Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) crews will be helping to deliver life-saving care for cardiac arrest patients as part of a new joint initiative with North West Ambulance Service (NWAS).
When a person dials 999 to report a suspected cardiac arrest, both North West Ambulance Service and Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service will respond and whoever reaches the casualty first will start providing life-saving treatment before ambulance crews can take over. Once the patient has been stabilised, they will then be conveyed to hospital by ambulance.
The scheme works in a similar way to the trust’s volunteer Community First Responder scheme, where trained members of the public are despatched to life-threatening emergency calls within their local community. The added advantage to despatching fire crews, is their ability to respond on blue lights therefore arriving more quickly to a situation where literally every second can mean the difference between life and death.
Fire crews will be paged by NWAS when a suspected cardiac arrest is reported within three miles of the fire station and despatched at the same time as an ambulance. Once the ambulance crew arrives, advanced life support will commence and the patient will be handed into the care of NWAS.
A historic Memorandum of Understanding document was signed by NWAS and GMFRS on 8 September to help make this happen.
Derek Cartwright, Director of Operations, North West Ambulance Service, said:
“This is an extremely positive project and it’s great to work with GMFRS on a scheme that will contribute to saving lives here in the Greater Manchester.
The chances of survival from cardiac arrest diminish rapidly with every passing second so the sooner someone can receive treatment, the greater their chances are of leading a full and healthy life afterwards. It doesn’t matter who gives that treatment – whether it is a member of the public, an ambulance crew or a fire crew so the more resources there are available to respond, the better for those who suffer this potentially devastating condition.
Last year, the ambulance service responded to 5486 incidents in Greater Manchester where the patient had suffered a cardiac arrest – sadly, despite everyone’s best efforts, not everyone survives but everyone deserves that chance and this is what this scheme will give people.
I’d like to thank Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service for their commitment to this project and I am sure there will soon be many patients who will also be alive to thank them. I would urge everyone to learn basic life support skills as you never know when you too could help save a life.”
David Acton, Chairman of Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Authority, said:
“This is an exciting development for Greater Manchester and one which we hope will save many, many lives. Our firefighters already work closely with NWAS, they are trained in CPR and the use of life-saving equipment such as defibrillators, and in fact have already saved lives through their intervention.
This seems a logical way to develop that further – and after all, if we could do more to help NWAS save even more lives, why wouldn’t we make that happen?”