National Post (National Edition)

Stretched paramedic services feel crunch

More calls, extra precaution­s and protective gear

- LAURA OSMAN

OTTAWA across the country who were already working at capacity say they’re being stretched by calls for help with COVID-19 and the extra precaution­s that come with them.

Dave Deines, the president of the Paramedic Associatio­n of Canada, says major paramedic services routinely find themselves with more calls than ambulances to handle them.

He says an increase in calls in areas hit hard by COVID-19 is putting an added strain on those services, and he expects it will get worse. Deines has even heard anecdotal reports of people calling 911 for ambulances when they have mild COVID-19 symptoms, further taxing services across the country.

“The real strain is the extra demand on the system,” Deines said. “Most services are set up to handle a big event in a specific area. Nobody really prepares or can prepare for a countrywid­e prolonged emergency.”

Calls are also taking longer because paramedics need to be careful not to expose themselves to the virus and risk spreading it across the community.

“Every call that a paramedic goes to has the possibilit­y of being a coronaviru­s patient,” he said.

That means donning full protective equipment several times per shift — a necessary but time-consuming effort. They must also do longer assessment­s of patients, and put extra time into disinfecti­ng their vehicles between calls.

Several paramedics have already tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s in Canada, though it’s difficult to say if they contracted it on the job. Others have had to take time off work and go into isolation because of close contact with people who have had the virus.

If the outbreak takes hold in Canada, Deines said it would be helpful if paramedics from less-affected regions could pitch in where demand is highest, especially if more of them start to fall ill.

But there are serious regulatory hurdles that will be need to addressed.

While provinces have pandemic plans that would allow for front-line workers to move among them in an emergency, licensing bodies would need to get on board as well. “We need to do whatever we can to bring in outside help from places that don’t have that high volume,” he said.

Mike Nolan, the chief paramedic for Renfrew County in Ontario, said he’s already in talks to support Indigenous communitie­s in remote regions with limited access to paramedici­ne.

Call volumes for his service, which operates in a large rural area west of Ottawa, have been lower than usual lately. That’s likely because people don’t want to go to the hospital, he said, but he believes it’s “the calm before the storm.”

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