Ongoing

Crisis Intervention Team training

Dartmouth College 6181 Collis Center, Hanover

This is a week-long Grant funded program offered through NAMI NH and NH Dept. of Safety/ NH Fire Academy and EMS. The student will come away with an understanding of many mental health conditions, an improved ability to de-escalate a situation in the field and better understand the resources available for not only the patient or citizen, but also for emergency responders. Course Schedule: Monday - Friday

The Cost of Code 3 – An Evidence-Based Look at Lights & Siren Usage

Richard M. Flynn Training Facility 98 Smokey Bear Blvd, Concord

Lights and sirens usage has been integral to Emergency Services, serving as the status quo in most Fire and EMS responses. Supported for decades by anecdotal and unsubstantiated beliefs that quicker on-scene and transport times equal better results. Yet, recent data have shown the minimal time saved by utilizing lights and sirens improves outcomes in a very small percentage of cases. Apparatus incidents account for a high percentage of first responder injuries and fatalities across all disciplines. In most cases, L&S use puts crews, patients, and civilians at undue risk. In this session, learn how your service can best utilize lights and sirens to improve patient outcomes and minimize risk. It will draw on the latest peer-reviewed literature and highlight McGregor EMS's experience as part of the National EMS Quality Alliance's (NEMSQA) nationwide Lights and Sirens Collaborative. Learning Objectives: 1. Participants will examine apparatus incident case studies and contributing factors to collisions. 2. Describe the impact of lights and siren usage on traffic collision incidence. 3. Determine how NH E911 utilizes the Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) to triage EMS responses accurately and appropriately. 4. Discuss the NEMSQA Lights & Sirens Collaborative, McGregor EMS’s participation, their lessons learned, and national best practices.