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One lump or two? Moline drops the axe on 12 firefighter/paramedics.

Refusing to consider what Ronald Reagan called “revenue enhancements”, the people of Moline have spoken.  Bub-bye to 4-5 firefighter/paramedics PER SHIFT.

In six months the City of Moline, one of the “Quad Cities” along the Illinois-Iowa border will have its’ emergency medical services provided by a private entity. 

So how do you like your tea?  One lump or two?

"Are we doing it right or is everyone else doing it right?” asks Moline (IL) Mayor Don Welvaert.  "When you look around us at the greater region, ourselves and our sister city of Rock Island are the only two public EMS systems left in the greater area."

The use of the word “greater” is now arguable.

 

 

The city council’s alderman voted 4-4 on the proposed budget package and Welvaert cast the deciding vote, effectively eliminating the positions of twelve of the city’s firefighter/paramedics.  The budget looks to close a $1.7 million dollar deficit.  The Council’s vote clears the way to begin accepting proposals for which the city hopes to choose one and have the private firm in place providing service on July 1, 2012

“I'm just looking at it from a financial point of view. What are the real numbers, because we've heard real numbers from A to Z. If the citizens of Moline are willing to fully fund EMS services and support personnel the tax rate would have to be readjusted," says 4th Ward Alderman Ted Ronk.

However, the nationwide cacophony of demands for lower taxes does not make that likely to occur.  Extremists like those in the Tea Party have demanded their political leaders not allow one extra penny of taxes.  Their extremist right-wing hero, Grover Norquist, has made many political “leaders” sign a pledge to that end. 

Can I warm up your tea for you?  Bub-bye 12 finely trained firefighter/paramedics. 

The vote was close. 7th Ward Alderman Sean Liddell who voted against the proposal put it this way:  "I would compare this call to privatize EMS in order to save pension costs being a boat that's taking on water and trying to bail out with a Dixie cup. Why would we cut personnel that all but pays for it?"

Union President Brian Vyncke expressed dismay that the city had not sought the union out earlier in the process to work toward a solution that would not result in slashing the daily staffing. 

“We understand concessions need to be made, but when they start threatening cuts of 4-5 firefighters on a shift, 18% of our guys, that's just not even remotely close to being fair."

The firefighter's union says this fight is not over. It will start negotiating with the city in January and the union says the goal is to save the 12 jobs.

Posted in EMS, EMS Topics, Funding & Staffing, IAFF, News, Staffing, Videos, WTF?

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Free Beer!*

September 29th from 8-11pm at Gators Croc & Roc, 1714 North Market Street, Dallas TX

I haven’t been home to “the big D” since the days of good ol’ number 79, Harvey Martin.  But I’ll be venturing into the Lone Star State to join dozens of my closest friends at the EMS Expo in just a couple of weeks.  I need to be in Emmitsburg that weekend, so I’ll be in and out quickly. It will be just like going to Wisconsin- or Czechoslovakia!

JEMS.com and FireEMSblogs.com are hosting The Meetup in Dallas, where some of the most influential EMS (and fire) bloggers from across the universe will break bread (‘tizers) and share some sodies (beverages).

At the end of the night, I’ll be walking (or crawling) away with either an iPad 16GB 3G, or one of the highly-coveted first copies of MONOPOLY: Emergency Medical Services edition which are available in the free raffle.  Geez, my friend Rhett (hiccup) won’t be there to run the raffle!

* If you are in the greater Dallas area or traveling to the Expo, be sure to stop in.  I’m buying the first 300 attendees a brewski.  Actually, that’s not true- but the event sponsored by Physio-Control will offer the first 300 a free beer or wine.  See you there!

Posted in EMS, EMS Topics, Just For Fun

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Medic 999: Let That Be a Lesson To Us

Medic 999′s most recent post tells us he is hanging up his blogging endeavors due to some shenanigans flung at him by some uninformed and misguided chuckleheads (my words, not his).

I don’t know the details of everything Mark had to take into consideration, but I fully support his decision knowing only he has the full story (all the chapters).  Having met the man a few times, I have no doubt he made the correct, albeit a tough decision.

But the lesson we can learn goes beyond how 999Medic was targeted and throttled.  Mark Glencourse is a paramedic who saw a need, found a path, and walked the walk.  We may not yet fully realize the incredible benefits gained by his actions.

The story has been told many times.  Briefly, Mark recognized the differences in the delivery of prehospital care between his service in the UK and others around the world.  He became acquained with The Happy Medic, then an anonymous blogger from somewhere on the west coast who shared similar concerns.  Looking outside the box, they found that common sense could be used to tackle the issues  and decided to put their money where there typing fingers were.

As we all watched in the blogosphere, Mark and Happy traded visits on each others turf, witnessing first-hand how things were done in the street.  Each rode with each other on calls, enabling them to identify areas where improvements (both immediate and long-term) could be made.

They met with each others movers and shakers and tangible changes were either immediately addressed or put on the fast track toward implementation.  It’s fair to say that the lives of individual patients were impacted by the shared knowledge gained by their visit.

Along came Ted Setla, and the professionalism and enthusiasm lit the fuse for the birth of Chronicles of EMS, a video production of the journey of Mark and Justin (The Happy Medic from San Francisco was forced to “come out of the closet” when Mark crossed the pond the first time).  Chronicles is about to explode into a reality TV series showing how EMS can be improved all across the planet.

Let me repeat that: Showing how EMS can be improved all across the planet.

All because two bloggers sent each other a message.

That’s the lesson, my friends.  It doesn’t take millions of people or millions of dollars to make significant changes in the lives of our fellow human beings.

It just takes heart and resolve.

We salute you Mark for showing us both, my friend.

Posted in EMS, EMS Topics, News, WTF?

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Two Dead in I-65 Ambulance Crash Hours Ago

A crash between an ambulance and a Tennessee Department of Transportation truck killed two people this afternoon on Interstate 65 north of Nashville, TN.

Preliminary reports say the driver of the ambulance, an off-duty Franklin firefighter, was killed, along with the patient being transported. An off-duty Metro firefighter working as an EMT for the ambulance company was injured and hospitalized in stable condition.

The names of those involved, as well as the ambulance company, are not yet available.

Posted in EMS, LODD, News

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?

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Posted in Change, EMS

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Freak Wind Accident Kills LA Paramedic Friday

EMS LODD A bizarre weather incident claimed the life of a Louisiana ambulance worker last Friday afternoon.

Winds in the area gusted strong enough to knock a Cameron Parish EMS trailer off of its blocks. 38-year old Thomas Widcamp of Grand Lake, LA was pinned between the building and a car. He was transported by air to a Lake Charles hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Widcamp leaves behind a wife and four children and numerous other family members as well as his devastated co-workers.

Our thoughts and prayers are with you all.

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Posted in EMS, LODD

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CDC Says 1 in 3 Will Contract H1N1

First Responders Are In For A Battle

Strap yourselves in, it’s starting to get rough out there. In a story that may rival the coverage of Hurricane Katrina, the H1N1 flu pandemic is sweeping across the nation and across the media.  As of today, the CDC reports that 79 children have died in America this year due to H1N1. 

The CDC fears that the public may not fully appreciate the magnitude of the situation.  As the flu hit earlier this year, one quarter of patients afflicted ended up in the ICU, and 7% of those died.  Today, a CBS poll reports that 51% of respondents say they will pass on the vaccination.  Parents of the those most affected (under 24 years old) are in a quandary over what to do.

video courtesy CBS News

Don’t be too quick to blame the parents, as they are getting mixed messages on whether or not to vaccinate their children.  Some pediatricians are advising to hold off on the first round of vaccine because the study sample was too small (only 600) to deem its safety.

And parents are listening.  The  poll released today indicates nearly 40% of parents will choose not to vaccinate their children.  Early government agency screw-ups haven’t helped give credence to a message that could very well be true.  And the wrong decision –either way- puts the parents un a life-or-death trick bag,

The Children’s Hospital at Oklahoma University Medical Center in Oklahoma City is one example of the pandemic’s impact today:

video courtesy CBS News

Some of these infected patients are arriving at the ER by ambulance, so some first responders say the vaccine can’t come soon enough for them.  As we speak, Milwaukee Firefighters join thousands of first responders as the first to get vaccinated.

Video courtesy of WISN-TV Milwaukee

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland signed a proclamation Wednesday allowing emergency medical technicians in the state to administer flu vaccines in light of continuing concerns about the spread of H1N1 influenza.  EMT’s normally do not administer injections, but will be put into action into what Ohio calls a “state of emergency.”

As the axiom goes: “Knowledge is Power.”  So go now and seek the knowledge you need immediately to get you and your family through this crisis. 

FireDaily will continue to follow all aspects of the pandemic, and will keep a special eye focused on its effects within our first responder community.

-J

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Posted in EMS, H1N1 Flu Pandemic

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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

EMS Flight Crew Perishes in S.C. Helicopter Crash

lodd ems      lodd ems      lodd ems

FireDaily.com deeply regrets to report the line of duty deaths of three rescue workers as the result of a helicopter crash late Friday evening near the Belle Isle area of Georgetown County in South Carolina.

Flight Nurse Diana Conner All three were crew members aboard the aircraft and identified as pilot Patrick Walters, 45, of Murrells Inlet, flight nurse Diana Conner, 42, of Florence (pictured right) and paramedic Rondolph Dove, 39, of Bladenboro, NC. No patients were on board and no other injuries were reported.

The Lifecare flight crew had just left the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston and headed to their base in Georgetown County, an area just inland from Myrtle Beach.

The last communications were received at 11:16 p.m. according to Georgetown Emergency Management Director Sam Hodge. After the helicopter failed to arrive, a search was initiated. Emergency crews did not arrive at the crash scene until after 1:00 a.m.

ems chopper crash site The National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Robert Sumwalt said today the pilot indicated clear weather upon leaving MUSC, but then the helicopter encountered severe upon approach to the Georgetown County airport. It crashed in a wooded area about 1 mile from the airport. Initial investigation indicated the helicopter impacted the ground nose first and there was no sign of an in-flight fire. The NTSB and FAA continue their investigation.

FireDaily.com extends our thoughts and prayers to the family and friends of these three everyday heroes who made better the lives of so many others. Know that you are not alone in your grief.

Posted in EMS, LODD

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

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