Michael Minor Named Director of BREMSS

Sep 18, 2018 at 02:28 pm by steve

Michael Minor

Michael Minor has been named executive director for the Birmingham Regional Emergency Medical Services System, or BREMSS, replacing the retiring Joe Acker. Minor, trained as a paramedic, has been associated with BREMSS since 1993.

BREMSS, housed on the UAB campus, is a multijurisdictional agency that coordinates and improves prehospital medical emergency response by facilitating education and communication with emergency medical service agencies, 911 centers and hospitals. BREMSS is designated as the regional EMS agency and is partly funded by the Alabama Department of Public Health, Office of EMS.

BREMSS also operates the Alabama Trauma Communications Center, which processes information from 911 centers and paramedics to route trauma, stroke and STEMI (cardiac) patients to the most appropriate hospital that provides the best chance of survival.

The agency works with all components of the Emergency Medical Services System, which includes more than 200 emergency medical services organizations, 15 hospitals, more than 2,500 EMSPs, nine trauma centers, 15 stroke centers, eight STEMI hospitals, more than 80 different municipalities and many different 911 agencies.

Minor credits Acker with driving the concept of highly coordinated emergency care in Alabama -- getting the right patient to the right hospital in the appropriate time frame. Locally, BREMSS developed protocols for stroke, trauma and STEMI response. The concept is now used statewide in stroke and trauma care, and a statewide STEMI system will launch next year.

"The statewide systems are all based on knowledge gained from the experiences at BREMSS over the past 30 years," Minor said.

Among the initiatives Minor intends to expand is an effort to provide EMS prevention education to the public.

"We call it prevention through intervention," Minor said. "Various EMS agencies have paramedics assigned to community education. The goal is to find strategies to help keep those residents safe and minimize the need for emergency medical services."

The original BREMSS system was initiated by the hospitals across a six-county region of central Alabama, consisting of Blount, Chilton, Jefferson, Shelby, St. Clair and Walker counties, in 1973. Winston County was recently added, making BREMSS a seven-county regional EMS system.

BREMSS features a communications center that is staffed around the clock with paramedics. The TCC links all acute care hospitals in the system and communicates with paramedics in the field, so that acutely ill and injured patients can be routed to the most appropriate facility. The on-duty staff has increased from one paramedic per shift to three paramedics on duty at all times since going statewide.

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