Posted: Apr 2, 2020
Firefighters trained as paramedics and EMTs will assist the FDNY’s overloaded medical services bureau as part of a “doomsday scenario” to deal with the surging coronavirus pandemic, the Daily News has learned.
Roughly 209 FDNY firefighters with emergency medical technician licenses have been ordered to man rapid response vehicles, according to a six-minute video released Tuesday night by United Firefighters’ Association head Gerard Fitzgerald.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2020 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: New York Daily News
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Posted: Apr 2, 2020
The city of Detroit will be the first to have specific test kits that could have results in minutes.
Normally, the swab tests take days to yield results.
Testing with these kits begin today but only for Detroit police, first responders and bus drivers.
Instead of waiting days to get results to find out if you have the coronavirus — you get results in 15 minutes.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2020 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: WXYZ-TV ABC 7 Detroit
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Posted: Apr 2, 2020
Sacramento-area fire crews and public health officials are launching a new initiative to provide mobile health support to the community.
“We’re essentially bridging the gap between emergency services and the hospital,” Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District Capt. Scott Perryman told FOX40.
Think of it as an urgent care center on wheels.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2020 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: KTXL-TV FOX 40 Sacramento
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Posted: Apr 2, 2020
The South Carolina Department of Health is creating a database that will give first responders more information about the places and people they’re responding to during the coronavirus pandemic.
The announcement came on Tuesday during a news conference with Dr. Linda Bell, DHEC’s Director of the Bureau of Communicable Disease Prevention and Control.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2020 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: WMBF-TV NBC 32 Myrtle Beach
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Posted: Apr 2, 2020
First responders and emergency workers are urging Minnesota lawmakers to ease their ability to obtain workers’ compensation should they contract COVID-19.
A bill before lawmakers would encompass firefighters, paramedics, police, nurses, doctors and people providing child care to emergency responders, among several others whose jobs put them at particular risk of contracting the disease that had infected 689 and killed 17 Minnesotans as of Wednesday.
- PUB DATE: 4/2/2020 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: Star Tribune
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