Monticello Ambulance Service, Inc

Monticello Ambulance Service, Inc Serving Drew County and Monticello Since 1972 Paramedic Service, Pre Hospital Care and
Emergency and Non Emergency Transfers

Shout out to Drew county Sheriff’s Deputies, Drew County OEM, Arkansas State Police, and Pafford Airone Echo for the ass...
06/05/2026

Shout out to Drew county Sheriff’s Deputies, Drew County OEM, Arkansas State Police, and Pafford Airone Echo for the assistance on a scene flight this morning.

Happy EMS Week 2026! Day 4 we provide information about our Advanced Response Vehicle provided in conjunction with Monti...
05/22/2026

Happy EMS Week 2026!
Day 4 we provide information about our Advanced Response Vehicle provided in conjunction with Monticello Ambulance Service and Pafford Medical Services.

An ARV (Advanced Response Vehicle) can significantly improve how an EMS system serves its coverage area, especially in rural, high-call-volume, or geographically spread-out communities. These units are typically staffed with advanced providers such as paramedics and carry ALS (Advanced Life Support) equipment, but are smaller and more mobile than a traditional ambulance.

Key benefits include:

Faster Response Times

ARVs can often respond more quickly than a full ambulance because they are lighter, easier to position strategically, and can navigate traffic or rural roads faster. This means advanced care reaches patients sooner during critical emergencies like cardiac arrest, stroke, severe trauma, or respiratory failure.

Earlier Advanced Life Support (ALS) Care

Because ARVs are staffed with highly trained personnel, they can begin advanced interventions immediately, including:

Advanced airway management
Cardiac monitoring and defibrillation
Medication administration
IV/IO access
Advanced assessment and stabilization
Early ALS intervention improves patient outcomes and can reduce mortality in time-sensitive emergencies.

Better Resource Utilization

Instead of sending a full ALS ambulance to every call, an ARV can assess and treat patients while allowing transport units to remain available for calls that truly require ambulance transport. This helps:

Reduce ambulance shortages
Improve system coverage
Increased Coverage in Rural Areas

For large rural EMS districts, ARVs can be strategically placed to cover distant communities where transporting an ambulance from a central station would create long response gaps. The ARV can begin treatment while a transport ambulance is en route.

Support for BLS Crews

In systems with Basic Life Support (BLS) ambulances or volunteer responders, ARVs provide advanced paramedic backup. This creates a tiered response system where:

BLS arrives quickly
ARV delivers ALS capability
Transport resources are used efficiently
Improved Mass Casualty and High-Demand Response

During multiple simultaneous incidents, ARVs can rapidly distribute advanced providers across scenes without committing several ambulances at once.

Community and Operational Benefits

An ARV can also:

Assist fire departments and law enforcement
Provide rapid medical command on scene
Improve public confidence in EMS response capability
In many EMS systems, especially those with staffing shortages or large coverage areas, ARVs help improve response efficiency, patient outcomes, and overall operational flexibility.

Monticello Ambulance Service INC. crews participated in the ARKANSAS EMS WEEK PARADE OF LIGHTS and EMS DAY AT THE CAPITA...
05/21/2026

Monticello Ambulance Service INC. crews participated in the ARKANSAS EMS WEEK PARADE OF LIGHTS and EMS DAY AT THE CAPITAL.

Happy EMS Week 2026! Day 3 we share details about why Advanced Life Support ambulances are crucial in life threatening c...
05/20/2026

Happy EMS Week 2026!
Day 3 we share details about why Advanced Life Support ambulances are crucial in life threatening cardiovascular emergencies!

For a cardiac arrest or serious chest pain call, an ALS ambulance is usually more important because those patients can deteriorate very quickly and may need advanced treatments before reaching the hospital.
To a lay person, the difference is basically:
A BLS crew can keep someone alive and provide basic emergency care.
An ALS crew can often treat the actual life-threatening problem immediately.
Cardiac Arrest
In cardiac arrest, the heart has stopped pumping effectively. Every minute matters.
A BLS crew can:
• Start CPR
• Use an AED/defibrillator
• Provide oxygen
• Help keep blood flowing until more help arrives
That is critically important and absolutely saves lives.
But an ALS crew can also:
• Give life-saving cardiac medications
• Place advanced airways for breathing
• Read and interpret heart rhythms in detail
• Treat dangerous rhythms that may not respond to a basic AED
• Manage complications after a pulse returns
In many cardiac arrests, the patient needs more than CPR and shocks to survive.

Chest Pain / Possible Heart Attack
Chest pain can sometimes be indigestion — but it can also be a heart attack that suddenly turns into cardiac arrest.
A BLS crew can:
• Give oxygen if needed
• Monitor vital signs
• Transport quickly
An ALS crew can additionally:
• Perform a 12-lead ECG to identify a heart attack early
• Notify the hospital’s cardiac team before arrival
• Give medications that reduce heart strain or treat dangerous rhythms
• Start IV access in case the patient crashes
• Treat life-threatening complications immediately
That early diagnosis can save heart muscle and sometimes save the patient’s life.

Simple Way to Explain It
A BLS ambulance is excellent at:
“Keeping the patient stable and getting them to the hospital.”
An ALS ambulance is designed for patients who may:
“Die or rapidly worsen before reaching the hospital unless advanced treatment starts immediately.”
For cardiac arrest and serious chest pain, those extra minutes of advanced care can make a major difference in survival and recovery.

Thank you Pafford for the awesome box stuffed with goodies.  As usual you out did yourselves again this year.  Happy EMS...
05/20/2026

Thank you Pafford for the awesome box stuffed with goodies. As usual you out did yourselves again this year. Happy EMS week to all. God bless you always.

Thank you Pafford Air One for the BBQ and fixings
05/20/2026

Thank you Pafford Air One for the BBQ and fixings

Happy EMS Week 2026! Day 2 we have information about Advanced Life Support services vs Basic Life Support services. An A...
05/19/2026

Happy EMS Week 2026!
Day 2 we have information about Advanced Life Support services vs Basic Life Support services.

An ALS ambulance and a BLS ambulance are both emergency ambulances, but the biggest difference is the level of medical care and training available inside the unit.
BLS Ambulance (Basic Life Support)
A BLS ambulance is staffed by EMTs (Emergency Medical Technicians). They are trained to handle many common emergencies and provide basic emergency care.
What a BLS crew can do:
• CPR and use of a defibrillator (AED)
• Oxygen administration
• Bandaging and splinting injuries
• Help with childbirth
• Basic airway support
• Monitor vital signs
• Transport stable patients safely
Typical calls for BLS:
• Minor injuries
• Falls without major trauma
• Stable medical problems
• Routine hospital transfers
• Mild breathing problems
You can think of BLS as:
“Stabilize and transport safely.”

ALS Ambulance (Advanced Life Support)
An ALS ambulance has at least one paramedic on board in addition to EMTs. Paramedics have much more advanced medical training and can perform complex treatments.
What an ALS crew can do:
• Start IVs
• Give many emergency medications
• Advanced cardiac monitoring (12-lead ECG)
• Treat heart attacks and strokes
• Advanced airway procedures
• Manage severe trauma
• Perform advanced life-saving interventions
Typical calls for ALS:
• Chest pain or heart attack
• Stroke symptoms
• Severe breathing problems
• Serious car accidents
• Overdoses
• Unconscious patients
• Major trauma
You can think of ALS as:
“Mobile emergency room-level treatment before reaching the hospital.”

Happy EMS Week 2026! As we celebrate with our crews for their hard work and dedication, we would like to share informati...
05/18/2026

Happy EMS Week 2026!
As we celebrate with our crews for their hard work and dedication, we would like to share information about all things EMS!
Today Emergency Medical Dispatch

Emergency Medical Dispatchers (EMDs) are much more than people who simply answer a 911 phone. They are trained to begin helping the patient before an ambulance even arrives.
A basic 911 call taker mainly:
• Answers the phone
• Gets the address and basic information
• Sends responders
An Emergency Medical Dispatcher does all of that plus provides medical prioritization and life-saving instructions over the phone.
Why EMDs Are Important
1. Help Starts Immediately
In many emergencies, the first few minutes are the most important.
An EMD can:
• Coach CPR during cardiac arrest
• Help someone use an AED
• Give choking instructions
• Help control severe bleeding
• Guide childbirth instructions
• Assist with airway positioning
That means treatment can begin several minutes before EMS arrives.
For cardiac arrest especially:
Telephone CPR instructions have been shown to increase survival rates.

2. They Send the Right Resources
Not every call needs the same response.
An EMD system helps determine:
• Whether ALS or BLS is needed
• If fire department response is needed
• If multiple ambulances are necessary
• Which calls are truly life-threatening
This improves:
• Response efficiency
• Ambulance availability
• Patient outcomes

3. They Catch Serious Emergencies Early
Sometimes callers do not realize how serious the situation is.
An EMD is trained to recognize clues for:
• Stroke
• Heart attack
• Cardiac arrest
• Sepsis
• Severe trauma
• Respiratory failure
A caller may say:
“He’s sleeping and breathing funny.”
An EMD may recognize:
“This is likely cardiac arrest.”
That recognition can save valuable time.

4. They Keep Callers Calm and Focused
People calling 911 are often panicked.
EMDs are trained to:
• Control chaotic scenes
• Get critical information quickly
• Give simple step-by-step instructions
• Keep callers focused until help arrives
A calm dispatcher often helps prevent delays and confusion.

Simple Layperson Explanation
Basic 911 call taking is:
“Sending help.”
Emergency Medical Dispatching is:
“Sending the right help while beginning emergency care over the phone.”
An EMD effectively becomes:
“The first medical professional involved in the emergency.”
That can make a major difference before EMS ever gets to the scene.

Congratulations Clayton Hartwig on graduating from UAM with a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration! Clayton is a...
05/10/2026

Congratulations Clayton Hartwig on graduating from UAM with a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration! Clayton is an Emergency Medical Technician and valued member of our team here at Monticello Ambulance Service.

At Monticello Ambulance Service Inc, we take great pride in promoting the excellence of our outstanding crews.We are hon...
02/23/2026

At Monticello Ambulance Service Inc, we take great pride in promoting the excellence of our outstanding crews.

We are honored to recognize five exceptional team members who, on three separate occasions in the past month, helped achieve ROSC (Return of Spontaneous Circulation) — resulting in successful CPR saves.

These are the direct result of dedication, ongoing training, teamwork, and a commitment to clinical excellence in real-life emergencies. Our crews consistently sharpen their skills so that when seconds matter most, they are ready.

These are also made possible with the guidance of our Emergency Medical Dispatchers, whose calm guidance and CPR coaching to families and loved ones plays a critical role in survival before our crews arrive and assume care. Their partnership in the chain of survival truly makes a difference.

Please join us in recognizing these outstanding individuals:

Left to Right:
Joshua Godfrey
Charlotte Godfrey
Jessicah Sweet
Emma West
Paul Sims

We are proud of your professionalism, commitment, and dedication to serving Drew County!

Address

325 West Shelton
Monticello, AR
71655

Telephone

+18703677384

Website

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