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Our Thurston County Sherriff Office has required from our SAR units, proof that an EMS unit is needed in Search and Rescue.
The standard ALS and BLS response times in the 10 minutes in town. Rural is 30 minutes on the average.
More in the wilderness areas, by up to a hour.
Our aim is to assist the victims of the rescue as soon as possible. We would like feed back as to what your area does with respect to this issue.
Our average search is 8 to 24 hours long. With no EMS other than a few First aid People, we wanted to advance our training in responses for our victims. The care needed was more advanced than a first aid level. We received the Green light over 6 months ago to attend a county provided EMT Training.
We have worked to address the protocols in our jurisdiction.
Now 5 days before EMT training starts the SO wants us to do an essay and prove our worth or no training!
We do not transport but provide an on site EMS till a more Advanced transport arrives. Can you help with your counties EMS and SAR protocols? STATS would be also welcomed. Email me at AzTRAUMAMOMMA@aol.com
I am currently putting together a SAR medical team and am starting from the ground up. We have only a few members from out side our County as we do not have a Jr College to recruit from. All the EMS is taught more than 30 miles away and in order to be an EMT B you have to go through 4 inch book on our counties Protocols. National Registry is not acknowledged here. If you want to work here you start somewhere else. Equipment and supplies are hard to find, even broken items. Our roller bandages were made and distributed in 1959. No lie.
But when we get a call out we work hard. One rescue I personal patched up and sent two by ambulance and 14 by POV. Total count of injured personal was 23. On ONE rescue. All were volunteers.
Broken T/B with no distal pulses. Flailed chest at t 5-8. Amazing injuries with little equipment and lots of our own money on the line. I just lost a hare traction splint that I know is gone. But you do what you can for the Patient.
You do good things. I think you should be commended.
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