CHI Memorila ambulance
CHI Memorial has received more than $1.3 million dollars in grant funds which will be used to directly benefit the citizens of North Georgia.
CHI Memorial received more than $1 million in grant money from the State of Georgia for its work providing Covid testing and vaccines to the North Georgia community. Those funds were used to purchase three ventilators and 12 state-of-the-art Stryker LIFEPACK monitors/defibrillators to go on the current ambulance fleet. Two new ambulances were also purchased and will arrive later this year.
The new equipment and ambulances will further enhance the emergency services provided to residents of Dade and Walker County.
They also received a grant totaling more than $323,000 from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services to enhance the training and skills of its EMS employees in rural North Georgia. The goal is to significantly expand the capacity of CHI Memorial’s EMS personnel to administer care for mental health and substance use disorder emergencies occurring in rural portions of Dade and Walker Counties, where CHI Memorial provides ambulance service.
This will be a multi-faceted two-year project that includes enhancing EMS training on trauma-informed, recovery-based care for individuals experiencing mental health and substance use related crises; administering Advanced EMT training, geriatric education, advanced medical life support training and emergency pediatric care training for EMS
personnel.
The grant funds will also facilitate the enrollment of four EMTs in an EMT-to-Paramedic Bridge Program through the Faithful Guardian Training Center, in Temple, Ga., and purchase automated CPR devices and naloxone kits (to reverse opioid overdose) to outfit ambulances responding to rural areas of Dade and Walker Counties.
"SAMHSA recognizes the great need for emergency services in rural areas and the critical role EMS personnel serve across the country," officials said. "With this grant program, SAMHSA aims to develop the capacity of EMS staff to support residents in rural communities."
LIFEPACK monitor-defibrillator