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RAA Participates in RIC Drill

On Friday July 10, Richmond Ambulance Authority was involved in an aircraft accident at Richmond International Airport (RIC). It consisted of a small plane that was hit on the runway by a larger plane and the larger plane caught on fire. There were approximately 70 patients and included a multi jurisdictional response.

 

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RAA and Captain Wes Wampler Win 2010 ODEMSA Awards
Richmond Ambulance Authority Wins ODEMSA’s 2010 Regional Award For ‘Outstanding EMS Agency’ and Captain Wes Wampler of RAA Wins Regional ‘Outstanding Prehospital Provider’ of the Year

Richmond Ambulance Authority (RAA) has been selected to receive the Old Dominion EMS Alliance’s (ODEMSA) 2010 Regional Award for Outstanding EMS Agency and Captain Wes Wampler, operations supervisor for RAA and a long-time volunteer with the Harrisonburg Volunteer Rescue Squad, has been named Regional Outstanding Prehospital Provider of the year.

In a letter to the Richmond Ambulance Authority, Heidi Hooker, executive director of ODEMSA, said:  “The ODEMSA Regional Award is a reflection of how much you and your actions are valued within the Central Virginia EMS System.  It also is a small token of appreciation for all that you do to enhance prehospital patient care in the Old Dominion EMS Alliance region.   Judges thought your actions deserve regional and statewide recognition.”

ODEMSA’s criteria for the Regional Award for Outstanding EMS Agency reads as follows:  An EMS agency that exemplifies outstanding professionalism and service to its community; whose high level of patient care is evident by innovative training, community awareness, preventive health programs, public relations efforts and participation in local, regional and statewide EMS systems.  

ODEMSA says the award recipients have demonstrated a pattern of conduct or activities that has culminated in an exceptional improvement of the emergency medical services system in the locality, region or state, or performed a single unusual event that was beyond ordinary duty.   Richmond Ambulance Authority’s prehospital cooling of cardiac arrest patients in the field, which has helped to dramatically improve resuscitation and

survival rates, was noted among RAA’s achievements.  This in-field cooling during resuscitation, followed by VCU’s sophisticated post-resuscitation care, is now allowing the discharge of over 40 percent of these aggressively cooled cardiac arrest patients – alive and neurologically intact – compared to the national survival of approximately 6 percent.

“We are truly honored to receive the ODEMSA Regional Award,” said Chip Decker, CEO of the Richmond Ambulance Authority.  “Richmond Ambulance is dedicated to providing the finest prehospital care possible to the citizens of Richmond and to have our efforts recognized by our peers means a great deal to us.”  

Captain Wes Wampler, Operations Supervisor for the Richmond Ambulance Authority and also a long-time volunteer with the Harrisonburg Rescue Squad, was named regional winner of the ‘Outstanding Prehospital Provider’ of the year award.  This award goes to an individual who exemplifies outstanding dedication and service to his or her community through involvement in EMS.  Wampler was 17 when he started volunteering with the Harrisonburg Rescue Squad and, even after joining RAA fulltime, he still volunteers there 48 to 60 hours per month.

“We are extremely proud of Wes and the example he has set for so many in EMS,” said Decker.  “He is a true leader with a passion for EMS and his contributions are innumerable as a supervisor, paramedic and accredited emergency medical dispatcher.   He has even donated his own accrued leave time to others in their hour of need, one of many reasons he is so highly regarded by his co-workers.”

The ODEMSA Regional Awards will be presented at a gathering on July 30, 2010, at American Legion Post 354 pavilion on the James River in Chesterfield County.   Winners of the Regional Awards will be automatically entered into competition for the 2010 Governor’s EMS Awards which will be announced during the 31st Annual Virginia EMS Symposium at the Norfolk Waterside Marriott on Saturday, November 13.

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RAA Reminds Citizens to Add “ICE” Contact Information to all Family Members’ Cell Phones PDF Print E-mail
The Richmond Ambulance Authority (RAA) is issuing a reminder to Richmond area residents to input In Case of Emergency (ICE) contact entries into all family members’ cell phones – theirs, their children’s, even their elderly parents’ – to help paramedics and other emergency responders in the event of an accident or incident involving the phone’s owner. 
 
“The ICE concept was the idea of a U.K. paramedic named Bob Brotchie,” said Rob Lawrence, chief operating officer of the Richmond Ambulance Authority.  “We worked together at the East Anglian Ambulance Service and Bob launched the ICE initiative locally in April 2005 after years of frustration in trying to quickly reach relatives of people he was treating.  ICE rapidly gained momentum world-wide a few months later after the July terrorist bombings in London, and we want to remind everyone here in Richmond of what a simple and important safety measure this is.”
 

Statistics show that more than 80% of the U.S. population owned cell phones as of 2007 and there has been a significant increase in cell phone usage among teenagers as well.  According to a Pew Internet Study, as of September 2009, 75 % of children in the 12-17 age group owned cell phones.  That is up from 45% when the study first began in 2004.
 
“Not only is cell phone usage up, but people are constantly upgrading to newer model phones because of family plans and other promotions,” said Chip Decker, chief executive officer of the Richmond Ambulance Authority.   “When they do, they need to remember to input the most updated ICE information into these new phones and do so in a way that is clear to emergency providers.”
 
It is good to list two to four ICE contacts per cell phone.  The following are examples of information to input:
 
For adult’s phone:
ICE: Name (husband)
         Contact numbers: cell, work, home
 
ICE: Name (friend)
        Contact numbers:
 
For child’s phone:
ICE: Dad (First and last name)
        Contact numbers:
 
For elderly parent’s phone:
ICE: Daughter (First and last name)
        Contact numbers:
 
ICE: Name (Caregiver)
        Contact numbers:
 
“I am delighted that the Richmond Ambulance Authority is promoting the ICE initiative in Virginia,” said Bob Brotchie of the East Anglian Ambulance Service.  “This is an important reminder to the good people of Richmond, whether they have a basic cell phone or a smart phone. The iPhone 3G, for example, now offers a smart-ICE app that features a globally recognized EMS Alert emblem.  This particular ICE app stores personal medical information in addition to emergency contact information, and we will continue to see more advanced options for capturing and communicating ICE information as mobile technology evolves.”
 
An ICE contact or smart-phone app can provide life-saving medical information about the patient such as medical history, previous medical conditions, allergies and prescription medications the patient may be on at the time of injury.  It also helps family members and / or friends to be notified of the patient’s involvement in an emergency as quickly as possible.
 
Decker continued, “We are proactive in our approach to medical safety and want everyone else in Richmond to think this way as well.”
 


Example of RAA’s use of patient’s cell phone to contact loved ones in a time of need.

Supervisor was requested by RAA crew on scene for assistance.  I was dispatched to the scene.

I arrived to find the crew on scene with a female patient in the back of the ambulance in respiratory distress.  The patient was being cared for by the crew and they were ready for transport.  The crew advised that the patient could not provide any names or phone numbers of anyone to watch her young children due to her condition.  I advised the crew to transport and that I would handle.  I went inside the home to find RFD who was taking care of three children, approximate ages 5, 4 and 1 year old.  They had prepared the two older kids breakfast and made up a bottle for the baby.  I freed up the fire crew and took over caring for the children.  They had not been able to locate family so as standard procedure I contacted our communications center to request RPD for assistance in locating family.  Meanwhile I looked around and found a cell phone on the coffee table.   I found a number in the phone titled “Auntie”.  I called the number and verified that I was talking to the aunt of the children.  I explained the situation and she was able to contact the father of the children, we’ll call him “T”.  I picked up the baby and while burping the child, I walked outside and talked to a couple of neighbors who had gathered and verified the father was in fact “T”.  One of the neighbors had contacted someone who knew him as well to inform of the situation.  Soon RPD and the father arrived.  The father, now with his children, took over care and we cleared off the call.

The most appropriate result was achieved with utilization of all resources on scene and accessing the patient’s cell phone to contact family.

 Click for WCVE Radio spot.

Click to view the NBC 12 article and video. 

 
 

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