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Posted: Aug 10, 2021

Oklahoma City Fire Department Medics Authorized to Transport Patients

Josh Dulaney

The Oklahoman, Oklahoma City

(MCT)

Citing a severe staffing shortage amid a surge in COVID-19 cases and the typical increase in service calls during summer, the Emergency Medical Services Authority announced Monday that Oklahoma City Fire Department medics will be authorized temporarily to transport patients suffering heart attacks and other related symptoms.

“We obviously are going to prioritize the life and death cases,” EMSA Medical Director Jeffrey Goodloe said. “We want to get that fire crew back in service as soon as possible so they can be available for the next call, because we never know when the next call to 911 is going to be.”

Under the authorization, when a fire department medic diagnoses a patient with acute coronary syndrome and an EMSA unit has not been assigned, the medic must call an EMSA supervisor to determine if a unit will arrive within 20 minutes.

If an EMSA unit cannot be guaranteed to arrive in 20 minutes, the medic must call the Office of the Medical Director and give a complete patient report. The Office of the Medical Director will determine if a fire department vehicle can transport the patient and to which hospital.

During a news conference at the downtown fire station, emergency response authorities said Oklahoma City is among cities around the nation enduring a shortage of qualified emergency medical technicians and paramedics who provide pre-hospital treatment, care and transportation.

Goodloe said the emergency response system here is under stress as the COVID-19 pandemic has intensified at a time when paramedics are responding to increased summer calls related to car accidents, boating and water emergencies, and the regular load of heat strokes and chronic illnesses.

“When we look at the confluence of a busy summer in Oklahoma City, we are in the midst of not just a pandemic, but by all scientific evidence, the fourth wave of this pandemic in the United States,” Goodloe said. “And the fact that EMS is a tough career and frankly it is hard to recruit qualified EMTs and paramedics to this profession when you look at those things together, our EMS system today is under significant demand.”

EMSA President and CEO Jim Winham said the ambulance service typically administers 1,500 tests annually to potential paramedics and EMTs. That number fell to about 250 last year, and some schools are shutting down because there are not enough students, he said.

A rookie who has graduated the 14-month paramedic program makes around $55,000 a year, Winham said. With the shortage of paramedics, EMSA is offering a $20,000 sign-on bonus and is considering paying off student loans, covering relocation expenses and even providing the cost of daycare, he said.

EMSA’s Western Division has 31 open positions for full-time paramedics and nine openings for full-time EMTs.

“Everything is predicated on the staffing,” Winham said.

At the same time, hospitals are filling up with COVID-19 patients, which is causing a delay for emergency responders who have transported their patients and are waiting for a bed.

Some bed delays can last an hour or longer, authorities said. But as emergency responders wait at the hospital, another 911 call might come in.

Winham said EMSA usually conducts 300 responses a day, with about 275 turning into transports to area hospitals. That number has jumped to 400 responses a day, with more than 300 transports, he said.

While EMSA historically handles between 75 and 80 priority-one calls each day, Winham said that number nearly doubled on June 27, to 158.

Meanwhile, response times for Oklahoma’s largest ambulatory care provider have not met compliance standards in

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Posted: Aug 10, 2021

Farmington (MO) Fire Department to Get New Aerial Ladder

Farmington (MO) Fire Department officials are back in town after spending time in Wisconsin doing a final inspection on the department’s new aerial ladder it purchased, reports mymoinfo.com.

Officials say they hope to have the new apparatus in September.

The ladder will be housed at the station, located at 222 East Columbia St.

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Posted: Aug 10, 2021

Photo of the Day: August 10, 2021

Toyne—Rochelle (IL) Fire Department rescue pumper. Spartan Metro Star ELFD cab and chassis; Cummins L9 380-hp engine; Hale Qmax 1,250-gpm pump; UPF Poly 500-gallon water tank; two 30-gallon foam cells; Waterous Aquis 6.0 dual-agent foam system; Elkhart Cobra monitor with 8598 extender. Dealer: Orin Snodgrass, Dinges Fire Company, Amboy, IL.

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Posted: Aug 10, 2021

130-year-old historic wedding venue and event center in Colorado destroyed by fire

VIDEO: One hundred and thirty years of history were destroyed in minutes after a fire ripped through one of Pueblo’s longest-standing buildings. The Albany Event and Wedding Venue has stood on Albany Avenue between East 7th and 8th streets since the late 19th century. It’s now in ruins following Monday afternoon’s devastating blaze.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2021 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: KKTV CBS 11 Colorado Springs
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Posted: Aug 10, 2021

What New York looked like after 9/11

PHOTOS: Eugene Richards lives in Brooklyn, but was out of the country on September 11, 2001. When he returned to New York City four days later, he has written, he "metamorphosed into a bruise." He stayed home, convinced that no one needed another photographer surveying the wreckage. But Richards's wife and collaborator, Janine Altongy, insisted that they go see it.
- PUB DATE: 8/10/2021 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: The Atlantic
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