BY MEGHAN FOLEY
SENTINEL STAFF
Meghan Foley can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or mfoley@keenesentinel.com. Follow her on Twitter @MFoleyKS.
Christopher J. and Maryan G. Platz of Winchester Ambulance know they have a problem.
Fire Chief Norman W. Skantze in neighboring Swanzey knows he does, too.
While the towns differ in how
their emergency medical services are delivered, they share a common
struggle to have enough personnel to respond to calls — especially
during the day.
Winchester has its own ambulance
service manned by paid on-call personnel. Swanzey contracts with R.J.
DiLuzio Ambulance Service LLC in Keene.
The Swanzey Fire Department is a
first-response agency, meaning it has some paid on-call members who are
trained at some level to help a person having a medical emergency.
Winchester contracts with DiLuzio
for backup, and if it needs a paramedic-level emergency medical
technician to help with a call. Swanzey doesn’t have a plan B if its
sole provider, which also contracts with other towns, isn’t able to come
through.
To date it hasn’t come to that,
Skantze said, but he worries about the future, especially knowing that
ambulance services aren’t part of the region’s mutual aid system, which
covers only fire departments.
Mutual aid means fire departments
will help one another during an emergency at no cost. It’s expected
that the department providing the assistance will someday be on the
receiving end.
Southwestern N.H. District Fire
Mutual Aid has long dispatched ambulances for its member towns,
according to Chief Philip J. Tirrell. But there are no agreements in
place through the agency that require ambulances to respond to towns
they don’t cover as backup, he said.
In the past, when DiLuzio
couldn’t respond to a call, Keene would be contacted to provide backup,
Skantze said. If Keene couldn’t come, the next in line would be
ambulances from Winchester, Troy or Marl-Harris in Marlborough, Skantze
said.
However, Marl-Harris no longer
operates as an ambulance service, and Troy and Winchester are struggling
to respond to their own calls, he said.
Meanwhile, Keene officials are
now evaluating the fire department’s ability to back up ambulance
coverage to towns that don’t have contracts with the city’s ambulance
service.
“It puts us in a difficult place —
if DiLuzio, who currently meets the needs of the community, continues
to attract more customers and answer more calls,” Skantze said.
Skantze is one of many local fire
and EMS officials concerned that emergency medical services in the
region are reaching a breaking point. Some services are struggling to
stay afloat with fewer volunteers and funding, while others that can
make the calls are feeling the strain.
Thinning ranks
At one time during the past 25 to
30 years, Winchester Ambulance had so many members there would be
fights to get on the schedule to do runs, Chris Platz, a captain with
the agency, remembers.
Now the department, which serves
about 4,340 residents, is down to six active members, and has been
missing about 30 percent of its calls during the past year, he said.
“Some of it has to do with a lack
of volunteers. The other reason is there is not much industry in town,
and people who might be interested in joining the ambulance service
aren’t coming to Winchester to work,” Chris’ wife, Maryan, a lieutenant
with Winchester Ambulance, said.
In addition, emergency medical
services is a challenging field to work in, and one that’s hard to make a
living from, she said. It’s also “a young person’s game” because of the
physical demand, she noted.
“It’s not anybody’s fault, but
the job as a rule doesn’t pay enough. With a few exceptions, you’re
going to be working more than 40 hours a week to pay your bills,” she
said.
Still, Maryan Platz said she loves being an emergency medical technician.
“It gets in your blood,” she said.
Winchester Ambulance has received 400 to 500 emergency medical calls annually for the past five or six years, Chris Platz said.
That’s much more than the 100 to 150 calls per year members responded to when he joined the agency in 1990.
With the increase in call volume
and decrease in volunteers, Winchester Ambulance is at a point where it
can’t continue to operate as it has been.
Emergency medical services are no
longer about putting somebody in an ambulance, getting to the hospital
as fast as possible, and hoping that person lives: An ambulance has
become essentially a mobile emergency room, Chris Platz said.
“More lives are being saved now
than ever before because of the advances in pre-hospital care,” Zachary
J. Ford, a lieutenant with Winchester Ambulance, said.
The challenge, he noted, is
getting people to realize that, and that Winchester Ambulance and other
emergency medical responders can’t do their job without enough staffing
and community support.
“The bottom line is people expect
us to show up at their worst times, and we have a budget lower than the
library. To me, that is telling,” he said.
The budget for Winchester
Ambulance — a town department that operates under the fire department —
this fiscal year is $84,152. The library’s budget is $108,350.
The Platzes are in the very early
stages of a plan they hope will revitalize Winchester Ambulance and
keep it running for years to come.
But they expect it’s going to be a
tough sell to town officials and residents, especially since they want
to hire people part time to cover shifts during the day. That involves
spending money.
About 20 percent of Winchester Ambulance’s calls come between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. during the week, according to Ford.
But having people available to
respond to emergency medical calls during weekdays is a big struggle,
and Winchester Ambulance often must turn to DiLuzio Ambulance for help,
Maryan Platz said.
The EMTs who are in town often are working during the day or just not available, Maryan Platz said.
By state law, the service must
have two people on an ambulance to take a patient to the hospital. But
Winchester Ambulance likes to have three because it can be helpful to
have another person caring for a patient en route, Maryan Platz said.
While Ford and the Platzes live
in Winchester, other Winchester Ambulance EMTs are from Hinsdale,
Richmond and Swanzey. They all have to report to the fire station to get
an ambulance before going to the site of a medical emergency.
“So there is already a delay there,” Maryan Platz said.
With a day crew, people would be at the station and could respond more quickly, she said.
Besides meeting with Winchester
selectmen, she said ambulance personnel plan to reach out to successful
business owners in town for guidance in funding the part-time positions.
“We now have to look at the
business aspect, and that is something new for us,” she explained. “We
need to think about how we are going to fund this, and how we are going
to do it in a way that doesn’t put too much more burden on taxpayers.”
They also plan to meet with other
ambulance services in the region that have hired people to cover day
shifts to learn how they do it, and when they realized they needed to go
that route.
Swanzey’s dilemma
The town of Swanzey is 45 square
miles with about 7,230 residents, dozens of businesses, a regional
middle and high school, two elementary schools, a 16-bed assisted living
facility, three state highways and an airport run by the city of Keene.
Over the same time period, EMS
calls received by the agency increased by 98, or 17.6 percent, with 2012
being the lowest at 557, and 2015 being the highest at 655.
The 40 members of the fire
department are paid per call with the exception of the fire chief and
fire inspector, who are full-time paid employees, and the EMS
coordinator and deputy chief, who each work 16 hours per week. Of those
40 men and women, about 20 are licensed in some level of emergency
medical care, Fire Chief Skantze said.
But as the need for emergency
medical services rises in town and elsewhere, the ability of volunteers
and on-call staff to provide them has decreased, he said.
Last year, the fire department responded to 898 calls, 600 of them emergency medical calls.
Before switching to DiLuzio in the late 1990s, Swanzey received its ambulance service from the Keene Fire Department.
Besides Swanzey, DiLuzio primarily covers Gilsum, Harrisville, Marlborough and Richmond.
Swanzey’s agreement with DiLuzio,
which was signed by selectmen in 2016, says the agency will provide
ambulance coverage 24 hours a day, but “there may be times when the
emergency medical service system’s requirements or unforeseen
operational issues may be such as to make a response impossible due to
the limited resources of (DiLuzio Ambulance).”
If that happens, “a mutual aid ambulance may be dispatched,” according to the contract, which expires in 2019.
The Swanzey Fire Department is a
first-response agency to EMS calls in most cases, in advance of the
ambulance service, Skantze said.
“In doing so we can provide
patient-care skills, and then work directly with the ambulance on scene,
which will often transport the patient to the hospital,” he said.
But sometimes the setup doesn’t work.
“You have to keep in mind that
providers who are on-call for the town also have work, family and other
obligations that compete with the demands of the increasing call
volume,” he said.
As in Winchester, emergency medical calls made during the day are the toughest to cover, Skantze said.
“Many employers have been very
supportive with releasing our firefighters for major incidents. However,
it is getting more difficult for employers to allow their employees to
leave work for the more routine EMS and fire calls during the daytime
hours,” he said.
In addition, emergency medical
services have made great strides in recent decades, and the service
levels that Swanzey, DiLuzio and other providers offer are higher than
they were 10 or 20 years ago, according to Skantze. That requires
additional training of emergency medical responders, and additional
costs, he said.
Skantze believes Swanzey should
consider having a fire department-based ambulance service because of the
increasing demand and the immediate need.
Such a service would permit the
town to generate revenue by billing patients or health insurance
companies, as long as the patient goes in the department’s ambulance to a
hospital, according to Skantze. That would help offset expenses, and
allow the fire department to do a better job of providing emergency
medical services to the community, he said.
The fire department, which
provides some emergency medical care, can’t collect from insurance
companies or patients because it doesn’t have an ambulance transport
service.
However, what the future holds
for emergency medical services in Swanzey and across the region doesn’t
necessarily come down to what is best for the towns, but what’s best for
the patients, Skantze said.
“I think the problem has been
creeping up on us, and looking back, we’ve just kept adjusting,” he
said. “But how much longer can you keep adjusting before you need a
major solution?”
Good Luck, everyone wants a piece pie, but there is still a bad taste in Winchester from the days when we took our new, very expensive, Ambulance to N Carolina at no charge. Who can you trust?
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