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Ambulance transport costs increase

An ambulance ride to the hospital just got costlier in DeKalb County.

The Board of Commissioners voted Aug. 28 to increase the rates, which had been among the lowest in the metro Atlanta region.

The cost of a basic life support transport will increase by $250 to $750. Transports requiring advanced life support will cost $825, up from $550.

Around the region, basic life support transports range from $343 in Douglas County to $1,627 via Grady EMS in Fulton County.

In DeKalb, the cost of oxygen during a medical transport will be $75, up from $45, while EKGs will cost $112.50 instead of the old rate of $75. Mileage costs will be $10.50 per mile versus $7.

The rate increase does not sit well with Viola Davis, of the Unhappy Taxpayer and Voter, who recently had a child transported from school to the emergency room at Egleston’s Children’s Hospital in Atlanta for a medical emergency.

“That visit to the emergency room turned out to be about $680,” Davis told commissioners before they voted to approve the increase. “Then after that, we received our bill to transport our child from the school to the emergency room. That bill was for $600.

“As a critical care nurse, I was sitting there trying to figure out exactly why would the ambulance service costs as much as the emergency room,” Davis said.

Emergency rooms are staffed with doctors, surgeons, x-ray technicians, Davis said.

“You have all of these professionals that are trained in trauma such as myself that works critical care,” she said. “You understand why that increased cost is there because you never know what the emergency may be.

“Show me where the ambulance service is doing as much training as the emergency room [staff],” Davis said.

The county’s current ambulance service provider, the Arizona-based Rural/Metro Corporation, has been operating on an emergency basis since July 2010.

Rural/Metro, which provides emergency and non-emergency ambulance services and private fire protection services in 20 states throughout the United States, was hired after the county canceled its contract with CARE Ambulance, a Montgomery, Ala., company. CARE’s contract was ended after the company responded slowly to several incidents, county officials said at the time.

Rural/Metro requested the rate increases because it has been experiencing a problem in collecting some of the transport fees.

“This is intended to be a stop gap measure…to assist this provider,” Commissioner Lee May said.

Norman Augustin, deputy chief of operations for the DeKalb Fire Rescue Department, said the ambulance fees are typically paid by Medicare or insurance companies.

Commissioner Jeff Rader explained that Rural/Metro is losing approximately $28 per transport for its 32,000 transports per year.

“Obviously, the increase that is being proposed is more than $28,” Rader said. “The key here is to identify the fact that there is a loss…but more importantly, this was an emergency selection that was instituted using our existing cost structure.

“It would have been great if we could have made a selection much sooner, because you typically don’t want to run with emergency selections for two years,” Rader said.

The county is currently in the process of accepting proposals from companies interested in taking over the ambulance service. So far, the county has received three proposals that will be evaluated and narrowed down to one finalist.

The Board of Commissioners will then vote on the proposal. The administration will bring a recommendation to commissioners at the end of October, said Kelvin Walton, the county’s director of the county’s purchasing and contracting department.

Once a new provider is selected, the transition would take at least two months Walton said.

 


Comments (6)

nb
Said this on 9/24/12 At 11:32 am
here's the thing. i work for dekalb county and i will be the first to tell you that, if you dont already know, we are the busiest department in the southeast united states. we annually run close to 100 THOUSAND calls. the reason for the increase is that #1. we have been on of the lowest charging services in metro atlanta, #2. we are the busiest service in metro atlanta and therefore after awhile trucks and equipment break down. if the equipment and trucks are not capable of being maintained then the result is lack of ems. #3. FUEL is not free. bottom line, if you call 911 and want to go/ need to go to the hospital...... you will have to pay for it!!!! trust me it could be alot worse than what it is. i would also like to comment on our training. as mentioned above, we spend several years not to mention the annual training and re certifications we have to do to make sure we on top of our game. every firefighter in DEKALB county is either EMT-I or Paramedic trained.
CJ
Said this on 9/16/12 At 06:02 pm
As a 28 year Paramedic, I want to say THANK YOU for coming to our defense. People have no idea the training we receive and have to continually go through to maintain our proficiency and training. I have served the citizens of DeKalb County for 20 years now and have loved every minute of it. I log a MINIMUM of over 100 hours of continuing education a year! Everything from pediatric to geriatrics. I respond to every emergency from the beiginning of lif to the end of life. I never know what will be my next patient.
For MS Davis to disparage my profession the way she does tells me one thing, she is not in emergency medicine. My skill set is more advanced than hers are. I work on my own under orders from my medical director. I have to diagnose my patient and treat accordingly. I don't wait for someone else to do it for me.
Thanks for your support.
KC
Said this on 9/12/12 At 06:21 pm
A 50% increase for BLS, ALS, EKG, and mileage with a 67% increase for oxygen is OUTRAGEOUS! Insurance premiums will go up as a direct result of this action. This is all in preparation for implementation of Obamacare!! No one is getting anywhere near this in pay raises!!
Monique
Said this on 9/12/12 At 05:54 pm
I am absolutely infuriated by Mrs Davis's remarks regarding ambulance training. It is in my opinion blatantly clear that she has NO idea what is involved in manning a ambulance! Firstly this country is incredibly blessed to have paramedics on almost all 911 units. In Dekalb there are paramedics on all rural metro units and many Dekalb fire units also have paramedics. Each ambulance is crewed by a emt advanced which takes a minime year of training. They specialize in intermediate life support. They are required every year to complete continued education courses and skill training. They don't just drive a ambulance. Then there is the paramedic. In total it takes three years of college to obtain this level if you included the emt section. They are licensed just like nurses. They are highly trained in advanced life support and many go further and specialize in critical care. They are required by the state and national registry to maintain their skill level and knowledge through state approved continuous education courses. They have to complete advanced cardiac life support, pediatric advanced life support, PHTLS,geriatric care and so. They do not have the luxury of nice well lite emergency rooms and unlimited resources. They are continuously training and updating their education and skills. So Mrs Davis check your facts before you make such a ignorant and hurtful comment regarding ambulances. These brave men and women save countless lives everyday, often for little pay and even less gratitude.
SillyGoose
Said this on 9/10/12 At 01:36 pm
There's a charge because there's a cost. Sure it'd be nice if it could be covered by the government, but geez must you set your standards so high? It's like people are never satisfied.. Not saying that all Obama has done already is enough, but can people recognize what he HAS done rather than moping about having to pay for an ambulance ride, which is a SERVICE?
Plenty of countries would love to be able to call a number and have EMS there in 10 minutes, even if they did get a bill for it later. Be glad the ambulance services don't make you pay up front.
Telkonequi
Said this on 9/7/12 At 09:00 pm
Why is there any charge? I thought Obama was going to take care of this. I thought he would take care of us. Why dosen't the Board contact Obama to cover this? After all, he said "I got your back."

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