EMSN
your best source for EMS news

General
Specific
Crashes Military
Medevac Criminal
Assaults Features

Special Reports

Life
Job Listings   Obituary
Photos On the Road
Polls Notices 
Columnist
Curmudgeon's Corner Insights
EMS  A - Z Series IC Corner
Advertise on EMSN
Information Prices
Readers Free Services
Emailed News
Webmaster Free Services
RSS
HTML TICKERS
Disclaimer
Search

Submit News, Post Jobs

Tips for submissions 
Submission Conditions  
Job Posting Guidelines
Contact   About EMSN
Comments  EMSN TV


Our news service is free and, while you may freely email our intact newsletter to individual friends or link to any page of our site, our compiled news is not, in whole or in part, to be used to cut and paste or otherwise repost to a web site, newsletter or other communication means without our explicit permission. If you wish to use our compiled news you may request html coding,  or use one of the News Tickers or News Feeds above.

The contents of this site, unless otherwise specified, are copyrighted by © EMSNetwork, 2000-2002. The news provided is for personal use only. Reproduction or redistribution of the this site and the comments board, in whole, part or in any form, requires the  express permission of EMSNetwork or the original source. For Questions or comments pertaining to this site, contact the web administrator. The EMSNetwork is not responsible for the content of external sites linked and does not endorse their content.


EVOC-ative Feedback


Feedback: Emergency Vehicle Safety in the 21st Century by T.E.A.M
Excellent article. I totally agree. We are finding at Sedgwick County EMS (Wichita, KS) that many of our calls only require a ''regular traffic'' response....

Feedback: Emergency Vehicle Safety in the 21st Century

Excellent article. I totally agree. We are finding at Sedgwick County EMS (Wichita, KS) that many of our calls only require a ''regular traffic'' response. Even those where we respond ''emergency traffic'' are done so with due regard and following guidelines that promote safety like stopping at all red lights and stop signs, and enforcing a maximum speed limit of 10 mph over the posted limit when conditions allow.

A good dispatching and call taking and interrogation 911 center with Pro QA have tremendously aided in reducing the number of emergency responses. The medic is much safer and the patients are receiving the care they need, when they need it, and in a safe manner.

SOPs that restrict driving speeds and AVL have also helped us enforce safe driving practices. AVL greatly improves dispatching so the right medic unit is responded the first time. Additionally, all medics also receive CEVO driver training every two years and low forces driving is highly emphasized.

I look forward to reading more.
Greg Schuessler


{back to EVOC-ative Feedback }


Apr 23, 2007, 9:11:23 AM
 


Top of Page

~ EMSN news section ~
EVOC-ative Feedback

 Updated Headlines
Feedback: ..appreciating your "EVOC-ative" articles
Feedback: EVOC-ative
Feedback: Emergency Vehicle Safety in the 21st Century by T.E.A.M
For additional or older news, use the links at the bottom of the EVOC-ative Feedback section home page.