草莓影视

Trending Topics

Minn. cities begin alternative response methods to deal with increased calls

Increases in drug overdoses and behavioral health calls have led some Twin Cities fire and EMS chiefs to use social workers and Community Risk Reduction to address demands

US-NEWS-HOW-TWIN-CITIES-MEDICS-ARE-1-MS.jpg

Assistant Chief Beaux Beauvais, a paramedic, holds a cardiac monitor/defibrillator that will be part of a response medic聮s kit at St. Louis Park Fire Station 1.

Richard Tsong-Taatarii / The Minnesota Star Tribune

By Liz Navratil
Star Tribune

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn. 鈥 The calls came in quick succession over the course of two weeks: A man in St. Louis Park fell and dialed 911 for help getting up, again and again.

So Assistant Fire Chief Beaux Beauvais, who is also a paramedic, tried something different. He went to the man鈥檚 house, reviewed his medications and found they were likely mixing poorly and causing his dizziness.

鈥淲hen our firefighters go out on 911 calls every day, they sometimes identify patients that might need extra help beyond the confines of that 911 call,鈥 Beauvais said.

That鈥檚 why St. Louis Park will soon have a new alternative response medic dedicated to handling those types of calls, joining a growing number of cities trying to blend social work with medicine to reduce emergencies.

Fire chiefs across the Twin Cities metro area say they鈥檝e also seen a spike in calls, some driven by drug overdoses or mental health concerns. In other places, people are aging and falling more frequently. Many fire chiefs say more patients seem to be relying on 911 for nonemergency issues that might be best handled in a doctor鈥檚 office.

鈥淲e already had an embedded social worker within the police department,鈥 said Richfield Fire Chief Mike Dobesh, whose department is testing out a similar program. 鈥淪o there was this request to see if we could do something different, something bigger.鈥

The number of calls coming into the St. Louis Park fire department has risen in recent years, and medical requests now account for about 70% of them, interim Fire Chief Mike Scott said. He added that it鈥檚 鈥渒ind of a misnomer鈥 now to call it just a fire department.

With the new alternative response program, Beauvais said, 鈥淭he hope is that we can give the patient the best chance of a good outcome.鈥

Trending
The ambulance slid on the ice and struck the bystander who was directing them to the scene
What started as a routine transport for two EMTs turned into heartbreak when the medical jet carrying their young patient crashed just minutes after takeoff
The Uniformed Firefighters Association stated that the two members had served at Ground Zero
The tribute will recognize police officers, firefighters and paramedics who responded to the New Year鈥檚 Day truck-ramming attack that killed 14 people

Burnsville began experimenting with a Community Risk Reduction team a couple of years ago. Firefighter-paramedics came in to work overtime, partnering with police and social workers, to try to focus on reducing the overdoses and falls that accounted for most of their calls. The program is still in its pilot phrase.

鈥淲hat it will look like officially in the future, I don鈥檛 know for sure,鈥 said Burnsville Assistant Fire Chief Neal Dwyer, adding that officials are trying to use call data to ensure they鈥檙e finding gaps in services and fixing them.

Richfield and Edina launched a new team about a year ago that pairs a paramedic with a Hennepin County social worker. Together, they try to focus on helping the people who call 911 most frequently.

They can take the patient to a hospital in an emergency. Other times, they leave behind a card listing programs that might be able to help the person, a resource some patients turn to months later.

鈥淲ith the increased call volume, no matter how much staff we put on all these calls, we will never be able to keep up with the increased demand,鈥 Richfield Assistant Fire Chief Jenell Brooks said. 鈥淪o to be able to have an alternative way where we could give people other resources has been really helpful.鈥

Martin Scheerer, chief of Hennepin EMS, said he鈥檚 worked with several cities that are trying to launch similar programs and 鈥渆veryone鈥檚 got a little different twist.鈥 But, overall, he鈥檚 been supportive.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really helpful for the whole 911 system, because less people will call 911 that don鈥檛 need the 911 system,鈥 Scheerer said

St. Louis Park officials hope to have the new paramedic in place by the end of February and expect to experiment as they figure out how to best use that person鈥檚 time.

Some time might be spent responding to 911 calls. Paramedics have more medical training than many other first responders. They can run heart monitors and provide medications for the most urgent calls, such as heart attacks or strokes.

鈥淪omething that maybe an EMT wouldn鈥檛 be able to provide extensive care for, our paramedic can get there first 鈥 three, four minutes ahead of the ambulance,鈥 Beauvais said.

Some time might be spent with the police department鈥檚 behavioral health unit, helping to respond to mental health concerns. Another portion might be spent following up on 911 calls, as Beauvais did with the man who kept falling.

Beauvais spent several hours with the man. His paramedic training allow him to spot the medications that might be interacting poorly. With the man鈥檚 permission, Beauvais contacted the man鈥檚 medical team, whose members changed his medications that same day.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 been out there since,鈥 Beauvais said. 鈥淭hat was a problem that wouldn鈥檛 have been discovered by our firefighters because they just don鈥檛 have the time to sit there and spend time like that, as an alternative response medic would.鈥

漏2025 The Minnesota Star Tribune.
Visit .
Distributed by