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Agenda - 10-03-2013 - 1
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Agenda - 10-03-2013 - 1
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6/11/2015 4:42:17 PM
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BOCC
Date
10/3/2013
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Work Session
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Agenda
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1
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Minutes 10-03-2013
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2010's\2013
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Comprehensive Assessment of Emergency Medical Services 74 <br />and 911 /Communications Center Operations Study <br />The medical dispatch response codes used by Communications Center Telecommunicators (see Figure <br />10, page 18) will identify for first responders and EMS Medic personnel the initially identified condition <br />identified and the Response Code as well as the Response Status recommended; i.e. "DELTA" = "life <br />threatening ", First Responders respond Emergency Status; i.e. "lights & siren ". <br />Proper triaging of an emergency medical call is vital and can go a long way to assuring the responder dos <br />not run over a pedestrian at a crosswalk on the way to an incident that is not an emergency. <br />This said; response "time" in Orange County must still be addressed. The professional organizations that <br />have spoken to and suggested the time standards referenced have identified their basis for doing so. In <br />many discussions of the topic with local EMS professionals in North Carolina, ALS response objectives <br />are typically established at between 8:00 -9:00 minutes. <br />On the basis if the organizations that have endorsed this standard it merits attention and until the North <br />Carolina Medical Board which is responsible for adopting the rules and standards governing advanced <br />life support services says otherwise, the standard; albeit its potential consequences, need to be <br />considered seriously. <br />Vehicle Speed & Distance to Incident Location <br />For reference, the following formula can be used to calculate the average travel time, particularly for <br />major emergency vehicle; i.e. ambulances and Fire trucks; between two points; (NFPA 1720- A.4.3.2): <br />1.7 x Distance + 0.65 = Travel Time <br />For example, if the distance to the scene of an incident is known to be five (5) miles; <br />(1.7 x 5) +.65 = 9.15; a Travel Time of 9 minutes and 12 seconds <br />This travel time equates to an average speed of 33 -34 miles per hour, which actually is not unusual for <br />fire, rescue, and EMS vehicles for this distance considering acceleration, deceleration, time of day, road <br />conditions, other traffic, etc. <br />Reversing this formula, using the 2011 EMS average Travel Time of 09:30, and converting the 32 seconds <br />to hundredths of a minute, would result in the following: <br />9.50 minutes Travel Time = 1.7 times Distance "x" +.65 <br />or <br />(7.53 -.65)/1.7 = 4.2 miles traveled <br />This being the case, the distance that Medic Units could travel and still meet the objective of an 8:00 <br />minute total response time is 4.2 miles. <br />However, were this to be the case; i.e. ALS ambulances never responding to incidents further than 4.2 <br />miles from their assigned base -in order to meet the 8:00 minute Total Response Time objective; the <br />area within which the existing EMS units could effectively travel would leave the majority of the County <br />essentially "uncovered ". <br />The pages that follow include a sequence of County maps that illustrate the concern associated with this <br />issue. <br />Solutions for Local Government, Inc. 30 <br />
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