-J

Posted in Change, EMS, Firefighters

Fire Departments as First Responders

Peeling off his latex gloves after treating a 4-year-old boy having a severe asthma attack, J. R. Muyleart sighed with a touch of frustration. It was 3 a.m. and in the past 24-hour shift, Mr. Muyleart, a firefighter, had responded to at least one emergency call per hour.clip_image001

But only two of those calls were for fires; most of the others involved heart attacks, diabetic sores, epileptic seizures and people complaining of shortness of breath.

“I joined the force to battle blazes, not to be an emergency room doctor,” Mr. Muyleart, 35, said as he and the rest of Engine Company 10 drove back to their firehouse, which for most of the last 15 years has been the busiest in the country, according to industry surveys.

Among the hidden costs of the health care crisis is the burden that fire departments across the country are facing as firefighters, much like emergency room doctors, are increasingly serving as primary care providers.

About 80 percent of the calls handled by Engine Company 10 are medical emergencies because the firehouse serves one of the city’s poorest areas, where few residents have health insurance, doctors’ checkups are rare, and medical problems are left to fester until someone dials 911.

In many big cities, the problem is compounded by budget shortfalls that have led to the elimination or proposed elimination of 6,000 firefighter jobs in the past year, or about 2 percent of all firefighters, according to the International Association of Fire Fighters. At the same time, emergency calls have increased by 1.2 million, or 3.5 percent, compared with the year before.

Washington’s fire department, which has not faced major layoffs, is dispatched along with Emergency Medical Services to almost all emergency calls in the belief that it can provide the quickest response. It gets more such calls per capita than just about any other fire department in the nation, and a disproportionate number come from poorer neighborhoods like Trinidad, where Engine 10 is based, in the Northeast section of the city.

In New York City, only about 45 percent of the 473,335 calls answered by firefighters last year involved medical emergencies. The city’s Emergency Medical Service handles most medical calls, responding to 1.2 million last year.

clip_image002Fire departments nationwide responded to almost 1.5 million fire calls in 2008, compared with 3 million in 1980, according to the National Fire Protection Association. Fire departments went on about 15.8 million medical calls in 2008, up from about 5 million in 1980, a 213 percent increase. The shift has occurred as cities realized that firefighters could respond more quickly than ambulances, and more cities trained firefighters as emergency medical technicians.

Some cities have questioned the cost of dispatching fire engines to medical emergencies, but most have determined that it is too risky not to always send the closest emergency personnel.

In St. Louis, Emergency Medical Services and the Fire Department merged in 1997 to save money. But the city fire chief, Dennis M. Jenkerson, still sends fire trucks on most medical calls.

“People call and say, ‘I’m having trouble breathing,’ ” Chief Jenkerson said. “Can they afford to wait five and a half, six minutes, for an ambulance? No. Seconds count with most medical emergencies.”

Most other departments also dispatch fire trucks to medical calls because firefighters are trained emergency medical technicians, cities have more fire trucks than ambulances, and fire stations are located throughout the city, said Lori Moore-Merrell of the International Association of Fire Fighters.

“If it’s a serious medical call, a fire, we sprint, regardless,” Mr. Muyleart said as he hustled to the truck after a caller reported chest pains. “It just seems like so many people use us as their primary care providers.”

-The New York Times

Posted in Change, EMS

Tagged , ,