Posts Tagged Fire chief Michael Hill

Woodstock Fire/Rescue District news

Excerpts from the Woodstockindependentcom:

Service cuts at Woodstock’s hospital could cost the Woodstock Fire/Rescue District hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional equipment and personnel.

About 44 percent of Woodstock-area ambulance transports in September bypassed Centegra Hospital-Woodstock for other hospitals, according to data from WFRD. By contrast, in January, about 10 percent of WFRD’s transports went elsewhere.

In mid-August, Centegra-Woodstock stopped accepting most inpatient admissions. The hospital continues to run a basic emergency room, and it offers other services, but patients who need overnight stays are being treated at Centegra-Huntley or Centegra-McHenry. That means WFRD’s ambulance runs for people with conditions ranging from serious allergic reactions to pneumonia must be transported out of town.

The additional drive time which comes with taking many patients from Woodstock to Huntley or McHenry has Fire Chief Michael Hill thinking about the future. For decades, Woodstock’s ambulance service has been structured for paramedics to deliver patients to the emergency room and be back on the road quickly — sometimes in just five or 10 minutes.

Now, Hill said, a trip to an out-of-town hospital can take an ambulance out of service for 35 to 40 minutes. For a district that runs about 12 calls a day, that time adds up. On occasion, if all three WFRD ambulances are out, crews from neighboring towns are called in to cover.

“If you go to the Woodstock hospital and drop off your patients, you’re ready to respond. An ambulance is available,” Hill said. “If you’re out in McHenry or Huntley, you’re too far away. You’re not available.”

A Centegra official said the health system is working with WFRD and that Woodstock’s ER can provide emergency care to the vast majority of patients.

“Our collaboration with Woodstock EMS is a work in progress, and we continue to discuss the ways to best serve patients in Woodstock and its surrounding communities,” Catie Schmit, Centegra’s director of emergency services, wrote in an email. “We are identifying additional opportunities for education to be sure patients are taken to the emergency room that provides the most appropriate care for their conditions.”

Hill cautioned WFRD’s most recent data only takes into account about a month’s worth of transports, so it’s still too early to decide if the district will need to hire more staff or buy another ambulance. But he said there’s a chance WFRD — and, by extension, taxpayers — will need to spend more to make up for the reduction in services at Woodstock’s hospital.

Buying a new ambulance would cost about $210,000, and hiring more employees to staff it would cost easily more than $100,000 a year in salaries, benefits and other expenses.

In the case of walk-ins to Centegra-Woodstock, private ambulances are being used to transport patients to other hospitals at their expense. (Insurance typically covers at least part of this cost, which can run in the thousands. WFRD ambulance trips come with a bill, too, ranging from about $500 to $900 for residents.) When patients call 911 for an ambulance, they will be taken directly to the hospital which can best treat them. Ambulance crews are directed by hospital doctors as to where to go.

Hill is worried that injured or sick people will decide to skip the ambulance altogether by driving themselves to the hospital when they’re in no shape to do so.

“Don’t be afraid to call 911. The most disturbing stories I’ve heard were of people that needed help and didn’t want to call the ambulance because they weren’t sure what was going to happen,” Hill said. “We, Woodstock Fire/Rescue District, are going to take care of you. We’re going to get you to the correct hospital and get you the treatment you need.” 

thanks Dan

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Woodstock Fire Department news

Excerpts from the ChicagoTribune.com:

A Woodstock man woke up at 3 a.m. and took his dog for a walk. Fire chief Michael Hill doesn’t know the man’s name, but said he may be responsible for saving about 50 people from a massive fire at the 32-unit Willow Brooke Apartments complex in Woodstock.

After letting out his dog, he saw the smoke and called 911 to alert report that a building was on fire and then he entered the building and started knocking on doors and alerting residents to leave,” Hill said. “I wish I had his name.”

Crews from the Woodstock Fire/Rescue District responded and called for mutual aid from surrounding fire departments. About 60 to 70 firefighters responded to 2105 Willow Brooke Drive about 3:15 a.m. The origin seems to have been on a balcony, and the fire went up to the roof line, where the top of the two-story building was engulfed.

“Both in the warning to get the fire department on the way and also the warning of people—it took quite a while until smoke detectors were activated—those residents would not have been alerted if it were not for that gentleman,” Hill said.

Even with the man’s warning, firefighters and the Woodstock Police Department had to rescue people from two balconies and make one rescue from inside the building.

Hill said the fire was one of the tougher ones he remembers because there was no vehicle access to the back of the building.

Where firefighters might have encountered fire in the attic space between the residents’ ceilings and the roof, they instead found plywood nearly an inch thick, giving the fire ample space to burn where firefighters couldn’t get water on it directly. It took about 90 minutes to get the blaze under control.

“Apparently they had put a second roof over the top of the other, because the first roof was leaking, creating a void space between which is where the fire got into, making it virtually impossible for us to access it,” Hill said.

The American Red Cross provided lodging to 43 people from 32 units and brought in breakfast and lunch for the residents and for emergency crews. Firefighters were at the location through Saturday afternoon.

thanks Dan

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