Pittsburgh Bureau of Emergency Medical Services

The Pittsburgh Bureau of Emergency Medical Services (PEMS) provides emergency medical services and medically directed rescue services for the City of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is a bureau of the Department of Public Safety (DPS), along with the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, Administration, Fire, and Animal Care and Control. The DPS is responsible for 55.5 square miles (144 km2) with a population of 305,841 as of the 2013 Census estimation. The Bureau was founded in 1975 by then current city administration, absorbing Freedom House Ambulance. Pittsburgh, in addition to being the birthplace of prehospital care, is one of few cities in the United States where "medically directed rescue" is practiced.

Pittsburgh Bureau of Emergency Medical Services
Seal of the Pittsburgh Bureau of EMS
Operational area
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
City Pittsburgh
Agency overview
EstablishedOctober 15, 1975 (1975-10-15)
Employees211 (2019)[1]
  • Uniformed Providers: 209
  • Civilian staff: 2
Annual budget$22,910,271 2019[1]
StaffingCareer
Bureau ChiefAmera Gilchrist
EMS levelALS/BLS
Motto"The Best Care Anywhere"
Facilities and equipment
Divisions3
Stations/Facilities16
ALS Medic Units
    • 13 - normal staffing (scheduled 24/7)
    • 11 - reserve/emergency
BLS Ambulances
    • 3 - normal staffing (scheduled 24/7)
    • 2 - reserve/emergency
HAZMAT1
Heavy Rescue3
Special/Technical Rescues3
River Rescue boats4 (one is Out of Service currently)
Other boats (inflatables)5
Hovercraft1
TEMS Units2
Infectious Disease response3
Swift Water/Flood Response units4
ALS Motorcycles4
Bicycle units4
Mass Casualty Unit1
ATV/Carts4
Prehospital Physician response3
Website
Official website
Union website (FAPP)

Pittsburgh EMS provides medically directed technical, tactical, and heavy rescue services for the City.

History

Prior to any formal prehospital care system in the United States, the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police and local funeral homes provided "scoop and run" transportation services, entirely lacking any resemblance of modern medical care; instead, they provided only the 'run' portion. The PBP commonly utilized their "paddy waggons" due to their versatility, and the funeral homes doubled hearses as ambulances to transport the sick and dying to the hospital, and more than likely, later to the funeral home. In 1968, Freedom House Ambulance was born out of an existing organization, Freedom House Enterprises, a nonprofit dedicated to establishing and supporting black-run businesses in the city. Freedom House Ambulance provided emergency care and some rescue services[2] in the City's Hill District and other predominantly black neighborhoods, as the police already covered responses to the rest of the city, composed mostly of affluent white communities. The seemingly "crazy" dreams of an anesthesiologist combined with the passion of a philanthropic board member and unwavering dedication of a med-school fellow, would catapult Pittsburgh and Freedom House to the world stage, whether they knew it or not. The work of Doctors Peter Safar, Nancy Caroline, Ron Stewart and Paul Paris, along with that of Phil Hallen, President of the Maurice Falk Foundation, soon lead to an operation the likes of which the world had never seen; to save countless lives on The Hill and elsewhere, employ young black people and combat racism. Before its demise, Freedom House would eventually become a shining example of prehospital care and the use of paramedics in the field for the rest of the nation and eventually the world to follow.[2][3]

On the 15th of October 1975, the Pittsburgh Bureau of Emergency Medical Services began coverage and delivery of prehospital care and rescue services to the City of Pittsburgh.[2]

On April 5th 2023, Amera Gilchrist was sworn in as the 8th Chief of the Bureau of Emergency Medical Services. She is the first African-American and first woman to lead the bureau.[4]

Organization

The Bureau of EMS is separated into three divisions: the Ambulance Division, Rescue Division and Training Division, each of which are commanded by a Division Chief.

The Division Chief responsible for Training, is also responsible for Special Events and Emergency Preparedness. The Division Chief coordinates with the City's Special Event Office of the DPS Administration Bureau to provide Advanced Life Support (ALS) coverage for all permitted events within the city limits. This can include staffing venues such as PNC Park and Heinz Field, homes to the Pittsburgh Pirates and Steelers respectively, providing coverage for the Pittsburgh Marathon and many 5K and 10K races around Pittsburgh. (including the nationally recognized Richard S. Caliguiri City of Pittsburgh Great Race),[1]

Medic 14 in downtown Pittsburgh

Specialty units

River Rescue

Pittsburgh EMS contributes to the City's joint EMS and Police River Rescue unit, which is staffed by two PEMS Paramedic/Public Safety Rescue Divers, and a PBP Officer/Helmsman. River Rescue operates a multitude of equipment including a new river boat recently delivered (2020) from Lake Assault Boats out of Michigan, two Boston Whalers, a fan boat that allows River Rescue to operate in and above ice in the winter, and a plethora of inflatable craft, some of which are stored on the Bureau's rescue trucks. Out of the water the Rescue Division operates a dive rescue truck that is used to aid River Rescue with prolonged river dive operations, or transport divers from their station in PNC Park to water rescue/recovery details not accessible from the rivers. River Rescue responds to request for service on the three rivers with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission and the United States Coast Guard. River Rescue as a joint DPS asset with Police and EMS allows River Rescue to provide a police presence on the water in the region, as well as to the Port of Pittsburgh, the nation's second largest inland port. Upon assignment to River Rescue, the paramedic divers complete an extremely rigorous initial training, as well as vast hours of refresher training throughout the year, in both the classroom and under the water. River Rescue also has the only ALS Licensed boats in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[5]

References

  1. "Operating Budgets | pittsburghpa.gov". pittsburghpa.gov. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  2. "The First Responders". The Atavist Magazine (in Norwegian). 2019-06-25. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
  3. "Birth of EMS: The History of the Paramedic". JEMS. 2013-10-08. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
  4. "Amera Gilchrist sworn in as Pittsburgh's first Black woman EMS chief". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  5. Taxel, Simon; NREMT-P (2017-11-02). "Pittsburgh River Rescue". JEMS. Retrieved 2020-12-23.
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