Rural EMS agencies face staffing and funding challenges
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[September 25, 2021]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – As the healthcare
disparity between rural and urban areas grows, emergency medical
services in rural areas are struggling to survive.
According to a policy brief from the National Rural Health Association,
nearly one-third of the nation’s EMS agencies in rural areas face
immediate “operational jeopardy.”
Low funding, typically from the county and fundraising efforts, for EMS
agencies has led to low pay for workers and volunteers. Add in the fact
that employees and volunteers are required to attend between six months
and two years of schooling and training, some agencies are desperate for
people.
Pat Schou, executive director of the Illinois Critical Access Hospital
Network, said no area of the state is without an EMS agency at this
time.
“We haven’t heard that any areas have been left uncovered, so that is
not what the hospitals are seeing just yet, but we see it coming,” said
Schou.
The NRHA said one of the largest contributing factors to the disparity
in mortality rate from traumas, including an overdose, for rural
residents is travel time and distance to trauma centers. Research finds
rural residents are significantly more likely than non-rural residents
to die following traumatic injury, and that disparity varies by trauma
center designation, injury severity, and U.S. Census region.
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According to the latest data from 2015, the average EMS total time call
for an urban area was 62 minutes. For rural areas, the average total
time call was 80 minutes.
Governor J.B. Pritzker vetoed a measure involving ambulance services
that he said would harm some of Illinois’ most vulnerable patients.
Ambulance companies, however, said the legislation was needed to prevent
the growing paramedic shortage that they say is putting pressure on the
health care system.
Lawmakers went around Pritzker and voted to override the veto. Illinois
State Ambulance Association’s Chris Vanderberg said the bill ensures
services are paid for, not by funds through managed care organizations,
but by fee-for-service.
According to the NRHA, attracting new EMS staff and retaining current
staff is critical to ensuring quality care for those who live in rural
areas.
“One of the most efficient ways to attract new staff is to increase the
supply of EMS staff from which to recruit through expanded training
opportunities,” the policy statement said. |