For 2nd straight year, Ottawa paramedic response times fall short of benchmark - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:04 PM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

For 2nd straight year, Ottawa paramedic response times fall short of benchmark

The Ottawa Paramedic Service is still falling short of a council-set benchmark for how long it should take to respond to life-threatening emergencies.

Paramedics failed to hit 75 per cent rate for life-threatening emergencies

The Ontario government has legislated a target time of eight minutes for paramedics responding to a life-threatening situation. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

Latest

  • Council received the Ottawa paramedic 2016 annual report without question or comment Sept. 13, 2017.

Despite a small improvement, the Ottawa Paramedic Service is still falling short of acouncil-set benchmark for how long it should take to respondto life-threatening emergencies, according to the service's 2016 annual report.

The provincially-legislated response time for life-threatening calls is eight minutes from the first unit being notified of the call for service to a paramedic arriving on the scene.

The City of Ottawa has set a benchmark that paramedics meet that target75 per cent of the time.

In 2016, the service's response time performance was 73.2 per cent, a slight uptick from the previous year when it was 72.5 per cent.

However, the paramedic service's performance has dropped 10 percentage pointssince 2013.

Coun. Eli El-Chantiryhas called for the city to speed up the hiring of paramedicsto deal with shortages in the past.

"We're going in the right direction," El-Chantiry told CBC News.

Ottawa city council approved the hiring of 12 paramedics in 2016 and another 24 this year, plus the addition of one ambulance. Pending budget approval, the city will acquire another ambulance andhire 14 more paramedics next year.

"Our residents live longer. We're encouraging people to stay at home [instead of going to long-term care homes]. In the future this is going to create more [pressure] on the system than less."

No one from the Ottawa Paramedic Service was able tocomment Thursday evening

Call volumes increasing

There has already been a 14 per cent increase in calls since 2012, according to the report, which was released Thursday.

DarrylWilton,the president of Professional Paramedic Association of Ottawa, said that increase has put a strain on resources.

Paramedics respondedto approximately 138,000 calls in2016, Wiltonsaid and that number is expected to be even higher at the end of 2017.

A bald man wearing a paramedic uniform, with a stethoscope around his neck, stands in a grassy field.
Darryl Wilton, president of the Professional Paramedic Association of Ottawa, says innovation has helped halt the decline in performance. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

"The frequency of our level zero alarms is increasing," Wilton said. "And we also know we're having a little bit of trouble meeting our response times."

"Level zero" alarms occurwhen there are no ambulances available to transport patients. CBC News has learned there were 250 such alarms in 2016.

Canada 150 events have also increased demands on the service, and thatwill create a "blip" in the data,makingit more challenging to plan for the future, Wilton said.

Response performance 'plateaued'

Life-threatening calls made up1.2 per cent of calls in 2016, according to the report. It also said that paramedics met their council-set benchmarks on responses to urgent and less urgent calls.

One factor that has helped keep response time performance from declining further is innovation on the part of the service, Wilton said specifically, rapid response units thatuse cars and bikes, rather than ambulancesto respondto calls.

Wilton said those paramedicscan assess, treat and even release patients before they need to be taken to hospital, freeing up ambulances to deal with more serious cases.

"What you've seen there is it's kind ofplateaued,where we have enough rapid response units throughout the community... we have to start looking at [whether] we have enough [ambulances] to transport people to hospital."