Emergency medical services in the Blackhelm Confederacy: Difference between revisions
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===Church services=== | ===Church services=== | ||
Church-based providers make up by far the largest number of medical providers in the nation, and as such most EMS responers will be affiliated with a church-run organization. Typically, church-based services will rely upon the services of paid, full-time lay paramedics and emergency medical technicians. In many areas, however, ambulance service is primarily volunteer based - especially in smaller municipalities where the ambulances are a part of the local parish. | |||
===Private/for-profit services=== | ===Private/for-profit services=== | ||
[[Category:Astyria]][[Category:Blackhelm Confederacy]] | [[Category:Astyria]][[Category:Blackhelm Confederacy]] |
Revision as of 20:35, 17 January 2024
In the Blackhelm Confederacy, emergency medical services (EMS) provide out-of-hospital acute medical care and/or transport to definitive care for those in need. They are regulated at the provincial level, with each individual province setting their own standards and guidelines for services within their borders.
Wide differences in population density, topography, and other conditions can call for different types of EMS systems; consequently, there is often significant variation between the Emergency Medical Services provided in one province and those provided in another.
Organization and funding
Publicly operated EMS
Publicly operated EMS operates along two separate lines - one branch of the public EMS is based out of veterans hospitals, which are open to serving any members of the public who served in the Blackhelm Confederate Military as well as their families.
The other branch is operated on a municipal basis, and is utilized to transport individuals to nearby church-run or private hospitals at the municipalities expense.
Church services
Church-based providers make up by far the largest number of medical providers in the nation, and as such most EMS responers will be affiliated with a church-run organization. Typically, church-based services will rely upon the services of paid, full-time lay paramedics and emergency medical technicians. In many areas, however, ambulance service is primarily volunteer based - especially in smaller municipalities where the ambulances are a part of the local parish.