Today the department
operates three (3) Type III ALS ambulances which are
staffed by Brewster Fire & Rescue personnel.
All of our
career firefighters and many
of our on-call members of the department are EMTs (emergency medical
technicians), either certified to the basic EMT or advanced Paramedic level.
The department strives to provide the highest
quality of care to its' patients and the community with well trained
personnel and the best equipment. In 2002 we responded to over 2,000 medical emergencies,
nearly a 10% increase over 2001.
Operational Overview
Medical emergencies during the daytime (8AM-6PM) are
generally handled by the on-duty personnel at headquarters which typically consists of two
firefighter/paramedics, two firefighter/EMTs, and a fire captain/EMT. During the nighttime
(6PM-8AM) the two firefighter/paramedics* on duty
are accompanied by an on-call "rescue squad" consisting of three
(3) EMTs responding from their homes. There are five (5) rescue squads lettered
" A"
through " E". Each squad rotates and is therefore on duty every fifth night.
Due to the increasing number of simultaneous emergency calls, the
department attempts to maintain two firefighter/EMTs covering the station at all
times. This coverage is to improve service and reduce response times
during simultaneous incidents.
Day or night, when additional
personnel are needed to assist at the scene of a medical emergency, or to staff the
other ambulances for simultaneous medical calls, then off-duty and on-call EMTs are
utilized. The fire dispatcher will notify department EMTs, via radio pagers,
by "toning out" the request for assistance and EMTs will then
respond from home.
Click here to view the
rescue squad roster. *Note:
shift strength and EMS
certification levels may vary
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The Town of Brewster is the first
community in Massachusetts to be designated a HeartSafe
Community. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health and the American
Heart Association have kicked off the HeartSafe Communities program to
help cities and towns improve their survival rate for sudden cardiac
arrest. Towns are awarded points, called heartbeats, that determine if
they qualify as a HeartSafe Community. The number of heartbeats necessary
for designation depends on the community's population. Heartbeats are
awarded for the number of citizens in the town that have received C.P.R. training,
and the number of first responder vehicles that are equipped with AED's.
Brewster will receive two HeartSafe Community road signs that denote the
towns status.
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