• UC Davis Fire
  • Lehigh University EMS
  • SUNY Cortland EMS
  • dayton
  • Brown University
  • uvm
  • Syracuse
  • muhlenberg
  • Villanova
  • boston-college
  • emory
  • richmond
  • mit
  • northeastern
  • vems-desales
  • tulane2012
  • Rice University EMS Tahoe
  • rowan2
  • carnegie mellon
  • dartmouth
  • emerg
  • georgetown
  • rochester
  • tamu
  • University of Massachusetts - Lowell
  • Virginia Tech Rescue Squad
  • oswego
  • Franklin and Marshall EMS
  • RPI Ambulance
  • Case Western Reserve University
  • UC Davis Fire Department (Davis, CA)
  • Lehigh University EMS (Bethlehem, PA)
  • SUNY Cortland EMS (Cortland, NY)
  • University of Dayton (Dayton, OH)
  • Brown University EMS (Providence, RI)
  • University of Vermont Rescue (Burlington, VT)
  • Syracuse University Ambulance (Syracuse, NY)
  • Muhlenberg College EMS (Allentown, PA)
  • Villanova University EMS (Villanova, PA)
  • Boston College Eagle EMS (Boston, MA)
  • Emory University EMS (Atlanta, GA)
  • University of Richmond EMS (Richmond, VA)
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology EMS (Cambridge, MA)
  • Northeastern University EMS (Boston, MA)
  • DeSales University EMS (Center Valley, PA) and Villanova University EMS (Villanova, PA)
  • Drexel University EMS (Philadelphia, PA)
  • Loyola Marymount University EMS (Los Angeles, CA)
  • Tulane University EMS (New Orleans, LA)
  • Rice University EMS (Houston, TX)
  • Rowan University EMS (Glassboro, NJ)
  • Carnegie Mellon University EMS (Pittsburgh, PA)
  • Dartmouth College EMS (Hanover, NH)
  • George Washington University EMeRG (Washington, DC)
  • Georgetown Emergency Response Medical Service (Washington, DC)
  • Rochester Institute of Technology Ambulance (Rochester, NY)
  • Texas A&M University EMS (College Station, TX)
  • University of Massachusetts Lowell EMS (Lowell, MA)
  • Virginia Tech Rescue Squad (Blacksburg, VA)
  • SUNY Oswego SAVAC (Oswego, NY)
  • Franklin and Marshall EMS (Lancaster, PA)
  • RPI Ambulance (Troy, NY)
  • CWRU EMS (Cleveland, OH)

Founded in 1993, the National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation (NCEMSF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization committed to scholarship, research and to creating a safer, healthier environment on college and university campuses through the support, promotion, and advocacy of campus-based emergency medical services. The Foundation is committed to the advancement of existing response groups and assisting in the development of new response groups. 

 NCEMSF serves as an umbrella organization supporting its over 250 constituent member colleges and universities in providing campus based emergency medical services. These, often student-run organizations, are comprised of highly trained students ready to respond in any medical emergency. Student volunteers respond within minutes and provide emergency care tailored specifically to their campus community. These groups range from quick-response services on foot or bike to advanced life support (ALS) transporting units.

In addition to providing for the acquisition of medical knowledge, campus based EMS allows student participants to develop certain life skills including leadership, communication, and decision-making. NCEMSF provides a forum for communication and creates an environment where ideas can be exchanged and problems can be solved.

Brooklyn College EMS Supports Efforts

Press Release

On Tuesday, the 11th of September of 2001, disaster struck America in the form of terrorist attacks, most notably on the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Calls went out to emergency medical response teams all over New York City, including privately owned and volunteer ambulance organizations.

Brooklyn College EMS was among those contacted before ten o’clock in the morning to respond to the scene of the crisis. Several members did their best to get to the city despite impossible conditions. The BC unit was delayed at the Brooklyn end of the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel for hours, rendering aid to those in need at that location before making its way to the vicinity of the towers. They returned, physically safe, well after dark that evening.

Back at campus, some of the squad remained behind to provide emergency care to those locally who might need it. Security was on alert, and rapidly began running vans in conjunction with the EMS for those willing to donate blood back and forth from campus to local hospitals. Volunteers met up at the Emergency Medical Squad’s office in 021 New Ingersoll, where Public Safety directed them to board waiting vans. The turnout was impressive. Classes had been cancelled for the afternoon, but the office filled rapidly with those who waited, almost impatient to give their support and assistance. Hospitals began turning people away, taking names and phone numbers, due to a shortage of blood bags and forms. The waiting list for those waiting to donate was extensive at many hospitals. “I am deeply moved by the compassion that our campus community showed to the countless victims of this terrible event,” said Allen Minzer, Chief of Operations of BC-EMS.

In the days after the towers fell, BC-EMS is still working just as determinedly to organize further blood drives and assistance for the remainder of the rescue and recovery efforts. Information on those efforts can best be obtained through those numbers listed on those television stations still broadcasting, although volunteers are always needed. For information on Brooklyn College’s EMS, please contact them at (718) 951-5859.

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