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ATTACHMENT A <br />ton. This would preserve Eugene rescue and transport resources for emergency avail- <br />ability in the more immediate Eugene metro area. <br />Second, the boundary change would allow for growth of the Lane Rural ambulance <br />service, both geographically and in terms of revenue. It also would pave the way for <br />possible placement of a Lane Rural ambulance in the Veneta area, although that dep- <br />loyment decision would ultimately be made by the provider agency based on further <br />analysis. <br />The above objectives would not be achieved without some revenue impact to Eugene <br />Fire & EMS, which would be transferring an estimated 850 calls per year to Lane Ru- <br />ral. This represents revenue estimated at $500,000. That figure, however, represents <br />raw revenue only. It should be recognized that, in expanding its service territory, <br />Lane Rural would incur additional operating expenses that would offset the revenue <br />to a great extent; conversely, Eugene’s actual net loss of revenue would be smaller <br />because rural calls cost more operationally than urban ones, and also because fewer <br />Eugene-based calls will need to be handled by other agencies. Actual calculations of <br />the net effect would depend on deployment configurations subsequent to an ASA <br />boundary change, and also on actual call experience under that scenario. <br /> Mobile Health Care System <br />6. <br />A Mobile Health Care (MHS) system links prehospital emergency medical services <br />with several types of non-emergency medical care in a network of 24-hour healthcare. <br />In Central Lane County, these would include fire/paramedic first response fire en- <br />gines and ambulances, a private non-emergency ambulance contractor, wheelchair <br />transport vehicles, and a mobile primary care provider known as Med Express. <br /> <br />The MHS system is designed to triage phone calls from the public for help on illness <br />and injury and match the level of response more closely with the level of care <br />needed. The responding caregiver determines if the patient can be safely treated and <br />released without further care or needs additional care. If additional care is needed, <br />the caregiver determines whether the patient must be seen immediately or later <br />and whether the patient needs transportation to a doctor's office, clinic, or emergency <br />department. <br /> <br />The goal is to improve early access to advice and direct the patient to the most appro- <br />priate level of care to match the nature and severity of illness or injury. This is de- <br />signed to improve the quality of care while lowering the overall cost. <br /> <br />Currently, only the fire units and private non-emergency ambulance service are <br />linked. Grant funding is being sought to link all other parts of the system and demon- <br />strate the efficacy of the MHS network. <br /> <br /> Continue to Lobby Congress for Relief <br />7. <br />From a national perspective, the effect of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 on am- <br />bulance services has been very small in comparison to the effects on physicians, hos- <br />pitals, and other health care providers. Nonetheless, ambulance associations and local <br />7 <br /> <br />