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Mayor Jacobs requests temporary changes to AMR contract

The temporary agreement will require ALS ambulances to respond to only the most severe cases, levels 1 and 2.

KNOX COUNTY, Tenn. — At the request of Dr. Martha Buchanan, Sr. Director of the Knox County Health Department and Mayor Glenn Jacobs, Knox County and its ambulance service provider of record, Rural/Metro of Tennessee, L.P. have agreed to a temporary operational change to the existing Ambulance Service Agreement. 

The 90-day agreement is designed to better ambulance response times throughout the county by altering service requirements, according to a release from Knox County. 

The existing contract states that the provider is required to respond to all 911 calls with an Advance Life Support (ALS) ambulance, which has limited numbers. 

The temporary agreement will require ALS ambulances to respond to only the most severe cases, levels 1 and 2, according to the release.

The release said Basic Life Support (BLS) ambulances will respond to the less severe cases as determined by standard triage guidelines, ultimately increasing the total number of ambulances available for response. 

The required response times for each level of service will not change, according to Knox County.

“The temporary amendments to the contract do not reflect issues with the service provider,” Mayor Jacobs said. “They are a result of ambulances being tied up due to the growing backlogs at all area ERs. With service demands likely to increase as flu season peaks in the coming weeks, this was a logical first step, and a very common one taken by other communities across the country, in easing the strain and keeping our residents safe and healthy.”

The temporary operational change will be reevaluated by both parties after 90 days, according to the release.

 

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