Since 1939, The Teaneck Volunteer
Ambulance Corps has been Teaneck's Emergency Medical
Service. 1998 was another busy year. There were 3418
calls last year, an increase of 7% over 1997, and an
average of 9.4 calls a day. The calls involved a wide
variety of medical and trauma emergencies, including an
accident on Rt. 4 on beautiful spring afternoon that
killed a 32 year-old woman, and left us to deal with her
sister, with a broken neck, her fiancee, and 6 month-old
and 13-month-old infants to care for. Or, a cardiac
arrest in the bathroom of a single-family home that left
two EMT's with the duties of CPR and other resuscitative
efforts while tunneling through a pile of clothes and
shoes that clogged the house. Or a call that was
reported as an auto accident on State St. and Lozier
Place, where the crew found that the collision had been
caused because a motorist's heart had stopped. He was
resuscitated by TVAC personnel.
Perhaps, the most challenging call
was in late autumn, after midnight, on Route 95, at
milepost 119 North, where the driver of a tractor
trailer had lost control of his truck, left the roadway,
and overturned, impaling the top of the cab on a
guardrail post, severely entangling the driver, and
causing major bleeding from his wrist. The TVAC crew
worked closely with the Fire Department, and tried
valiantly to save the patient even while another
emergency medical entity at the scene only stood back,
apparently in fear of the danger of the truck toppling
or going on fire. Unfortunately, the degree of
entanglement, and the patient's desperate injuries
overcame the rescue effort, but the valor and dedication
of the Fire Department and Teaneck Volunteer Ambulance
Corps members were never lacking.
A happier outcome occurred in
October, when a woman fell asleep with a cigarette
burning in an apartment on Teaneck Road, touching off a
working fire. There, fast and courageous fire department
rescuers, working in thick smoke quickly plucked the
woman, burned and not breathing, from her blazing bed,
and carried her outside. Quickly, TVAC members performed
a seamless transfer of patient care from TFD
resuscitative efforts, and immediately transported the
patient to Hackensack Medical Center, where she
recovered. In a community with slower response, or less
capability, of either the Fire Department, or the
Ambulance Corps, this woman would have probably died.
The close cooperation, joint training, and mutual
respect between the Teaneck Fire Department and TVAC,
results in lifesaving benefits to Teaneck's residents.
Good Emergency Medical Service is no
accident. Unlike most ambulance corps in Bergen County,
TVAC maintains on-duty personnel in Ambulance
Headquarters around the clock. The ambulance building at
855 Windsor Road includes sleeping and eating
facilities, with the goal that an ambulance responds to
each call within 45 seconds and arrives within six
minutes (nationally-recognized good practice calls for
an ambulance to arrive within 8 minutes). We met that
goal 85.7% of the time in 1998, an improvement of 232
calls from 1997.
Most responses that take longer than
six minutes are the result of simultaneous calls. Two
out of every seven, and three out of every 30, calls
arrive at the same time. Residents can help solve this
problem.