Wash. Admin. Code § 246-976-960 - Regional emergency medical services and trauma care councils
(1) Regional
council composition and appointments. The department shall establish regional
emergency medical services and trauma care councils (EMS/TC) and shall appoint
members to be comprised of a balance of hospital and prehospital trauma care
and emergency medical service providers, local elected officials, consumers,
local law enforcement representatives, and local government agencies involved
in the delivery of trauma care and emergency medical services recommended by
the local emergency medical services and trauma care councils within the
region.
(a) The department will design and
manage the appointment process.
(b)
In areas where no local EMS/TC council exists, the regional EMS/TC council
shall make recommendations to the department regarding appointing members to
the regional EMS/TC council.
(2) Funding and grants. The department, with
the assistance of the emergency medical services and trauma care steering
committee, shall adopt a program for the disbursement of funds for the
development, implementation, and enhancement of the emergency medical services
and trauma care system. Under the program, the department shall disburse funds
to each emergency medical services and trauma care regional council, or their
chosen fiscal agent or agents, which shall be city or county governments,
stipulating the purpose for which the funds shall be expended.
(a) The councils shall report in the regional
budget the individual source, amount, and purpose of all gifts and
payments.
(b) Matching grants may
be made under the provisions of chapter 70.168 RCW and awarded for the purposes
identified in
RCW
70.168.130 and to accomplish other purposes
as approved by the department.
(3) Regional council responsibilities. In
addition to meeting the requirements of chapter 70.168 RCW and elsewhere in
this chapter, regional EMS/TC councils must:
(a) Develop and submit to the department
regional EMS/TC plans that meet the minimum standards of the department. In
developing and modifying the plans EMS/TC regions must:
(i) Use regional and state analyses provided
by the department based on the statewide electronic emergency medical services
data system, trauma registry data and other appropriate sources provided by the
department;
(ii) Identify and
analyze system trends to evaluate the EMS/TC system and its component
subsystems, using statewide electronic emergency medical services data system,
trauma registry data and other appropriate sources provided by the
department;
(iii) Identify the need
for and recommend distribution and level of care (basic, intermediate, or
advanced life support) for verified aid and ambulance services to assure
adequate availability and avoid inefficient duplication and lack of
coordination of prehospital care services for each response area. The
recommendations will be based on criteria established by the department and
will include information related to agency response times, geography,
topography, and population density;
(iv) Identify the need for and recommend
distribution and level of facilities to be designated which are consistent with
state standards and based upon availability of resources and distribution of
trauma within the region;
(v)
Identify prehospital training and education to meet regional and local
needs;
(vi) Identify EMS/TC
services and resources currently available within the region;
(vii) Summarize improvements and outcomes
from the last approved plan;
(viii)
See and consider the recommendations of local EMS/TC councils and systems
established by ordinance, resolution, interlocal agreement or contract by
counties, cities, and other governmental bodies;
(ix) Include in the plan, patient care
procedures adopted by the region that meet the requirements of
RCW
18.73.030 and
70.168.015 and the minimum
standards of the department and must include:
(A) The level of medical care personnel to be
dispatched to an emergency scene;
(B) Guidelines for rendezvous with agencies
offering higher levels of service;
(C) Air medical activation and
utilization;
(D) On scene
command;
(E) Procedures for EMS to
identify and triage patients experiencing trauma, cardiac, or stroke
emergencies. Procedures must include destination determination including the
type and level of facility to first receive the patient, and the process EMS
must use to alert the receiving facility;
(F) For major trauma patients, regional
patient care procedures must identify procedures to alert and activate the
trauma system;
(G) Patient care
procedures must include interfacility transport procedures including the name
and location of other trauma, cardiac, or stroke care facilities to receive the
patient should an interfacil-ity transfer be necessary;
(H) Procedures to allow for the appropriate
transport of patients to mental health facilities or chemical dependency
programs, as informed by the alternative facility guidelines adopted under RCW
71.168.170;
(I) Procedures to
handle types and volumes of medical and trauma patients that may exceed
regional capabilities, taking into consideration resources available in other
regions and adjacent states;
(J)
Procedures for how hospital diversion is managed in the region; and
(K) EMS and medical control
communications;
(x)
Include a schedule for implementation and identify goals, objectives, and
strategies;
(xi) Include strategies
that may promote improvements in the regional EMS/TC system;
(xii) Describe how the roles and
responsibilities of the MPD are coordinated with those of the regional EMS/TC
council and regional plan; and
(xiii) Describe and recommend improvements in
medical control communications and EMS/TC dispatch, with at least the elements
of the state communication plan described in
RCW
70.168.060 (1)(h).
(b) Review applications for
verification of ambulance and aid services and make recommendations to the
department regarding:
(i) Compliance with the
department-approved minimum and maximum number of verified trauma services for
the level of verification being sought by the applicant;
(ii) How proposed service will impact care in
the region in relations to clinical care, response time to prehospital
incidents, and resource availability;
(iii) How the proposed service impacts
unserved and underserved trauma response areas;
(iv) How the proposed service will impact
existing verified services in the region; and
(v) Include any comments from local EMS/TC
councils and systems established by ordinance, resolution, interlocal agreement
or contract by counties, cities, or other governmental bodies.
(c) Review applicants for
designation of hospital trauma services and make recommendations to the
department.
Notes
Statutory Authority: RCW 18.73.081 and 70.168.120. 02-14-053, § 246-976-960, filed 6/27/02, effective 7/28/02. Statutory Authority: Chapters 18.71, 18.73, and 70.168 RCW. 00-08-102, § 246-976-960, filed 4/5/00, effective 5/6/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.70.040 and chapters 18.71, 18.73 and 70.168 RCW. 93-01-148 (Order 323), § 246-976-960, filed 12/23/92, effective 1/23/93.
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