Otago Daily Times

Concerns Fenz unit not being called out

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OMARAMA residents are concerned they are not receiving timely medical care and they want change.

The nearest ambulance is 30km away in Twizel, but the town has a group of trained first responder volunteers and an agreement with St John that it would be sent to relevant medical calls.

But residents say the first responders often are not called out when they should be, and it has prompted a community meeting to make their voices heard.

Boots and Jandals Hotel owneropera­tor Bruce Dyson was in the Omarama Volunteer Fire Brigade first response unit for over a decade.

Patients had to wait for care if the unit was not dispatched, he said.

‘‘Twizel’s probably a good 2530 minutes and then Kurow could be up to 40 minutes away, and if those two aren’t available, you’re talking Oamaru or Waimate which is a good hour and aquarter, hour and 20.

‘‘There have been a few cases where people have had to wait for that long,’’ he said.

The Fire and Emergency New Zealand (Fenz) first response unit in Omarama is dispatched to relevant medical events by St John under an enhanced response trial that started in 2017.

The trial means they can be called to attend more medical emergencie­s than most other first response brigades.

The Boots and Jandals Hotel has made three medical calls in the past 10 months in which the first response unit was not called to assist.

One of those times, a bar manager waited more than an hour for an ambulance after someone fell over outside a nearby hotel.

Dyson said the first response unit — which is trained by St John — could get there a lot quicker.

‘‘In town, you’re talking three to five minutes, and outside — the rural areas — it depends how far they have to travel.

‘‘So it’s reassuranc­e for the people who could be on the end of the phone or [distressed family], it’s reassuranc­e for them and it’s reassuranc­e for the patient.’’

Omarama First Response Trust trustee Craig Dawson said the first response unit was set up so they could give patients the right support while they waited for an ambulance.

Timely medical care and being able to triage someone in person instead of over the phone could make a big difference, he said.

‘‘What we’ve found in recent times is we’re just not getting called out to these calls, which can be potentiall­y dangerous.’’

The community, especially older people, needed reassuranc­e they could get medical assistance in a timely manner, he said.

‘‘I think that if you live in a community and you have willing people who are highly trained with good equipment, why not use them?

‘‘It doesn’t cost St John anything for us to attend. We don’t send them a bill or anything like that. We simply just go out and do the job.’’

He wanted a new and enforced memorandum of understand­ing between St John and Fenz that meant the first response unit was called to all medical events and accidents.

Fenz Otago district manager Phil Marsh said the issue was on his radar.

It was St John’s responsibi­lity to assess each medical call and decide whether to dispatch the first response unit, he said.

‘‘We line up with the memorandum of understand­ing and the enhanced trial, and that’s where we have to stick to.

‘‘We can’t just go to everything unannounce­d or uninvited. We have to be working under that clinical governance.’’

The fire brigade received 93 calls within 12 months to the end of July; 41 were medical.

The current memorandum of understand­ing guidelines dictate when the unit can be dispatched.

‘‘For all incidents classified as Purple or Red — so that’s cardiac or respirator­y arrest or serious major lifethreat­ening incidents where we can arrive ahead of an ambulance resource — and for Orange incidents or Orange 1 incidents, where the first responder skill set may make a positive difference to patient outcome.’’

St John rural Otago area operations manager David Milne said nothing had changed regarding the partnershi­p with Fenz.

‘‘St John is aware of the Omarama community’s concerns, but would like to again reassure them that the Fenz first response brigade is, and will continue to be, dispatched by St John Ambulance to all relevant medical incidents,’’ Milne said.

He said the past 12 months of incident data showed no overall change for the Omarama community, the brigade being dispatched to four calls per month.

Three of those fit under the typical first response unit and about one per month fell under the enhanced trial criteria.

‘‘It is also worth noting that there are certain incidents where we will actively not request a Fenz response from Omarama.

‘‘For example, when the patient requests the brigade is not activated (as patients have the right to do this under the [Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers’ Rights]) and when there is a health profession­al on scene and they request the brigade is not activated because there is sufficient skill already on scene.’’

St John continuall­y reviewed the way they worked together to ensure resources were allocated appropriat­ely, but noted the ambulance service was experienci­ng extremely high demand across the country, he said.

A meeting was due to take place over the weekend to discuss various issues. — RNZ

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? The Fire and Emergency New Zealand first response unit is sent to relevant medical events in Omarama.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED The Fire and Emergency New Zealand first response unit is sent to relevant medical events in Omarama.

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