Ambulance dispatch services are a central operation that must continue during any disaster, including the current day COVID-19 or coronavirus outbreak. As the pandemic continues, questions and uncertainties arise, including how ambulance dispatch center operations and processes should be handled. With ever-changing CDC guidelines, understanding the need for changes and compliance is key.
Jennifer Kirkland is a well-respected Emergency Dispatch Center Manager in the Grand Junction Colorado area, a nationally recognized dispatch center expert, and Senior Consultant for Fitch and Associates. Her industry experience and understanding of the CDC guidelines has prompted the following tips and changes for creating a healthy and safer dispatching work process.
In regards to dispatching responding units, the biggest change is that dispatchers can question and survey incoming callers. Doing this helps dispatchers determine if they need to warn the responding units of any potential symptoms that may indicate possible coronavirus exposure. This is an additional step to the standard ambulance dispatching procedure.
The dispatch center should have pre-formatted questions with which to interview the requesting phone callers specific to COVID-19. Based on the responses from the caller, the dispatcher can assign a responding unit, or pass the phone call to a higher level call screener for review.
The International Academies of Emergency Dispatchers (IAED), the ambulance dispatch’s leading authority organization, provides many guidelines for standard ambulance dispatch operations. Most importantly, they offer protocols and guidelines for unusual events such as the current coronavirus pandemic. Protocol 36 of the IAED protocol manual specifically highlights how requesting calls should be escalated from the original dispatching call taker when non-ordinary events occur, like the current pandemic.
Typically, level one of the protocol suggests the dispatchers be armed with a series of questions, as mentioned previously, to ascertain any potential hazards for the responding units. In the case of the coronavirus, dispatchers are to ask about symptoms such as fevers, recent sickness, and recent travel.
There are four levels to protocol 36. At the higher levels, call screeners such as nurses and paramedics review the call to accurately assess and dispatch the appropriate responding resource. In the case of COVID-19, this could be a review that leads to the ambulance dispatch center dispatching a specialty designated unit and crew for COVID-19 responses.
In many ambulance dispatch centers with consoles and desks, the workstations are designed at least six feet apart. In smaller ambulance dispatch centers with less room, the area must be reconfigured so that communication center workers are sufficiently separated to ensure adherence with the CDC guidelines.
Jennifer recommends the following operational changes for ambulance dispatch centers to assure that the coronavirus doesn’t enter the workspace.
Additionally, as in Jennifer’s organization, she recommends having pre-planned amended work schedules based upon the various levels of staffing thresholds. This way, staff understand how their shifts will change if co-workers become ill and unavailable to work.
Finally, Jennifer noted that the Grand Junction Emergency Communications Center call volume is down due to the stay-at-home and shelter-in-place mandate. However, they are starting to see an increase in civil disturbance calls and medical calls as the public begins to get antsy from the quarantine.
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