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For Immediate
Release
6/10/09
 
Baker Bill to Revamp State's Emergency Medical Services Law
Measure Seeks to Ensure High Levels of Patient Care and Greater Public Safety
The state Senate today approved
legislation sponsored by Senator Lisa Baker (R-20) that would modernize,
standardize and improve Pennsylvania's Emergency Medical Services Law to ensure
high levels of patient care and greater public safety.
Baker, who chairs the Senate
Veterans Affairs and Emergency Preparedness Committee said the measure would
replace the existing Emergency Medical Services Law with one that is more
coordinated and responsive to the current EMS needs of the state.
Currently, the system is made up
of 53,000 EMS providers operating 1,014 ambulance services. Those providers
responded to more than 1.8 million patient encounters in 2008 – or a dispatch
every 18 seconds.
"Over the past 25 years, emergency
response has evolved rapidly, but there is a problem," Baker said. "The EMS
provisions in state law no longer reflect what is happening in communities
across the Commonwealth. In this fast-response, high-tech, crisis-centered
world, Pennsylvania is stuck with an outdated law."
Baker explained that in the 1980s,
most EMS organizations were adjuncts of local fire companies. But today, only
about a third are volunteer. She said changes in workforce, technology and
service configurations have all made it necessary to revamp the existing law to
reflect current practices and protocols.
Baker added that this legislation has been ten years in the making, and
incorporated countless revisions to reflect considerable input from providers
and concerned organizations. She said it adopts national education
standards and allows for new provider certification levels to ensure a high
level of patient care and public safety. It also establishes clear
regulatory authority for the Department of Health and the Bureau of Emergency
Medical Services.
"The revamped law prevents
confusion, promotes cooperation, provides certainty in standards, and helps
those in the business of saving lives do their work efficiently and
effectively," Baker said. "The nearly 3,500 entities that are part of the EMS
system play an indispensable role in our communities. We owe them our respect
and gratitude. We also owe them a law that allows them to operate in the best
fashion possible."
CONTACT:
Jen Wilson
(570) 675-3931
Additional Information:
Emergency Preparedness
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