discuss print share

Ohio Not Part of Federal Database on EMS Runs

This means agencies can't compare themselves to others to improve patient care & how EMS workers are trained


Suzanne Hoholik, The Columbus Dispatch | | Wednesday, January 4, 2012


COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio is considered a leader in emergency medical services, but it's one of the few states that don't send run reports to a national database.

That means EMS agencies here can't compare themselves to others across the country to improve patient care and how emergency medical workers are trained.

A 1992 law that created the Ohio trauma registry prohibits state officials from sending the information to the federally funded National EMS Information System.

"Ohio has been a leader for years and wants to submit data, but their statute prohibits them," said Karen Jacobson, director of the national information system.

The law bars individual hospitals and ambulance agencies from being individually identified in public data.

Two decades ago, the Ohio Hospital Association fought to keep the names of individual health providers confidential in the public trauma registry.

But for the information to be useful in the national database, Jacobson and her staff need to identify ambulance agencies for accurate groupings, even though the names are kept confidential.

This way, a volunteer fire department in southern Ohio providing basic life support to patients isn't grouped with the Columbus Division of Fire, which provides advanced life support.

EMS agencies could use the database to learn, for example, how well they respond to time-sensitive conditions such as severe injuries, cardiac arrests and strokes.

"Is Ohio getting patients to the right locations compared to other states?" said Jeffrey Leaming, executive director of the Ohio EMS division. "We can look at it here, but we can't benchmark that nationally."

The state EMS Board wants to change the law and send ambulance run information to the database.

Officials have asked state Sen. Jim Hughes, R-Columbus, to support changing the law. He is considering it, and the hospital association so far doesn't plan to oppose it because it would include information only from EMS agencies.

"If it doesn't have hospital data in it, we're fully supportive of pushing it forward," said Carol Jacobson, the association's director of emergency preparedness.



Copyright © 2012 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy


Connect: Have a thought or feedback about this? Add your comment now
print share
Related Topics: News, training, run reports, patient care

What's Your Take? Comment Now ...

Product Connect

Featured Careers & Jobs in EMS



Subscribe to JEMS in print

You’ll get 12 issues of JEMS + a free patch.

Award winning content every month, with features, clinical updates, new product information and much more. Subscribe now!




Subscribe to JEMS,
covering the hottest
topics in EMS!

Jems Cover

Get 12 issues,
print & digital for
one low price!


EMS Airway Clinic


Fire EMS Blogs


Blogger Browser

Ride the Innovation Wave

This special supplement, sponsored by Physio-Control Inc. andJEMS, profiles 10 EMS...
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Driver Killed After Car Goes Airborne, Crashing into Maryland Restaurant

Car flipped repeatedly and crashed into a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Georgia Officials Respond to Complaint over Teen’s Death

"Patient was in what they call a PEI rhythm."
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Widow Denied Benefits of Fallen Pennsylvania Paramedic

Widow urges changes for contractual first responders.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Family and Friends Remember Fallen Virginia Paramedic

He fell from an interstate overpass at the scene of an auto fire.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Hands On February 2012

Product Reviews from Street Crews
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Fiery Florida Highway Pileup

When rescuers first arrived, they could only listen for screams and moans because the poor visibility.
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Cincinnati Construction Collapse

Underlying support beam "sheared away," fire Chief Richard Braun said.
More >