Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
ambulance-association-Sadlier
Full Text:
Volunteers Roll Out A New Ambulance
(with photo)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
When responding to calls for medical help in its new ambulance, the Newtown
Volunteer Ambulance Association will have an added measure of safety in a
vehicle that's larger, stronger and heavier than its predecessor.
The association recently bought a diesel-powered Ford E-450 truck which it has
designated as Ambulance 770. The white, orange and blue vehicle joins
Ambulances 780 and 790 in the corps' 79 Main Street garage.
The association has donated the former Ambulance 770 to the police department.
The police plan to use it as a utility vehicle.
Chris Sadlier, an ambulance corps member for the past 12 years, served on the
corps' ambulance selection committee. Mr Sadlier, a Greenwich fireman who is
an intravenous technician with the ambulance association, helped select the
last several ambulances purchased by the volunteer group. Steve Murphy headed
the most recent ambulance selection panel.
In choosing the vehicle, corps members opted to buy a Ford E-450 truck chassis
mounted with a wheeled coach modular-style ambulance body. The ambulance has
14,500-lb gross vehicle weight rating, which is several thousand pounds
greater than the vehicle it replaces.
The ambulance's added capacity means it is built heavier all the way around,
providing an added safety factor while on calls, Mr Sadlier explained.
"It's a beefier truck," he said.
The new ambulance cost $94,000, of which the town donated about half the
money, Mr Sadlier said. The remainder was raised privately.
When it's equipped with emergency gear, such as radios and medical equipment,
the vehicle carries at least $20,000 worth of paraphernalia.
The ambulance body on the back of the truck is several inches taller than the
previous body, allowing more headroom and better working conditions for
ambulance staffers.
Two patients can be transported at a time. Typically, there are four people in
the ambulance: a patient, two attendants and a driver.
First Service
The vehicle saw its first local service November 8.
The corps is now responding to about 1,300 calls annually, or about three
calls daily, on average. The number of ambulance calls has increased as the
town's population has risen, Mr Sadlier said.
The new ambulance will be rotated with the other two ambulances on medical
calls, Mr Sadlier said.
To handle the hazards of winter driving, the ambulance is equipped with
"drop-down chains." The tire chains are kept in a storage area just above the
tires. When needed, the chains are dropped down from above onto the tires,
making for an easy conversion for winter driving conditions.
The ambulance is equipped with four antennas. One antenna handles the
vehicle's dispatch frequency. Another is linked to a medical radio which
provides communication between the ambulance and the hospital. A third antenna
is used for cellular telephone communications. A fourth antenna can be used
for an emergency services radio scanner.
In equipping the new ambulance, the corps has worked to keep the interior
layout the same as in the other ambulances, Sadlier explained.
The places where antiseptic is stored and where bandages are kept are the same
in the new ambulance as in the older ones to make working in the new vehicle
familiar and straightforward for the ambulance crews.
The 50-member corps expects the new ambulance to be in service for the next
five to six years.