Guest guest Posted October 15, 2008 Report Share Posted October 15, 2008 Hi all     I need information and or protocols for any counties in TX that have them for removal of taser barbs by EMS, I wanted to get an idea of how other services had or had not wrote there's. Thanks Dawn email: misstrauma@... Fort Wayne Journal Gazette Editorial (PUMs and SSMs) The EMS maze Complex ambulance structure likely here to stay Local officials are again preparing to award a contract for ambulance service under a once-novel organizational structure adopted a quarter-century ago. But it never really gained widespread acceptance in the national emergency medical services community. And now Fort Wayne is apparently stuck with it. Nearly six years after being part of the lowest – but losing – bid to provide EMS, the city Fire Department is sitting out the bidding process. That decision leaves just one private company to challenge the current contractor under a system that allows the winner to make money only by charging patients more than it costs to offer ambulance service. In South Bend and many other cities nationwide, firefighters – who spend less time fighting fires and more time on medical calls – double as medics and run the ambulance service. South Bend ambulance patients, by the way, pay about half of the $1,000-plus that Fort Wayne patients are b illed. The Three Rivers Ambulance Authority, the appointed government agency that oversees the process, has a history of rejecting the lowest bids for the service. Since the system was created in the early 1980s, the same for-profit company – and its successors – have won the contract. The system’s financial success is largely tied to a legally mandated monopoly and a work environment that some critics say fuels burnout. Still, the local service is top-notch, with quick response times and a high survival rate for heart attack patients. The ambulance service has all but been removed from local tax rolls, leaving – for better or worse – patients and their insurance companies to foot the bill. A mayoral task force gave the organizational structure its stamp of approval in 2005 after a lengthy study. And in this era of tight property tax restrictions, as long as the medical care continues at a high quality, it’s unlikely any officials who oversee budgets will push for moving any costs back to taxpayer-financed agencies. Early privatization Faced with tight city budgets in the Rust Belt recession of the early 1980s, Mayor Win Moses was looking for a way to maximize property tax revenues. Enter Jack Stout, a consultant who had developed a way of privatizing ambulance service and shifting the costs from local taxes to patients and their insurance companies. His public utility model called for local emergency room doctors to establish medical protocols and for a government a gency to oversee the entire process. The City Council – also seeking ways to stretch the budget – bought into the plan. The Three Rivers Ambulance Authority was created as a government agency, with members appointed by the mayor and county commissioners. The authority bids out the ambulance service to a contractor responsible for meeting tough standards on response time and medical service. The ambulance authority controls the billing. The city was running its own taxpayer-financed EMS department at the time, and while city officials were happy to stop paying for EMS, there was little talk about the new financial burden on patients. The city EMS submitted the lowest bid. But Stout claimed the city had an unfair advantage because of bulk purchasing power and other factors and insisted that to attract bidders, the city’s bid had to be “weighted.†The “weighting†raised the city’s bid above that of the winning contractor, Mercy Ambulance. Mercy was eventually purchased by Laidlaw, which folded Mercy into another of its companies, American Medical Response. AMR was later spun off. Mercy-AMR has won all subsequent bidding and continues to hold the contract. Without question, the all-paramedic service was – and continues to be – of much higher quality than the previous city service. At a price. The costs Three Rivers Ambulance Authority charges $998 for an emergency run, plus $14 per mile. The South Bend Fire Department charges $550 for its most exp ensive medical run, plus $5.40 a mile. In ville, the city contracts with AMR but subsidizes the service with tax money. Patients are charged $695. In Indianapolis, Wishard – a city-owned hospital – provides service within the pre-UniGov Indianapolis city limits and charges $712 plus $13 per mile. Wishard has its own property-tax levy and also subsidizes its service. Fort Wayne patients who rely on Medicare find that the federal government reimburses only about half the rate, said Ambulance Authority Director Booher. In response to the higher charges, the authority started its own subscription program, LifeCare, in the 1980s. Now priced at $59 per year, subscribers agree to allow the authority to bill their insurance company but incur no out-of-pocket expenses. The authority ran into trouble with state regulators for selling an insurance program without being an authorized insurer. State Sen. Wyss successfully sponsored legislation that exempted the ambulance authority. Given new property tax controls, Fort Wayne may well prove to be ahead of its time. ville, for example, is supposed to provide a taxpayer subsidy of 25 percent, but the amount has been creeping up. The city spends about $1 million a year on EMS, and “we’re trying to get away from a taxpayer subsidy,†ville Fire Chief Ken Zuber said. Profits and work More than half of the authority’s $12 million budget goes directly to AMR, the ambulance provider. At least some of the $6.4 million=2 0AMR received in 2007 represents profit to the company’s owners. One key way the private provider maximizes profits is by using no more ambulances than necessary. AMR employs “system status management.†It uses computers to predict where ambulances will be needed and move crews depending on time of day and which other ambulances are responding to calls. While ambulance crews in many cities are stationed in hospitals or fire stations, Fort Wayne’s crews essentially have no stations. That’s why motorists see ambulances sitting in shopping center parking lots and other commercial areas. “It’s really hard on the workforce,†said Dr. Bledsoe, a former emergency room doctor and paramedic who now is a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Nevada School of Medicine. “They spend 12 hours in an ambulance with no place to go to the bathroom or take a shower. “It’s just demoralizing.†And it results in high turnover, he said. “They end up with an itinerant workforce.†Fire-operated systems, on the other hand, tend to keep their employees for full careers, said Steve , the assistant fire chief in South Bend who oversees EMS. Moreover, “These ambulances idle for 24 hours,†Bledsoe notes. “It’s an economic and environmental issue.†He also questions how well the system predicts where ambulances will be needed. “There’s no empirical evidence that it’s any faster, he said. “The whole system is based on a fallacy. You can’t really predict, other than common sense.†Another way to guarantee steady income is the built-in monopoly in the city ordinance that created the ambulance authority and put private ambulance companies out of business. Having only one company provide emergency service in the city makes much sense. But in South Bend and other cities, private companies provide non-emergency ambulance transportation, from nursing homes to hospitals, for example. Such ambulance crews do not have to be staffed by the better-paid paramedics. But having a paramedics-only service is actually more cost-effective, the authority’s Booher said. Cities with dual layers of paramedic and non-paramedic service too often see non-emergency runs turn into emergency runs, resulting in two ambulances with two crews caring for the same patient. Fire role Medically, the city’s system is first-rate. Ambulance systems strive for a survival rate among heart attack victims of 6 percent to 10 percent, Booher said, while the city’s rate tops 30 percent. A major reason: Emergency medical technicians – who have less training than paramedics but still provide basic care – are nearly always on the scene within four minutes. They are not ambulance workers but firefighters. With fire stations spread throughout the city, they usually reach patients before an ambulance crew arrives. The fire trucks carry defibrillators. The dual response using firefighters and ambulance crews is common in Indiana and U.S. cities. The cost to the fire department is about $350,000 a year, only about 1 percent of the department’s budget. With buildings increasingly safer, firefighters spend more of their workday on medic runs and less on putting out fires. Last year, city firefighters had 8,728 fire runs but 9,482 medical runs. Given the fire department’s heavy involvement with EMS, city officials decided in 2002 that firefighters should be a direct part of the system. The Fire Department partnered with Paramedics Plus, a private company affiliated with the East Texas Medical Center and headed by former Fort Wayne Fire Chief Tony Myers, and bid for the contract. Though they submitted the low bid, the authority again awarded the contract to AMR, saying its scoring system showed AMR would be better, even though authority members said the joint venture would also offer quality service. The vote was 5-4. This year, Paramedics Plus is the only company other than AMR to submit to a pre-bid credentials check, but the Fire Department isn’t part of the bid. The department is examining ways to improve its first-responder role, Fire Chief Pete said. “We are focusing in on that, and let’s do the best we can with that,†he said. Accountability ville contracts directly with AMR, meaning that taxpayers can hold the mayor and fire chief directly responsible for quality and price of EMS. The same goes for South Bend and its fire department. The Three R ivers Ambulance Authority is composed of thoughtful board members who take their responsibility seriously. But as appointees, they are a layer away from voters. The public utility model, used in only about 20 cities nationwide, “creates a double layer of bureaucracy,†said Bledsoe, the Nevada professor. Barring any major shifts in how insurers handle ambulance service, don’t expect any changes in the local system. And, Bledsoe notes, government bureaucracies tend to be resilient. “Once you create a bureaucracy, it’s like killing a vampire,†he said. Warner , editorial page editor, has worked at The Journal Gazette since 1981. He can be reached at or by e-mail, twarner@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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