“if it was designed the right way, i could see how that could be helpful,” boyle said.
the student who phoned 911 reported that sidney was “seizing” and turning blue, which led the call-taker to enter a seizure protocol in her computer system — a medical emergency that generally has a less urgent response than an overdose.
as a result of sidney’s case, a review committee has now recommended that ambulance dispatch to seizure calls be upgraded from the second-highest response to the fastest response, helmer said.
that will result in an average of 20 more “purple calls” a day in b.c. this highest response is used for about three per cent of the 2,000 calls the services gets daily, she said.
this case also led to changes that will allow call-takers to ask about possible drug use if they suspect an overdose may be happening, which is scheduled to start in june. until now, call takers, who typically have no medical training, were prohibited from asking “leading questions” in the computer software they use to navigate 911 calls.
as well, call-takers will now be allowed more latitude for recommending the use of naloxone, even if an overdose hasn’t be confirmed.
and supervisors must now be notified when there is more than one patient at a “non-traumatic event,” a category that includes overdoses in the 911 system.