Just before Christmas, as 琉璃神社 city council was getting ready to set its 2018 provisional budget, it was told a large percentage of the calls the city鈥檚 fire department has to deal with are medical first-responses. And that is having an effect on the fire department鈥檚 resources.
The news wasn鈥檛 speculation. It came from a consultant hired specifically to look at the operation of the fire department and how its resources are currently being used.
The pronouncement had a number of councillors openly opine that maybe now is the time for 琉璃神社 to raise its voice and call for more ambulance resources in the city. Such a move can鈥檛 come soon enough.
Currently, 琉璃神社鈥攚hich is one of the fastest growing communities in the country鈥攈as just five ambulances stationed here to deal with not only the regular and growing needs of a mid-sized city, but also of a large and growing seniors鈥 population and an opioid overdose crisis that is spiraling out of control.
While many could be forgiven for thinking there are plenty of ambulances available here, they would be wrong. Given the regional nature of health care and the fact 琉璃神社 has become a regional centre for health鈥攅specially with with additions to 琉璃神社 General Hospital of a cancer centre and the cardiac care centre鈥攖he ambulances stationed in the city, as well as those in West 琉璃神社 and Lake Country, have basically become interchangeable. So it may appear there are plenty on the road.
But that does not mean the three ambulances stationed in Lake Country and the three in West 琉璃神社 during the day are always available. At night, only one ambulance is available in each of those communities and at other times they are being used to transfer patients to other areas farther away, including the south and north Okanagan.
As a result, the fire departments in all three communities become the first line of response in many cases.
News 琉璃神社 city council is willing to lobby for more ambulances here will no doubt be welcomed by both the ambulance service and the fire department, as it would help both. But is the province, under the new NDP government, willing to reverse the 鈥渟tand-pat鈥 position of the previous government when it comes to making such a move?
First-response firefighters are very well-trained and equipped to do the job they are tasked with. But, they will be the first to tell you, they are not ambulance paramedics, and not equipped to鈥攊n the words of one paramedic I talked to鈥斺渂ring the emergency room to you.鈥
Still, they are an invaluable resource for someone sitting in their living room, or out on the street, that suddenly needs medical assistance.
But, as the city鈥檚 consultant found, the current situation is putting too much pressure on the department and as a result it is affecting the other task they have to do鈥攔espond to fires.
The time has come to increase ambulance resources in 琉璃神社. It will be a move that will have a much wider impact than simply employing more paramedics. It will help two of the critical emergency response services in the city.
Alistair Waters is the assistant editor of the Capital News.