One of the three main missions of the EMS Reserve is to provide BLS medical foot teams and other services at large public events in and around Pasadena. Pasadena is home to the world famous Rose Bowl stadium which hosts such events as UCLA football games, the BCS Championship football game, and the annual January 1st Rose Bowl game. These large events can draw close to 100,000 people into the Rose Bowl. The safety and health of these spectators are protected by a partnership of the Pasadena Fire Department, the Pasadena Fire Department EMS Reserve and the San Gabriel Pomona Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross. At the largest of these events, additional EMS services are even provided by other Los Angeles area fire departments. During large Rose Bowl events, the EMS Reserve works with paid firefighter paramedics and volunteer American Red Cross members to run the Rose Bowl first aid station, staff medical foot teams, staff EMS ambulance carts and run medical dispatching. Medical responses during these events run the gamut from very minor to life threatening.
At smaller events, the EMS Reserve will work alone; staffing foot teams with only EMSR members. Regardless of event size, all foot teams are equipped with Automated External Defibrillators, oxygen and full trauma kits. Should a patient require Advanced Life Support care, and depending on the event, foot teams can request response from a paramedic bike team, staffed by Pasadena Fire Department firefighter paramedics.
These carts can be utilized to transport patients to the Rose Bowl first aid station, or in more serious situations, directly to a waiting Rescue Ambulance. They can also be used to reach patients too far to be reached quickly by foot teams.
Medical dispatch is based out of the Rose Bowl Command Center, along with the Incident Commander from the Pasadena Fire Department and representatives from the Pasadena Police Department, Rose Bowl security, Rose Bowl management, and during UCLA football games, UCLA game management. Medical calls can come in via phone, via radio from the Verdugo Fire Communications Center, and from representatives of these other agencies. Appropriate resources are then dispatched to the incident by radio. |