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Complete Health Indicator Report of EMS Response Time

Definition

Average (mean) time (in minutes) from unit notified by dispatch to EMS arrival at scene.

Numerator

Total minutes from unit notified by dispatch of EMS to scene arrival for individual EMS response trips.

Denominator

Total number of EMS response trips.

Data Interpretation Issues

Not all EMS agencies were compliant with data collection during all years. Due to non-compliance, the data collection system contains between 50% and 98% of actual EMS responses, depending on the year (more recent years are more complete). Data may also not be reflective of true response times due to data entry errors. Data for 2016 has been updated to reflect the population descriptions for counties that the Office of Primary Care and Rural Health uses. These descriptions no longer include "sub-frontier". Data for 2016 has likewise been updated to include agencies who were reporting to the new data system and were incomplete for 2016. In 2015, five counties grew in population size and were recalculated from Sub-frontier to Frontier. These counties include Daggett, Kane, Millard, Piute, and San Juan. In 2012, population density calculations for 2000-2010 were revised based on census data. In 2008, the query for this indicator was changed as follows: * The exclusions of canceled responses and inter-facility transfers were added. * Additional data for previously reported years was received. * Each county's population density classification was calculated for each year. Previously, each county's population density classification was tied to population numbers from 2000. The new query accounts for the fact that some counties have changed population density classification during the years included in this indicator. * Each response was classified based on the county in which the incident happened. Previously, responses were classified based on the county in which the responding EMS agency was based. [[br]] The 1999-2007 data were updated to reflect these changes. The averages changed compared to those previously reported as follows: * Sub-frontier: response time increased by 2.0 minutes on average * Frontier: decreased by 1.9 minutes * Rural: increased by 0.6 minutes * Urban: increased by 0.7 minutes [[br]] Data for 1996-1998 were not updated.

Why Is This Important?

Timely emergency service response can save lives of patients with life-threatening conditions such as severe injury, stroke, and cardiac arrest. The time from unit dispatched to arrival on the scene is an important measure of the capacity of the state Emergency Medical Services system to respond to calls for assistance.

Healthy People Objective AHS-8:

(Developmental) Increase the proportion of persons who have access to rapidly responding prehospital emergency medical services
U.S. Target: Not applicable

Other Objectives

Similar to Healthy People 2020 Objective HDS-18: (Developmental) Increase the proportion of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in which appropriate bystander and emergency medical services (EMS) were administered.

How Are We Doing?

EMS response times in Utah have risen slightly in recent years, with the rise being more pronounced in the least populated areas.

How Do We Compare With the U.S.?

National response time data are available for research requests from the National EMS Database (see [http://www.nemsis.org]). Valid comparisons between a state and the nation require identical statistical coding programs including case exclusion criteria for canceled calls, interfacility transfers, and response times that are negative, zero, or greater than 60 minutes.

What Is Being Done?

The UDOH Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Preparedness monitors EMS response time and develops programs to improve delivery of EMS services throughout Utah, especially in non-urban areas.

Available Services

EMS Act and Administrative Rules[[br]] [https://bemsp.utah.gov/][[br]] [[br]] List of Licensed and Designated EMS Prehospital (Ambulance/Paramedic) Services[[br]] [https://emslicense.utah.gov/lookup/][[br]] [[br]] Data reports[[br]] [https://bemsp.utah.gov/regulations/data/data-collection/]

Health Program Information

Information about the Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Preparedness data systems is available at [https://bemsp.utah.gov/regulations/data/].


Related Indicators

Related Health Care System Factors Indicators:


Related Risk Factors Indicators:




Graphical Data Views

Time (Avg. Minutes) From Unit Notified by Dispatch EMS Arrival at Scene by County Type, Utah, 1996-2021

::chart - missing::

YearCounty TypeAverage Time (Minutes)Numer- atorDenom- inator
Record Count: 98
1996Sub-frontier13.1
1996Frontier11.0
1996Rural8.3
1996Urban6.8
1997Sub-frontier13.5
1997Frontier12.6
1997Rural9.2
1997Urban7.1
1998Sub-frontier12.3
1998Frontier11.7
1998Rural9.4
1998Urban7.4
1999Sub-frontier16.628,3611,710
1999Frontier12.046,3923,858
1999Rural7.763,6328,248
1999Urban7.0615,50888,021
2000Sub-frontier17.020,3321,194
2000Frontier11.848,5754,115
2000Rural10.083,6788,335
2000Urban7.7631,68581,689
2001Sub-frontier15.116,2891,082
2001Frontier11.542,1063,655
2001Rural10.096,0219,606
2001Urban8.1628,51878,058
2002Sub-frontier16.713,223790
2002Frontier12.633,0182,627
2002Rural10.294,2539,206
2002Urban7.6465,16961,294
2003Sub-frontier14.213,286934
2003Frontier12.815,8701,243
2003Rural8.481,1089,609
2003Urban6.7336,98450,094
2004Sub-frontier14.296868
2004Frontier15.78,417535
2004Rural9.3107,19111,550
2004Urban7.2367,57350,784
2005Sub-frontier12.75,890463
2005Frontier13.59,128674
2005Rural10.2106,53410,471
2005Urban7.3489,46367,256
2006Sub-frontier15.87,628483
2006Frontier13.417,0181,274
2006Rural10.6107,62710,139
2006Urban8.0626,98678,687
2007Sub-frontier14.724,4081,658
2007Frontier12.529,7902,387
2007Rural9.5192,42920,303
2007Urban8.7607,95770,219
2008Sub-frontier15.627,3271,750
2008Frontier12.634,4652,727
2008Rural9.6188,72019,755
2008Urban8.4528,21762,753
2009Sub-frontier16.225,5281,575
2009Frontier13.237,8262,856
2009Rural10.0218,25121,934
2009Urban7.7647,83184,436
2010Sub-frontier16.829,4151,748
2010Frontier13.439,0882,914
2010Rural9.9266,41727,007
2010Urban7.6833,519110,393
2011Sub-frontier16.327,5871,697
2011Frontier13.641,3483,038
2011Rural9.4238,41725,362
2011Urban6.8710,135104,237
2012Sub-frontier16.024,7801,547
2012Frontier13.440,6853,033
2012Rural9.3259,84027,836
2012Urban6.6718,274108,645
2013Sub-frontier16.632,0451,932
2013Frontier13.127,6032,108
2013Rural9.8232,78023,835
2013Urban6.7767,761115,383
2014Sub-frontier17.434,7241,994
2014Frontier13.327,8222,095
2014Rural9.5240,02225,366
2014Urban6.6849,018128,208
2015Sub-frontier17.38,913514
2015Frontier14.554,7613,782
2015Rural9.4255,46327,199
2015Urban6.7972,842144,448
2016Frontier15.866,7684,229
2016Rural9.5263,86927,797
2016Urban7.3707,973169,971
2017Frontier15.783,0245,286
2017Rural9.9231,14223,298
2017Urban6.6891,892134,312
2018Frontier15.687,1225,583
2018Rural9.5231,18224,294
2018Urban6.7868,088128,839
2019Frontier16.7141,6728,597
2019Rural10.5284,54130,553
2019Urban6.5807,481121,624
2020Frontier17.4107,0856,406
2020Rural10.7306,22432,409
2020Urban6.7887,945131,748
2021Frontier17.9101,0646,047
2021Rural11.1378,82838,751
2021Urban6.7964,625140,295

Data Notes

Excludes canceled EMS responses. Excludes inter-facility transfers. Excludes response times that are negative, zero, or greater than 60 minutes.   [[br]] Sub-Frontier: <2 persons/sq mile. [[br]] Frontier: >=2 and <6 persons/sq mile. [[br]] Rural: >=6 and <100 persons/sq mile. [[br]] Urban: >=100 persons/sq mile. Data from 2016 was updated to include information on all Salt Lake County EMS agencies that was excluded prior. Data for 2016 was updated to reflect the population descriptions for counties that the Office of Primary Care and Rural Health uses. These descriptions no long include "sub-frontier".

Data Source

Utah Bureau of Emergency Medical Services, Utah Department of Health

References and Community Resources

[https://bemsp.utah.gov//] (general Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Preparedness website information pages) [https://ruralhealth.health.utah.gov/portal/county-classifications-map/] Office of Primary Care and Rural Health county classification map

More Resources and Links

Evidence-based community health improvement ideas and interventions may be found at the following sites:
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) WONDER Database, a system for disseminating public health data and information.
  • United States Census Bureau data dashboard.
  • Utah healthy Places Index, evidence-based and peer-reviewed tool, supports efforts to prioritize equitable community investments, develop critical programs and policies across the state, and much more.
  • County Health Rankings
  • Kaiser Family Foundation's StateHealthFacts.org
  • Medical literature can be queried at PubMed library.



Page Content Updated On 10/27/2022, Published on 10/27/2022
The information provided above is from the Utah Department of Health and Human Services IBIS-PH web site (http://ibis.health.state.gov). The information published on this website may be reproduced without permission. Please use the following citation: " Retrieved Fri, 26 April 2024 17:42:40 from Utah Department of Health and Human Services, Indicator-Based Information System for Public Health Web site: http://ibis.health.state.gov ".

Content updated: Thu, 27 Oct 2022 11:10:46 MDT