(5) Polly Mosendz, Digital Payoffs for Volunteer EMTs.
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... phones-and-scooters
2 1/2 consecutive paragraphs:
"Dialing 911 is an option only in the capital of Santo Domingo[, capital of Dominican Republic], not out in the countryside. Instead, call the regional firehouse. There, a dispatcher uses Beacon, [SMS-based (for Short Message Service)l another way to say it is 'text message-based'; both accordig to Trek] software created by nonprofit Trek Medics International, to send a group text to a team of volunteer emergency medical technicians in the area. One of the volunteers texts back a confirmation number and heads to the scene on a motorcycle equipped with a sidecar gurney, which he uses
to take you to a physician.
" * * * While the transportation research group at the University of Alabama at Birmingham [which of course is NOT Trek] found conventional ambulances cost an average of $1.46 a mile, one 2008 study found the motorbikes can operate for about 18.6¢ a mile. So Trek has been able to build a volunteer network of about 200 people in the Dominican Republic and Tanzania [the only two nations where Trek operates] with a shoestring budget supported by Google, Cardinal Health, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and private donations.
"Founded in 2009 by former paramedic Jason Friesen, the New York [City] nonprofit employs only a handful of people to manage operations.
Note: summary underneath the title in print: A Google-backed startup is setting up rural 911 services |