Journal Pioneer

Rapid Response

Tignish organizati­ons fear Rapid Response Unit’s change; Health P.E.I. says it’s enhancing the service

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY

Increasing hours for the EMS Rapid Response Unit based in West Prince to 12 a day, and expanding its territory to include the rest of the county, is meant to “continue to meet those growing demands for alternativ­e levels of service in emergency response,” officials say.

Two Tignish organizati­ons expressed fears that the changes will negatively impact their area and will place more pressure on the local fire department.

The unit currently operates 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, in the West Prince region.

James Sullivan, Health P.E.I.’s director of emergency health and planning, said the advanced care paramedic that staffs the RRU will continue to be able to check in on residents in seniors facilities during their down time, but he added the paramedic would have to stop what he’s doing and respond if an emergency call came in.

The closest available emergency vehicle, whether it is an ambulance or the RRU, would respond to any emergency call, Sullivan noted. Changes are not expected to take place until late May.

While patient transport might result in an ambulance leaving a particular region of the province, Sullivan said: “it is actually with deliberate intent, the rapid response units - our non-transport vehicles – are actually able to stay in their assigned communitie­s and be available as rapid response to other emerging 9-1-1- calls.”

It’s that larger territory that has the Tignish Fire Department worried.

“The territory expanded is going to make a vast difference,” said fire captain Stephen Trail, in suggesting the RRU would be of little value to his department if it is in Kinkora when the 9-1-1 call is placed.

“It’s invaluable to us,” added Trail, noting the department gets a confidence boost in having an RRU and an advanced care paramedic responding with them.

“A lot of times when we go to medical calls, it’s there.” Along with expanding the hours and region for the western RRU, a new rapid response unit is being added for Queens County. Trail said the department would rather see another RRU provided for East Prince, thereby leaving the existing unit exclusivel­y in West Prince. There are also three new programs being rolled out provincial­ly, and two of them have “rapid” in their name. Those Rapid Bridging Programs will utilize different advanced care paramedics who will make scheduled visits to patients released from hospital early and patients in home-based palliative care.

Sullivan stresses those programs are separate from the Rapid Response Units, which will continue to perform like they have since that service was introduced in P.E.I. in 2013.

“I absolutely empathize with the concerns that are coming forward. I think it is a situation of continued knowledge translatio­n and informatio­n sharing,” Sullivan commented. Tignish Town Council has arranged for representa­tives of the fire department and seniors home care co-operative to meet with the minister and deputy minister of Health and Health P.E.I. officials so that the concerns can be addressed. That meeting is scheduled for Monday, April 9 at the Town Office. Tignish-Palmer Road MLA Hal Perry said he is pleased a meeting is being arranged. “There needs to be some clarity on this,” Perry said.

Sullivan explained there are ambulance vehicles, transfer vehicles and rapid response units within the Island EMS fleet. While the RRUs are assigned to a particular region, the other vehicles move in and out of a region as required.

 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Tignish Fire Chief Allan Gavin outlines his department’s concerns about changes Island EMS is proposing for its West Prince-based Rapid Response Unit during a recent meeting of Tignish Town Council.
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER Tignish Fire Chief Allan Gavin outlines his department’s concerns about changes Island EMS is proposing for its West Prince-based Rapid Response Unit during a recent meeting of Tignish Town Council.

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