This year National EMS Week is May 18-24 and EMS for Children Day will be held May 21. It features hundreds of grassroots
activities coast-to-coast. On Wednesday, local communities and medical
personnel are encouraged to focus their EMS Week activities on raising public
awareness about the need for specialized emergency care for children.
For the last three decades, the Emergency Medical Services
for Children Program has successfully raised awareness among healthcare
professionals, EMS and emergency and trauma system planners, and the general
public that children respond differently than adults – physically, emotionally,
and psychologically – to illness or injury.
The EMSC Program’s initial efforts primarily focused on
addressing easily identified gaps in the quality of pediatric care in both the
pre-hospital and acute care setting. In the 1980s and 90s, work centered on
pediatric EMS training, establishing pediatric specific equipment lists, and
the development of pediatric care guidelines. In 2001, the Program funded a
pivotal grant to support the infrastructure for the Pediatric Emergency Care
Applied Research Network (PECARN). PECARN for the first time, made it possible for large,
multi-institutional studies to take place leading to the development of evidence
based pediatric protocols. Since 2006, the Program has focused on
national performance measures, a set of goals for each state to work towards to
assure more consistency in the emergency and trauma care of children across the
nation.
Looking toward the future, EMSC aims to ensure all
emergency departments (EDs) are ready to care for children through the
implementation of the National Pediatric Readiness Project (Peds Ready), a
national quality improvement initiative. A heightened focus is also being
placed on pediatric regionalized systems of care and pre-hospital pediatric
emergency care research.
The EMSC Program’s partners are extensive and extremely
critical to the program. EMS week is a very special time for u because the
program's goal is to address the entire continuum of emergency care, from the
pre-hospital care given by EMS providers to pediatric critical care in the
hospital setting to pediatric rehabilitation, as well as injury prevention.
Having great partners like ACEP, AAP, ACS, NAEMT, NAEMSO, ENA, and STN helps us
address pediatric emergency care where ever it may be taking place.
We have celebrated EMS for Children Day for the last 12
years realizing the important role that EMS providers play in the care of
injured children. This is a perfect opportunity for states, the general
public and other organizations to say
thank you to those who reach our children first when injury occurs.
To honor EMSC’s achievements and learn more about EMSC
Day, please visit http://emscnrc.org/Events/EMSC_Day.aspx. There are celebration and
appreciation ideas for EMS and health care professionals, as well as fact
sheets for the general public. There is also artwork for sharing on social
media and some child activity sheets. Supporters can share a proclamation with
governors and regional legislature to proclaim EMS Week.
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