EMS and Ambulance Funding Examined in AARP Wyoming Webinar

Posted on 01/11/24

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Braden Gunem

Does an ambulance need to show up if you dial 9-1-1? An AARP Wyoming webinar, slated for 1 p.m. on Jan. 22 will seek to answer that question and look at what the state can do to shore up its Emergency Medical Services (EMS).

The webinar is free to join and you don’t need to be over age 50 or an AARP Wyoming member to take part. Click here to register for the webinar.

Wyoming does not consider emergency medical services an essential service, which means no one is required to fund ambulance services. This has, in part, led to 16 Wyoming Ambulance Services having either closed doors or consolidated in the last 10 years.

At 1 p.m. on January 22, AARP Wyoming will be joined by State Senator and Kemmerer Fire Chief Fred Baldwin; Fremont County Commissioner Larry Allen; and Jennifer Davis, the healthcare policy to Governor Mark Gordon. This group will lay out why we are seeing ambulance services struggle in Wyoming and what can be done about it.

“When someone picks up the phone during an emergency there is an expectation that there is someone on the other end who can help,” says AARP Wyoming State Director Sam Shumway. “We think this conversation about EMS and how we pay for it is as important as any that will be had inside the Capitol in 2024.”

For more information about the webinar, contact Tom Lacock at tlacock@aarp.org or at 307-432-5802.

This story is provided by AARP Wyoming. Visit the AARP Wyoming page for more news, events, and programs affecting retirement, health care, and more.

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