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Harvey Hall Fighting Paramedic Service By Firefighters Move our EMS standards from the Amish level tothe current century! Move our EMS standards from the Amish level to the current century... August 07 September 07 October 07 November 07 December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08
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Here is excepts from an article on the internet from 2007 about Hall resisting Kern County residents attempt to provide paramedic service by firefighters. For the entire article, go to: http://mountainenterprise.c...
At one point, Elliott indicated that only a small proportion of rural emergency medical calls required advanced life support (ALS) paramedic intervention, compared to 15.7 percent of urban emergency calls. Fire Chief Dennis Thompson said his figures showed that 15.1 percent of rural calls required paramedic assistance. Kern County Fire Fighters Union President Derek Robinson said that Hall Ambulance Service data shows that 47 percent of the calls in Pine Mountain required ALS intervention during the period studied. "There may be less calls, but the percentage of calls where ALS care is needed seems to far exceed" urban averages, he said. Robinson said Elliott's report was "rife with errors, omissions and one-sided statistics," citing a study from Washington state showing that paramedic intervention for some kinds of heart attacks within eight minutes increases patient survival by 32 percent. With ALS delay of 20 minutes, survival decreases to only seven percent. "What that means is that survivability quadruples with early intervention," he said, noting that Elliott's own study showed that paramedic firefighters could be on scene an average of 25 minutes sooner than ambulance paramedics to rural ares such as Pine Mountain.
Thompson said that Kern County has the 10th largest fire department in the state (out of 600), but is the only department out of the top 15 in the state without a firefighter paramedic program.
If 15% of calls require paramedics, then 15% of the time the pt. is not treated in a timely, appropriate manner before Hall Ambulance gets there--which can take up to an hour in a rural area.
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