Infinity CCS helps the FDNY win Community Mayors Nicholas DeGaeta Award
Infinity CCS, UK-based technology provider, congratulates its client, the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY) project team, on winning the Department’s Community Mayors Nicholas DeGaeta Award for the implementation of its 9-1-1 Computerized Triage System.
FDNY has worked with Infinity CCS since 2016 to deploy the new system, FIT (Flexible Intelligent Triage) Platform, which is based on Infinity CCS’ call scripting and workflow solutions for call centres.
The FIT Platform was successfully deployed in 2016 and has now been in continuous use for nearly three years, supporting the FDNY’s ability to rapidly and accurately process the 1.5 million 9-1-1 calls for medical emergency assistance that it receives annually.
“We were the first and, to my knowledge, the only EMS system in the country that successfully bought a computerized triage software application from a company that doesn’t build their application just for 9-1-1 use,” said Edward Dolan, Deputy Commissioner.
“For all our calls, processing time went down by 6.7 seconds, and we also found that processing times for our high priority calls – those that are potentially life-threatening – went down by 3.6 seconds. Most importantly, we have seen a dramatic improvement in quality of the call triage assignment.”
Numerous members from multiple FDNY bureaux collaborated to successfully design, implement and train EMTs as well as identify the questions and call type assignments that the new triage system would use.
Completing this monumental task and meeting one of the Department’s main mission objectives of allowing 1.5 million EMS calls to be processed faster and more accurately, saw all members of the project team were presented with the FDNY’s Community Mayors Nicholas DeGaeta Award.
In the nearly three years since it has been rolled out, the new computerized triage system has improved response times, data tracking and dispatch training, as well as accuracy of dispatching the correct resources for each call type.
“We’ve implemented a whole new system without a hitch” concluded David Prezant MD, Chief Medical Officer of FDNY. “I think it’s a huge accomplishment.”