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.Time (avg. minutes) from unit notified by dispatch EMS arrival at scene by county type, Utah, 1996-2023 |
Data Source
Bureau of Emergency Medical Services and Preparedness, Utah Department of Public Safety
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".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.What Is Being Done?
The Bureau of Emergency Medical Services monitors EMS response time and develops programs to improve delivery of EMS services throughout Utah, especially in non-urban areas.
Date Indicator Content Last Updated: 09/30/2024