Edmonton Journal

Community paramedics get cash infusion from province

Edmonton, Calgary each to receive dedicated dispatch centres, more staff

- RYAN RUMBOLT

Albertans suffering CALGARY from chronic and non-emergency health issues will have another resource once the province expands its community paramedics program later this year.

The community paramedici­ne program has just received an additional $11 million in funding from the province to hire 26 paramedics to expand the service to Wetaskiwin, Red Deer, Camrose, Grande Prairie, Peace River, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat.

Another 10 community paramedics will be added in both Edmonton and Calgary while each city will also get its own dedicated dispatch centre to help co-ordinate the program and send paramedics out to calls.

Brandy Payne, associate health minister, said community paramedics assist Alberta’s elderly or vulnerable patients while freeing up emergency ambulance services and emergency rooms by avoiding stressful and unnecessar­y trips to hospital.

“Community paramedics help Albertans get the right care at the right time, right in their own communitie­s or neighbourh­oods,” Payne said.

“Working with EMS dispatch, the assess, treat and refer program will link patients to services and support in real time when emergency care is not needed.”

Community paramedics began operating in Wetaskiwin, Red Deer and Camrose this month. The service will roll out in Grande Prairie and Peace River in March, and Lethbridge and Medicine Hat in May.

Payne said emergency response teams in Alberta respond to about 400,000 calls every year, with around 15,000 calls for community paramedics.

Barb Ferguson, executive director of the Alzheimer Society of Calgary, said the program is already making a difference for elderly Albertans, specifical­ly those suffering from dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

“Imagine if you didn’t recognize what an ambulance was any more, and then you have some people in uniform coming in and taking you out of your home and taking you to a strange place,” she said. “It’s absolutely frightenin­g for somebody with dementia.”

Of the nearly 42,000 Albertans with dementia, Ferguson said caregivers are often an elderly spouse or family member who have their own medical concerns.

She says people with dementia who go to the emergency room rarely return home, and community paramedics give patients and family members a lifeline to health services that avoids a long wait in the ER or even long-term hospitaliz­ation.

Statistics from Alberta Health Services last year showed the number of ER visits in Calgary was around 248,000 in 2012. The next year that number rose to around 300,000.

From 2012 to 2016, the number of patients brought to ER by ambulance in Calgary went to 75,000 from 59,000.

Lisa McQuaid is one of the community paramedics who has been making the rounds in southern Alberta for the last two years. She says the program has been a success in Calgary and the expansion will provide that same level of specialize­d health-care services to more Albertans while freeing up first responders to deal with emergencie­s.

“There’s most definitely a time and place for transport, but there’s a great opportunit­y for front line staff and for patients at keeping people home where they want to be,” she said.

To contact the community paramedic program, call 1-855-4915868.

The program currently operates 365 days a year between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m.

 ?? IAN KUCERAK/FILES ?? Advanced care paramedics Matthew Lockert, left, and Erica Olson, with primary care paramedic Amy-Jean Easton stand with therapy dog Delray at the Callingwoo­d EMS Station in December. Associate health minister Brandy Payne said Tuesday 10 more community...
IAN KUCERAK/FILES Advanced care paramedics Matthew Lockert, left, and Erica Olson, with primary care paramedic Amy-Jean Easton stand with therapy dog Delray at the Callingwoo­d EMS Station in December. Associate health minister Brandy Payne said Tuesday 10 more community...

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