Vehicles Individual provinces and territories typically specify, generally through legislation and regulations, the specifications and types of vehicles to be used in EMS. These vehicles include
ambulances, but may also include rapid response vehicles (sometimes called "
fly-cars"), and specialized emergency support units, such as equipment vehicles and mass-casualty transport vehicles. Each province or territory, and also the Canadian military, has its own unique ambulance specifications. Individual provinces or territories may also specify types of mandatory equipment in those vehicles, including medical equipment. Ambulances type in
Canada are based on
United States federal KKK-1822 Standards requirements: • Type I Ambulances are based on the chassis-cabs of light duty pickup-trucks. • Type II Ambulances are based on modern passenger/cargo vans. • Type III Ambulances are based on chassis-cabs of light duty vans. Bus-based and air ambulances are not based on these standards. Buses are mostly for ambulatory transfer only and offer less advanced care services.
Staffing and training Individual provinces and territories also typically specify required levels of mandatory staff training.
British Columbia,
Alberta,
Saskatchewan,
Nova Scotia,
Ontario,
Prince Edward Island, and
Yukon are served by highly educated paramedics with advanced skills. Other jurisdictions have not yet reached these levels, and some jurisdictions have introduced, or are considering introducing, critical care paramedics. Progress varies, driven primarily by public demand, acceptance by the medical community, and funding. A great deal of the recent advancement in standards of care and procedures has been driven by formal outcome-based research and
clinical trials, such as the groundbreaking research work on the management of S-T segment elevation
myocardial infarctions (
STEMI), undertaken in cooperation with the
Ottawa Paramedic Service. Some paramedics undertake their own formal
research projects or collaborate with other researchers in the medical community, leading to publication (as with the preceding two references, both of which had paramedics in lead
investigator roles). In Ontario,
paramedics are certified to administer symptom relief medications under a base hospital
physician's license. The Ministry of Health and Long Term Care has established a minimum standard of care for the province, but base hospitals can add medications at their discretion. The number and type of medications beyond the minimum standard also varies with the paramedic scope of practice (primary, advanced or critical care).
Response times Urban areas such as Toronto set standards according to percentiles. In Toronto, the standard is 8 minutes and 59 seconds or less 90 percent of the time on
AMPDS triaged Delta and Echo calls. There is no jurisdiction in Canada that is currently reporting successful achievement of this response time standard, and services cite a variety of reasons for this failure, but continue to aspire to the standard. This approach to response time monitoring is accepted in most urban areas of the country, but there are some jurisdictions that set a second standard for rural areas (the majority of the country). Such standards vary from one jurisdiction to the next. Additionally, there are jurisdictions that do not set specific response time objectives, instead simply reporting average response times for emergency calls.
Towards national standards There are currently major initiatives for improved standardization of staff training underway in Canadian EMS. The Paramedic Association of Canada has produced the National Occupational Competency Profile (NOCP), and several provinces are working toward meeting these standards. Provinces and territories are also responsible for standards with respect to the dispatching of EMS resources, and some jurisdictions are measuring performance,
benchmarking and setting standards. In addition, initiatives by the Paramedic Chiefs of Canada organization are working towards improved interoperability and a
best practice approach to the overall management of EMS systems. Several provinces have started testing using the COPR (Canadian Organization of Paramedic Regulators) licensing exam for both PCP and ACP levels. As of March 2018, these include
British Columbia,
Saskatchewan,
Manitoba,
Nova Scotia,
P.E.I., and
Newfoundland and Labrador. ==Funding and costs==