South Yorkshire firefighter Emergency First Responder success

Firefighters in South Yorkshire have been praised for attending more than 350 medical emergencies last year, under the county's first Emergency First Responder scheme.
Mark Atherton and Matt Hall are among the firefighters delivering the scheme in South YorkshireMark Atherton and Matt Hall are among the firefighters delivering the scheme in South Yorkshire
Mark Atherton and Matt Hall are among the firefighters delivering the scheme in South Yorkshire

Among those singled out for praise were Mark Atherton and Matt Hall (pictured). The life-saving scheme is a joint initiative between South Yorkshire Fire & Rescue and Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust.

On-call firefighters from Rossington, Stocksbridge and Dearne fire stations were sent to 358 medical emergencies in 2016, including cardiac arrests and incidents stating chest pains and breathing difficulties. At other incidents, firefighters have provided support and made the patient comfortable until the ambulance service arrived on scene.

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Training for firefighters who are part of the scheme includes basic life support, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and oxygen therapy. They are equipped with a kit which includes oxygen and an automated external defibrillator to help patients in a medical emergency such as a heart attack, collapse or breathing difficulties.

An EFR is dispatched at the same time as an ambulance and does not replace the usual emergency medical response from YAS. However, their location within the local community could mean they are nearer to the scene in those first critical minutes of a medical emergency, delivering life-saving care until an ambulance arrives.

They also support and complement other volunteer community first responder schemes within South Yorkshire, ensuring the level of medical provision to local communities is supplemented.

Emergency First Responders are only available for dispatch when staffing levels at their fire station allow and the scheme does not impact fire cover.

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Head of Emergency Response, Tony Carlin, said: “Just over a year into this scheme going live, our firefighters are already showing the incredible value they can add to their communities and the role we can play as a fire service in enhancing the work of our emergency service partners and volunteer community first responders.

“Our role as a fire service will always be to protect our communities and reach and save those who are in danger as quickly as possible. A new statutory duty has made it a requirement for us to work more closely with our blue light partners, and this scheme is a perfect example of how we are already doing that.”