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536-pound Wash. man questions why FD can’t take him to doctors’ appointments

A debate forms over what is an emergency for a Longview man and first responders

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A Longview Fire Department ambulance.

Longview Fire Department/Facebook

By Matt Esnayra
The Daily News

LONGVIEW, Wash. — A Longview resident who is bedridden from a decade-old accident and weighs 536 pounds says he can’t find a way to doctors’ appointments and questions why city emergency staff can’t transport him.

Vince Vieira, who basically hasn’t been able to use his legs since falling at home 11 years ago, said he hasn’t been to the doctors in about seven months, ever since Longview Fire Department personnel questioned how staff would help him get to appointments if an emergency drew the crew away.

To the 57-year-old, his doctor appointments are emergencies because he said his health depends on the checkups and he has no other way to reach physicians. He said he feels like he’s stranded in the middle of the ocean, surrounded by lifeboats that won’t help.

“That’s what they choose to do, to rescue people who can’t rescue themselves, " Vieira said about first responders.

But Longview EMS Chief Eric Koreis said emergency crews can’t be used to take people to routine doctors’ appointments.

“As you can imagine, if every member of the community called 911 to take them to a doctor’s appointment ... we would be hard-pressed to figure out what to do,” he said.

What’s an emergency?

Vieira is the great-grandson of Victoria Freeman, who integrated Longview School District in the 1920s.

At around age 15, he said he drove off a 300-foot cliff and broke his sternum and both legs. More than a decade ago, he had surgery on one leg after falling at home and developed an infection. Eventually, his muscles started wasting away and he could now only walk for short intervals.

Ever since meeting with Longview fire staff in September, Vieira said he feels he can’t call them for help; he said he couldn’t go to a dentist appointment in October when he suffered from an abscessed tooth that ruptured.

Koreis said staff held a common discussion with Vieira in the fall on how they would help him with non-emergencies if crews were called away to life-or-death situations. For instance, a person called the department for assistance going up and down the stairs seven times after a recent surgery, Koreis said; crews helped the patient, but had a similar conversation with that person.

Previous city reports also show emergency response rates are not meeting national expectations, which recommend the first unit of a department arrive at emergencies within five minutes or less at least 90% of the time.

A 2022 city report shows crews reached the goal 33% of the time during EMS emergencies. Nearly all calls in 2022 were for EMS at 49%, compared to fires at 3%, the report states.

The lower response rate could be due to more calls for help. In 2011, the Longview Fire Department fielded about 5,000 service calls and according to a 2022 annual report, the department handled 6,555 service calls.

Longview spokeswoman Angela Abel said emergencies must be the department’s first priority.

“Responding to non-emergencies takes that ambulance, first responders and possibly a fire engine away from emergency situations,” she writes in an email.

Still, Koreis said staff help with non-emergencies when they can, even going so far as to make sandwiches for diabetics who don’t want to go to the hospital, and changing bedding for people who soil themselves.

He said staff would never refuse service to anyone in emergencies, and his staff also referred Vieira for virtual physician appointments through the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services.

He added that the department has gurneys and ambulances to support someone hundreds of pounds heavier than Vieira, who questioned to The Daily News if his weight was the reason emergency crews refused to take him to appointments. Vieira said “It’s humiliating and embarrassing” that the department won’t help him.

AMR Regional Director Rocco Roncarati also said the company provides ambulances for people who weigh 350 to 1,200 pounds and a gurney for patients who weigh up to 650 pounds. He said firefighting personnel help move patients, in addition to ambulance staff, depending on circumstances, like if there are stairs where the patient is located. Vieira’s residence is on the first floor and there are no stairs.

People in Cowlitz County who use Medicaid can also use a transportation service called Community in Motion for non-emergencies, like going to doctors’ appointments. However, a staff member said they don’t have equipment to transport people who weigh more than 500 pounds.

Vieira said he feels stranded.

“I’m stuck at home. I have no way of getting around,” he said. “My only transportation is (an) ambulance.”

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