Emergency Medical Services Response Times in Rural, Suburban, and Urban Areas

Corresponding Author: Howard K. Mell, MD, MPH, CPE, Presence Mercy Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, 1325 N Highland Ave, Aurora, IL 60506 (moc.liamg@llem.eiwoh).

Accepted for Publication: April 16, 2017.

Published Online: July 19, 2017. doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2017.2230

Author Contributions: Dr Stopyra had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Study concept and design: Mell, Carr, Stopyra.

Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: Mell, Mumma, Hiestand, Holland, Stopyra.

Drafting of the manuscript: Mell, Hiestand, Stopyra.

Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Mell, Mumma, Hiestand, Carr, Holland.

Statistical analysis: Mell, Hiestand.

Administrative, technical, or material support: Mell, Mumma, Holland, Stopyra.

Study supervision: Mell, Carr, Stopyra.

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: None reported.

Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of the Emergency Care Coordination Center, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response, US Department of Health & Human Services.

Additional Contributions: We thank ESO Solutions for providing the data.

Received 2017 Feb 27; Accepted 2017 Apr 16. Copyright 2017 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.

This study describes the interval between receipt of a 911 call and the arrival of the first emergency medical service unit on the scene of a reported emergency in the United States.

Emergency medical service (EMS) personnel in the United States respond to an estimated 37 million 911 calls annually, providing care to the sick and injured, but the initial link in the chain of survival includes family, friends, and bystanders. A collaborative effort between emergency care and emergency management experts within the US government recently led to the development of a public education campaign titled Until Help Arrives (https://community.fema.gov/until-help-arrives). Spearheaded by the US Departments of Homeland Security, Defense, and Health & Human Services, this initiative seeks to empower laypersons to provide care to the ill and injured until EMS personnel arrive. While there is an unavoidable delay between a 911 call and EMS arrival, to our knowledge, no current published data exist to quantify these time frames. This study seeks to describe the interval between receipt of a 911 call and the arrival of the first EMS unit on the scene of a reported emergency in the United States.

Methods

We reviewed deidentified EMS records from calendar year 2015 from 485 EMS agencies distributed throughout the United States (ESO Solutions). Encounters were distributed geographically throughout the country and were classified, based on the 2014 US Census Bureau categorization of the originating zip code, as rural (population <2500), urban (urbanized centers, population >50 000), or suburban (urban clusters, population 2500-50 000).

Only emergency (911) prehospital encounters were included. We excluded patient transfers, encounters coded as aborted encounter, and all encounters with arrival times 120 minutes or longer or transport times 180 minutes or longer (as these outliers were not representative of the general EMS experience). One author (B.H.) examined the data for obvious errors and outliers, and corrected data errors resulting from the use of a 12-hour am/pm clock. All other data entry errors resulted in the calculated time interval being set to missing. Given the lack of other covariates available for incorporation, multiple imputation was not valid for dealing with missing data. Therefore, complete case analysis was used to generate descriptive statistics. The study was determined to be exempt from review by the institutional review board at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.

Results

Data were provided for 1 796 987 EMS encounters. There were 625 encounters identified as outliers and excluded as described here. Table 1 provides the distribution of encounter types in the database. A total of 71% of encounters (n = 1 275 529) resulted in transport of a patient by the primary EMS unit. There were 70 189 encounters (3.9%) from rural zip codes, 1 576 019 (87.7%) from suburban zip codes, and 150 779 (8.4%) from urban zip codes. Table 2 provides time data for the various encounter types by population category.

Table 1.

Distribution of Emergency Medical Services Encounters by Category
CategoryNo. (%)
Aborted encounter6116 (0.34)
Dead on arrival20 771 (1.2)
No patient found on scene39 397 (2.2)
Patient encounter without transport by primary unit455 174 (25.3)
Patient encounter with transport by primary unit1 275 529 (71)
Total1 796 987 (100)