Trending Topics

Ill. FD wins CFSI award for community mental health program

The Joilet Fire Department will receive the 2025 Excellence in Fire Service-Based EMS Award from CFSI and Masimo for its innovations in EMS

JolietFireDepartment.jpg

Joliet fire and EMS personnel visit students and staff at Joliet Early Learning Center.

Joliet Fire Department/Facebook

By Bill Carey
EMS1

ARLINGTON, Va. — The Congressional Fire Services Institute (CFSI) and Masimo will recognize the Joliet (Ill.) Fire Department with the 2025 Excellence in Fire Service-Based EMS Award for its groundbreaking innovations in emergency medical services.

The award will be presented during the 35th Annual National Fire and Emergency Services Dinner on February 13 in Washington, D.C., CFSI stated in a press release.

The Joliet Fire Department earned this honor for its community mental health program, which offers prevention and awareness training for firefighters, as well as rapid crisis intervention and free, comprehensive mental health services for community members. The program leverages a network of local mental health organizations to deliver these vital resources.

“With an increase in mental health-related calls nationwide, fire departments face challenges in responding to these calls and providing rapid care for the growing number of individuals who suffer from mental illness”, CFSI President Jim Estepp said. “I congratulate the Joliet Fire Department for developing an innovative EMS program that addresses a significant challenge facing the department and enhances its EMS capabilities.”

“Masimo is proud to co-sponsor the Excellence in Fire Service-Based EMS Award,” U.S. Alternate Care Senior Vice President Andy Jones said. “At Masimo, our focus is on product innovation just as fire departments find ways to innovate their services to meet the growing emergency medical challenges in their communities. As a proud cosponsor of the Excellence in Fire Service-Based EMS, Masimo congratulates the Joliet Fire Department for their achievements in emergency medical services.”

Trending
The bipartisan EMS Counts Act aims to fix outdated federal job classifications that undercount cross-trained EMTs and paramedics, making it harder to identify service gaps
Officials say Lauren Wilson posed as a paramedic, treated over 100 patients without certification and used forged documents to get hired
A woman is suing former EMT along with his parents and American Medical Response, claiming the ambulance company failed to vet his criminal past
With EMS now city-run, Kingston officials approved funding for a new ambulance to reduce the risk of all units being tied up, pending reimbursement through a state grant