Title: RuralFrontier EMS Agenda for the Future http:www'nrharural'orggroupssubEMS'html
1Rural/Frontier EMS Agenda for the Future
http//www.nrharural.org/groups/sub/EMS.html
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6Rural/Frontier EMS Agenda
- Emergency Medical Services Systems Act of 1973
- NHTSA EMS Agenda for the Future
- 1996
7Rural/Frontier EMS Agenda
- Origin
- National Organization of State Offices of Rural
Health - National Association of State EMS Directors
- National Rural Health Association
- Office of Rural Health Policy (USDHHS)
8Rural/Frontier EMS Agenda
- Goal
- On-line and Print Document
- National Consensus Document
- Local/State/National Makers of Policy and Funding
Decisions - Local EMS Service Chiefs
- On-line Literature Compendium
- Maintained by REMSTTAC
9Consensus Process
- Iterative writing process
- EMS/rural health organizations and communities
alerted/liaisons named - August, 2003 October, 2004
- Drafts to editorial board, steering committee,
public - Four public drafts circulated/posted
- National review meeting held
- Fifteen drafts total
10Thanks!
11Volunteers andEMS Community Consensus
- Nine person editorial board
- 14 person steering committee
- 25 volunteer writers, editors, meeting
facilitators - 65 from EMS/rural health communities participated
in consensus conference - Additional 150 submitted over 2,000 comments
12Rural/Frontier EMS Agenda
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Mic Gunderson, National
EMS Management AssociationThomas Judge,
LifeFlight of MaineDr. David Kim, Idaho
Emergency PhysiciansCarol Miller, Frontier
Education Center, New MexicoDr. Daniel
Patterson, University of South Carolina Rural
Health Research Ctr. Nels Sanddal, REMSTTAC,
MontanaGary Wingrove, Gold Cross/Mayo Medical
Transport, Minnesota Dr. James Upchurch, Indian
Health Service PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR/PRIMARY
AUTHOR Kevin McGinnis, NASEMSD RESEARCHER Dr.
Richard Narad, California State University
13Steering Committee
Dennis Berens, Nebraska Office of Rural Health
(Chair)John Barnas, Michigan Office of Rural
HealthDean Cole, Nebraska Office of EMS Jim
Derrick, New Mexico Office of EMSMarvin Firch,
Iowa Office of Rural Health Caroline Ford,
Nevada Office of Rural HealthDavid Lake, Kansas
Office of EMS Fergus Laughridge, Nevada Office
of EMSDr. Greg Mears, North Carolina Office of
EMS Jim Prince, Alabama Office of EMSChris
Tilden, Kansas Office of Rural HealthEvan
Mayfield, Federal Office of Rural Health
PolicyEli Briggs, National Rural Health
Association Mary Sheridan, Idaho Office of Rural
Health
14You!
15The Vision
- The rural/frontier emergency medical
- service (EMS) system of the future will
- assure a rapid response with basic and
- advanced levels of care as appropriate
- to each emergency, and will serve as
- a formal community resource for
- prevention, evaluation, care, triage,
- referral and advice. Its foundation will
- be a dynamic mix of volunteer and paid
- professionals at all levels, for and
- determined by its community.
16The Vision
- basic and advanced levels of care as appropriate
to each emergency - formal community resource for prevention,
evaluation, care, triage, referral and advice - mix of volunteer and paid professionals
- determined by its community.
17Major Themes
18 Themes
- Disconnect between what public expects and what
rural/frontier EMS delivers - Maine Survey 87 expect Advanced Life Support
(ALS)
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20 Themes
- Informed self-determination
- Objective community EMS evaluation
- Public informed
- Evaluation results
- Options/standards
- Costs
- Community determines type/level local
investment in EMS
21Themes
- Paramedic Paradox
- Integration EMS-based community health services
(community paramedicine) - To assure ALS present in community when needed
- Using EMS providers to fill health care services
gaps - Assures these providers skills maintained
- Other solutions to service survival and ALS
provision - Regionalization/cooperatives
- Effective mix of volunteer/paid staff
- Alternative means of bringing ALS to scene
22Themes
- Money (Federal/State/Regional/Local)
- Recruitment/retention
- Infrastructure
- Training
- Data collection
- Research
- Medical direction
- Adequate reimbursement
23Themes
- Volunteers
- Management/direction of services as modern
clinical and business operations to assure
existence - Management and leadership training for service
chiefs and medical directors - Medical directors trained supported adequately
24- Integration of Health Services
- EMS Research
- Legislation and Regulation
- System Finance
- Human Resources
- Medical Oversight
- Education Systems
- Public Education
- Prevention
- Public Access
- Communication Systems
- Clinical Care and Transportation
Decisions/Resources - Information Systems
- Evaluation
25Rural Access to Emergency Services Act of 2005
(RAES Act)
- S.1108
- H.R.2525
- Addresses Recommendations
26Recommendations
- Integration of Health Services
- Encourage EMS-based community health service
program development through the funding of
pilots, cataloguing of existing successful
practices, exploration of opportunities for
expanded EMS scopes of practice, and on-going
reimbursement for the provision of such
services.
27- Research
- Fund and implement the recommendations of the
NHTSA EMS Research Agenda for the Future but
address the needs and challenges of
rural/frontier EMS systems research. - Enable local research
- Enable multi-center research
28- Legislation and Regulation
- Authorize and fund a restructured Federal
Interagency Committee on EMS to provide
national leadership. - Adequately fund the state EMS lead agency to
enable it to carry out its designated
responsibilities. - Create the opportunity forstate-level public
policy to delineate the roles, support and
treatment of EMS volunteers, while fulfilling
public expectation on level and type of EMS
provided.
29- System Finance
- Authorize and appropriate sufficient funds for
CMS to reimburse EMS providersthe cost of
maintaining full-time response in rural/frontier
areas - Implement a series of CMS reforms (including
rural definition) - Make federal and state funding programs
available explicitly and categorically to EMS
systems and providers including private and
for-profit agencies.(other legislation) - Form, and fundrural/frontier EMS operational or
service-contracting networks.
30- Human Resources
- Extend federal and state rural health manpower
recruitment and retention planning leadership,
technical assistance and funding specifically and
categorically to rural/frontier/tribal EMS and
implement through state EMS offices, state
offices of rural health or other appropriate
entities. - Analyze, at the state EMS agency level,
rural/frontier workforce recruitment and
retention efforts and develop statewide plans for
improvement. - A national EMS service leadership and service
management training model should be developed
31- Medical Oversight
- Establish statewide networks of EMS medical
oversight, including medical directors at the
local, regional, and state levels as appropriate - Implement at least one full time equivalent
position of state EMS medical director in every
state with a job description. - Adequately compensate EMS medical directors
- Require that EMS medical directors be physicians,
but - State-level peer review protection
- Rural/Frontier EMS Medical Directors Course
32- Education Systems
- Address, as part of the implementation process
for the Emergency Medical Services Education
Agenda for the Future, the unique needs of
rural/frontier practice and EMS-based community
health services. - Fund at the state and national levels a 14 point
Rural/Frontier EMS Education and Training
Initiative. - National model with local flexibility
- Career mobility
- Education/training access (distance
learning/mobile labs). Stockpiling of training
resources.
33- Public Information, Education and Relations
- Develop a national template for community EMS
system assessment and informed self-determination
processes(ORHP) - Fund processes for community EMS system
assessment and informed self-determination.
34- Prevention
- Make prevention one of the EMS-based community
health service roles of adequately staffed
rural/frontier EMS provider agencies. - Develop and fund community health advocacy roles
and prevention programs for rural/frontier EMS
personnel that are mutually beneficial.
35- Public Access
- State EMS offices shouldencourage E-9-1-1 and
WE-9-1-1 system completion where other approaches
have failed. - Integrate Automatic Crash Notificationother ITS
technology and health event advice lines
intopublic access and EMS resource deployment. - Provide formal Emergency Medical Dispatch to
every caller seeking EMS. - States should establish formal plans for roadside
call-box, satellite, and/or cellular networks
36- Communication Systems
- Conduct comprehensive state EMS communications
needs assessments upon which to base federal,
state, and local investment in communications
infrastructure improvement. - Make EMS eligible for Universal Service Fund
support.
37- Clinical Care and Transportation
Decisions/Resources - Define and require a statewide minimum type and
level of EMS to be provided to all communities
including equipment and clinical care standards - Plan, integrate and regulate, at the state level,
aeromedical, critical care transport, and other
statewide or regionwide systems of specialty care
and transportation - Create mechanisms for EMS personnel to
participate in EMS-based community health
services, non-EMS personnel to participate in EMS
care, by exploring and integrating new roles and
scopes of practice for all available providers.
38- Information Systems
- Fund and implement the National EMS Information
System (NEMSIS) - Implement EMS information systems at the local,
regional, state, and national levels - Reflect the sophistication of each EMS system
inits EMS information system. - EMS systems must provide analyzed and descriptive
information on the service and patient carethey
provide. - Encourage multi-system data collection
39- Evaluation
- Federal and state funds should be made available
to support the development and implementation of
state EMS evaluation activities. - Fund the availability of training and toolkits to
encourage effective local service/system quality
improvement processes.
40Rural Access to Emergency Services Act of 2005
(RAES Act)
- S.1108
- Kent Conrad (D-ND)
- Pat Roberts (R-KS)
- Tom Harkin (D-IA)
- Ben Nelson (D-NE).
- H.R.2525
- Mark Kennedy (R-MN)
- Earl Pomeroy (D-ND)
- Paul Gillmore (R-OH).
41RAES Act Provisions
- Creates three demonstration projects to allow
states to innovate ways to integrate EMS systems
with health care systems - piloting EMS-based community health services
- creating flexible training models
- assuring the availability and access to quality
medical direction - a number of other activities
42RAES Act Provisions
- Expands the work of Medicare's Quality
Improvement Organizations to include ambulance
providers - Creates an ambulance-specific urban/rural
definition and provides for improved Medicare
reimbursements needed - Eliminates isolation test and allows CAHs to
receive cost-based Medicare reimbursement when
providing contracting for ambulance service
43RAES Act Provisions
- Assures Medicare beneficiaries emergency
ambulance coverage by setting the "Prudent
Layperson" standard as deemed satisfaction of any
medical necessity requirements - Adds ambulance services to the definition of
rural health care provider, which will allow
them to participate in the telecommunications
programs supported by the Universal Service Fund
44Take Home Messages
- Use the Agenda as leverage
- Informed self-determination
- EMS-based community health services
- Regional/collective efforts
- New technology
- Use the Agenda to position your service
45Copies
- National Rural Health AssociationPhone (816)
756-3140 - Printed copies are 15.00 for members of NRHA and
25.00 for non-members. Bulk purchase discounts
can be applied. 20 for orders of 10 copies or
more, 25 for orders of 20 or more. For bulk
orders call Jeff Sullens at NRHA (816) 756-3140. - http//www.nrharural.org/groups/sub/EMS.html
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