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Feature Story

EMS Conference Marks Quarter-Century with Global Audience

“I didn’t want to have to drive to Orlando to attend an EMS conference,” recalled Dr. Wayne Lee, the visionary behind the First There First Care and Gathering of Eagles Conference, which wrapped up its 25th anniversary program June 17, 2022 in Hollywood, Florida, when describing the origins of the event.

In 1996 the predominantly county-run EMS system in Florida was divided into several separate cities. The system received much criticism from local media regarding inconsistencies in care from one city to another. Lee, who was serving as medical director for several of Broward’s fire rescue agencies, was looking for a way to unify the various systems.

First There First Care and Gathering of Eagles Conference
A competitor in the 2022 Michael Haygood ALS Competition performs BLS skills on a “patient” during the preliminary competition at the Coral Springs Public Safety Training Facility. (Photos courtesy Joel Gordon)

“Clin-Con was a great program,” explained Lee. “And it still is. However, we needed something local that was convenient for everyone here to participate in, [so they] didn’t have to travel long distances or commit hours of time off and limited budget dollars.”

Humble Roots

Lee’s vision of bringing Broward’s fire and rescue agencies together began with a simple luncheon held at the Carolina Club in Margate, Florida. “Let’s bring everyone together,” stated Lee. “We can talk about where we are now and where we want to go in the future.”

After a successful start it was decided the concept would continue. The following year it was moved to a larger venue where guest lecturers and presentations regarding the latest in EMS-related concepts were added. Nova Southeastern University in Davie, Florida, hosted the first full conference.

While the First There First Care conference was developing its foundation, a small group of EMS providers including North Lauderdale Fire Chief Rodney Turpel and Medical Director Antonio Gandia were conducting ALS competition exercises in the back lot of University Hospital in Tamarac.

“The idea,” according to Gandia, “was to prepare Broward’s competition teams to do well at other regional competitions. So we developed our own small version right in our own backyard.”

The competition’s popularity grew rapidly to include teams from Miami-Dade and Palm Beach Counties. The competition received its own name in honor of retired Broward EMS Chief Michael Haygood, one of the competition’s founders and an active participant in the other competition events.

After a couple of years, the two events combined into a two-day program that featured the ALS competition on the first day and the EMS conference on the second.

Shot in the Arm

Gathering of Eagles and First There First There Conference
The large contingent of Eagles take a break from their rapid-fire, intense Gathering of Eagles program for some well-deserved lunch.

The combined events, now known as the First There First Care EMS Conference and Michael Haygood ALS Competition, developed a successful track record of attendance and participation. After a three-year stint at NSU, the conference moved to Broward College. Then it began traveling to various hospitals and other locations across the county.

However, attendance and interest in the programs began to fade. “At one point we felt as if it had run its course,” said current committee chair Bruce Caruso.

Several efforts were undertaken to boost interest, including adding a third day with an extrication competition. Despite those efforts the program seemed to be losing steam, said Caruso.

After much discussion about whether to sunset the conference, the Broward County EMS Council and the Fire Chiefs Association of Broward County got involved. Through state-funded EMS grants the EMS Council provided financial support for the program while the Fire Chiefs Association oversaw the management of the programs.

Outside funding allowed conference planners to entice nationally recognized speakers as well as seek a permanent home. A steering committee was developed under the Fire Chiefs Association. To broaden interest levels the committee recognized the need to integrate the greater emergency medicine community and opened its doors to emergency room nurses. The theme for that first combined year was “Bridging the Gap: From the Streets to the ED.”

A trade show was added. The addition of sponsors and vendors helped boost the program financially. Slowly the conference began to regain traction.

As part of the growth, the need for a larger venue came into focus. Don DiPetrillo, a veteran of Broward’s fire-rescue systems and chief of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, suggested the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Florida. The location would make a great destination site and could attract visitors from outside the area. This initiative gave the conference a high-profile backdrop and brought both events under one roof.

First There First Care and Gathering of Eagles Conference
Thanks to 3D printing, participants in the Advanced Airway H.O.T. class at First There First There were able to practice cricothyrotomies on live subjects.

Tide Change

That same year the committee secured Ed Racht, MD, chief medical officer of Global Medical Response and a member of the Eagles Coalition, as keynote speaker.

The Eagles are a large association of municipal medical directors with an international following. After attending the conference, Racht saw tremendous potential in the program.

“There was something special about it,” recalls Racht. “The name First Care had true meaning. After all, isn’t that what we do? We care for people.”

The following year he brought in Paul Pepe, MD, founder and coordinator of the Eagles. Over the next couple of years, several more Eagles were invited speak at the conference, including local pediatric emergency physician Peter Antevy, MD, who would go on to develop the Handtevy emergency pediatric dosing program.

Partnership Raises the Bar

As if the planets aligned, the Eagles, which were originally centered at the University of Texas, were searching for a new home. What better place to relocate then South Florida?

Despite having to cancel the program in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2021 the First There First Care conference reconvened with a new partner—The Gathering of Eagles. Members of the Eagles Coalition from across the globe traveled to or “Zoomed” into South Florida to attend the conference, which had grown to two days. With the addition of the Eagles program the conference now totaled four days.

This year, First There First Care and the Gathering of Eagles established a full partnership that expanded the program to six full days, including the Michael Haygood Advanced Life Support competition, which featured 25 preliminary teams on Sunday and a finals portion on Tuesday, with the top seven teams competing in the finals.

The K2 Emergency Nursing competition, still the only one of its kind in the country, featured six ER nursing teams representing hospitals across Broward and Miami-Dade counties. The combined week-long conference offered EMS and nursing leadership tracks, hands-on classes, Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN) and Advanced Burn Life Support (ABLS) courses, Florida Resuscitation Academy, a cadaver lab, and the two-day Gathering of Eagles program.

First There First There and Gathering of Eagles
Dionny Baez tells his story of survival from a boating collision, after which field transfusion of whole blood and quick action by paramedics are credited with saving his life.

Attendees from across the United States were in attendance, as well as several foreign countries including the United Kingdom, Ireland, Columbia, and Saudi Arabia. The conference footprint spread across three separate venues: The Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, the nearby Le Meridien Hotel in Dania Beach, and the Coral Springs Public Safety Training Facility.

Attendance was estimated at well over 1,000. Wednesday evening featured a 25th anniversary gala and the annual fire chiefs’ EMS awards ceremony. The trade show grew to more than 80 vendors. And for the first time, the Florida State Office of EMS moved their quarterly meetings to the conference.

For those who could not attend, the conference committee partnered with EMS World as the premier educational and media partner of the conference. EMS World is providing the recorded presentations online in individualized formats. CEUs are provided for the online training.

Quarter Century and Stronger Than Ever

What began as a simple concept to bring a group of EMS providers together to share interests and develop common strategies in a convenient, no-pressure environment has evolved into one of the largest, best-recognized emergency medical care programs in the country.

“Broward County has always been on the leading edge of developments in EMS,” said Julie Downey, chief of Davie Fire Rescue and president of the Fire Chiefs Association of Broward County. “First There First Care and Gathering of Eagles is just one more example of the commitment and dedication our people display every day, for the benefit of our citizens.”

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