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HomeMy WebLinkAbout022806 EMSCity of Virginia Beach Department of EMS Staffing and Deployment Briefing Chief Bruce W. Edwards February 28, 2006 1 EMS Staffing and Deployment Factors •Calls for Service •Resources •Achievements •Future Considerations 2 EMS Calls for Service Volume 37,000 36,000 35,922 35,000 34,611 Number of Calls 34,000 33,634 33,000 32,707 32,000 31,124 31,000 30,000 29,000 28,000 20012002200320042005 YEAR 3 EMS Calls for Service Top 5 Call Types Dispatched Unconscious 7% 10% Illness Cardiac 10% 47% Injury/Fall 13% Breathing Difficulty 13% Other Types 4 EMS Calls for Service By Patient Age 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% <2526-4546-6566+ 5 EMS Calls for Service Special Operations Incidents/Deployments •Marine Rescue: 221 •Vehicle Entrapments: 229 •SWAT Medics: 197 •Bike Team: 38 •SAR Team: 4 6 EMS Calls for Service Geographic Demand 7 Staffing and Deployment Operating Philosophy •Integrated system of First Response, Advanced Life Support, Transport •Citywide ambulance response th •Performance measured at the 90percentile level (No averages reported) 8 EMS Resources: Rescue Squad Personnel •Our volunteer rescue squad system remains strong •Net decline in membership during 2003 & 2004 –Negative attention impacted morale –Some transitioned to career positions •Net increase in membership for 2005 9 EMS Resources: Rescue Squad Personnel –Recruiting/Retention •Volunteer retention programs have raised morale considerably. •Expanded recruiting programs are paying off. (Orientation enrollment up 64%) 10 EMS Resources: Rescue Squad Personnel Composition: •69% patient care providers •19% administrative •6% special operations •6% training pipeline 11 EMS Resources: Career Personnel •4 Brigade Chiefs hired in 2004 •24 Medics hired in 2004 •8 Medics hired in 2005 –ALS delivery –Rescue squad augmentation –Weekday staffing 12 EMS Resources: Ambulance Deployment •Ambulance crews are scheduled under a model which balances a number of factors: –Geographic coverage –High demand areas –Areas with longer travel times •Resources are adjusted in response to call demands 13 Impact of ERS Enhancements on Ambulance Response Times While responding to 2,288 additional calls in 2005 (6.8% increase from 2003) EMS was still able to: •Decrease citywide response times by 19.5% •Decrease rural response times by 28.9% Additional ambulance staffing led to shorter travel times across the community. 14 Response Time Comparison Demand vs. Ambulance Response Time 40 35.92 35 34.61 33.63 32.71 31.12 30 Demand & Response Time 25 21.75 21.25 21 20 18.5 17.5 15 10 5 0 20012002200320042005 Year RESPONSE TIMECALLS (1000s) 15 Response Times First Help and Ambulance 20 Travel Time 15 10 Overall Response 5 Time 0 First HelpAmbulanceAmbulance (Pri 1)(Pri 1)(Pri 2) 16 EMS Staffing and Deployment Technology Initiatives •Automatic Vehicle Locators (AVL) •GPS Mapping Systems •Field Reporting 17 EMS Staffing and Deployment Opportunities and Challenges •Opportunities –Princess Anne Commons Careplex –Virginia Beach General Hospital Renovations –Rapid Cardiac Intervention Project •Challenges –Increasing Call Demands –Aging Population –Road System Capacity 18 EMS Staffing and Deployment On the Horizon •New Medical Treatment Modalities –American Heart Association Guidelines –Advanced Airway Techniques •Field supervisor force at maximum output •Increased staff capacity required to meet increasing demands of the future 19 Questions? 20