Posts Tagged ‘ambulance service’

EMS Overdrive

February 3rd, 2012

This month has been a doozy for our Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Trauma System team.  This week we finished the 2nd of 2 high-profile and important decisions.  A couple of weeks ago I made a decision to let Yuma City take over part of the ambulance response in that town.  I thought the city folks had given solid evidence why they should be allowed to provide their own service (technically called establishing public necessity).  I also locked in the rates for the Yuma ambulance to the level they are at right now for 3 years. 

I also OK’d a merger of two ambulance companies in the Valley this week.  Rural Metro Ambulance will take over four areas where PMT ambulance used to respond, but they can’t raise rates on customers for at least 3 years.  I also required Rural Metro to keep the electronic health data that PMT is using in those four areas, as well as expand it to other areas it serves.  That electronic data provides an important window into how the system is doing in responding to emergencies, providing important interventions, and getting people quickly to the right kind of treatment.  Timeliness is important in any emergency, but we have been able to document the differences in quickly getting patients into medical care after cardiac arrest and traumatic brain injury. 

Some folks don’t realize just how closely ambulance service is regulated- it’s an important element of patient care and ADHS along with partners across the state have to make sure it’s the best it can be in Arizona.  The state is broken up into Certificate of Necessity areas where companies or cities have a contract to provide the service.  The contracts outline how long a company has to respond to a call, how much they can charge and what happens if they don’t do a good job.  You can learn more about this on our Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Trauma System website.

What’s a Certificate of Necessity, Anyway?

December 27th, 2010

Arizona uses a Certificate of Necessity (CON) system to regulate ground ambulance service in Arizona- and to make sure that every place in the State has adequate emergency medical services, including the frontier parts of AZ.  The CON actually describes the geographic service area, level of service (advanced life support or basic life support), hours of operation, response times, effective date, expiration date and any limiting or special provisions for emergency medical services in the specific geographic area.  A ground ambulance service that is awarded one of our CONs must stick with the criteria on their certificate and operate in accordance to the statutes and rules by which it is governed.  Check out these links for statutes and ground ambulance rules for the details of how it works.

We just posted some new guidance for folks who are interested in applying for new CONs for emergency medical services.  The new guidance basically summarizes our statutes and rules for applying for a new CONs, which includes a requirement that the applicant shows that there is a ”public necessity” for the new service.  Our new guidance makes it clear that we’ll evaluate public necessity by analyzing the needs of the community, the adequacy of the current services provided, maximizing the use of contemporary EMS protocols that have been demonstrated to save lives and quality of life, and ensuring cost controls.

Specifically, our new guidance clarifies the kind of information we’ll use to make our decision whether to approve new CONs, including whether the applicant demonstrates:

  • A plan for a robust, on-going benchmarking and performance improvement process that encompasses all components of the EMS system from emergency medical dispatch through emergency department arrival;
  • A plan to collect and submit electronic patient care reports consistent with our EMS Bureau’s guidelines;
  • A plan to adopt clinical guidelines and operating procedures for time sensitive illness consistent with American Heart Association best practice guidelines;
  • A plan to initiate guideline-based pre-arrival instructions for all callers accessing 9-1-1 for assistance;
  • Evidence of regular attendance and participation in meetings of the regional and State EMS Councils;
  • A plan to ensure that ambulance service will be maintained and improved for rural communities; and
  • Assurance that the service model will be cost effective and not result in higher ambulance rates.

Our overall goal is to basically improve the quality of EMS service by championing effective life-saving practices while making sure that costs are contained.  The good news is that many of the recent developments in EMS care are operational and inexpensive (like using the new CCR method for resuscitation).