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EMS holds christening event for new ambulance

Chancellor Brown "christens" new ĢƵambulance

ĢƵChancellor Kelli R. Brown "christens" new ĢƵambulance

By Cam Adams

The ĢƵ Emergency Medical Service is among the oldest collegiate EMS services in the country. This year marks the service’s 60-year anniversary, which ĢƵhealth services director Pam Buchanan hopes will be a time of celebration.

May 5 was no exception.

ĢƵEMS hosted Chancellor Kelli R. Brown and several others for a new ambulance christening ceremony behind the H.F. Robinson Administration Building on campus. 

“We’ve had the current ambulance since about 2015, so it was just kind of getting outdated,” said Jacob Meador, ĢƵEMS chief. “It was coming up on that 10-year mark, and me and Pam have been talking about this process for about a year or two now.”

ĢƵEMS is a basic life support service licensed by the North Carolina Office of EMS, operating under Harris Regional Hospital’s 911 franchise. The agency is part of WCU health services and is fully staffed by students with an EMT certification or higher.

As opposed to the diesel-powered old ambulance, the service’s new ambulance is gas powered, which is more efficient for a college campus. The 2023 truck comes with other new features like a backup camera, a brand-new stretcher and a more updated design in the layout.

The agency will also be getting new radios and a new low-frequency siren that’s better for the college crowd. 

“We have a lot of people wearing headphones, all the people in their cars might be listening to loud music, it's less about the sound and more about the frequency that it's putting off,” Meador said.

“It also helps with, say someone's hearing impaired, this is something that you feel rather than hear, and then the lights are all upgraded so they're more visible.”

The ambulance christening comes just days before Meador graduated with a bachelor’s of science in emergency medical care.

“It was a nice thing. I think we were hoping for it a little sooner… We've been talking about it for (two) years, so I think ever since my sophomore year here, Pam had put it on my radar,” Meador said. “It was a nice thing to see come full circle and get to actually see it in person.”

The new ambulance won’t be commissioned until August for the fall semester when the ĢƵEMS is planning to continue its 60-year celebration. Buchanan said the agency is building a database of former team members to help put together an event to invite them back to campus.

“We'll have, hopefully, a dinner event, and then our plans are for those people to be able to stick around for the home football game the next day, so we'll have more to come about that,” Buchanan said.