Generally, EMS will transport you to the closest appropriate emergency room able to handle your medical condition.
Patients may be transported to a slightly more distant hospital, but this is on a case-by-case basis as warranted by an individual's medical condition and the hospital's availability to receive patients.
Yes. We encourage small groups to tour our facility in Bradenton which includes the Emergency Communications Center and the Emergency Operations Center. If you or your organization is interested in such a tour, please call us at (941) 749-3500.
By Florida State Statute, EMS can only honor a DO NOT RESUSCITATE ORDER (DNRO). If a valid DNRO order is presented to the ambulance crew, resuscitative efforts can be stopped immediately.
Advanced Directives cannot be accepted by our ambulance crew. If advanced directives are presented, the ambulance crew must initiate care and call the closest hospital to obtain an order from a physician to terminate efforts.
If you or a loved one is experiencing a terminal or end-stage condition and do not wish to have resuscitative measures taken, consult with your physician to obtain a DNRO.
All requests require an original signature, a clear photo ID of the requestor, and a $5 pre-payment for each record of transport requested.
Patient Request for Medical Records
Patient Authorization to Release Medical Records to 3rd Party
Pay online https://ipn4.paymentus.com/cp/mace
Pay by phone (833) 735-2238
Pay by mail
Manatee County EMS
PO Box 589
Bradenton, FL 34206-0589
Please contact Digitech for payment arrangements or register for an account and schedule payment arrangements online CLICK HERE.
You can register online here, or please complete, print and sign the application.
Return the completed application to:
Manatee County Emergency Management
P.O. Box 1000
Bradenton, Florida 34206-1000.
We recommend keeping sandbags in storage through the end of hurricane season. Sandbags can be placed at the curb alongside your trash bin for regular garbage collection.
For most cases, yes. However, it depends on the type of coverage your insurance plan has at the time of transport and whether the transport is considered medically necessary by your insurance plan.
Not only will you be providing much needed services to the community, you will also have access to the HIE, be paid at the Medicare rate for CPT codes used per client, and earn points for MIPS. Please review our Handbook for more information.
The phone system routes your call to the appropriate area’s communication center. Then the call taker asks for the address of the emergency, the phone number you’re calling from, your name, and any other details that may assist the responders. They also ask several questions about the nature of the emergency.
It is important to stay calm and answer all the call taker's questions. The communications center will dispatch your emergency to the appropriate responders. You may be asked to stay on the phone until a responder arrives. The call taker may also give basic first aid instructions when needed.
Do not hang up. When the 9-1-1 call taker answers, just tell her or him that you called by mistake. If you hang up, the call taker does not know if an emergency actually exists at the location from which the call originated.
In most cases, the call taker will see the caller's name, phone number, and address. They might call you back to ensure that you are safe or they might even send a police officer to the address to ensure that there is not a problem.
Children often call 9-1-1 and just hang up. If this occurs, the call taker will normally dispatch a police officer to the caller's location to emphasize the importance of calling 9-1-1 only in an emergency.
If you do not have a primary care provider, you can contact one of these facilities:
MCR Health
Multiple Locations
(941) 776-4000
Turning Points
701 17th Ave W
Bradenton 34205
(941) 567-6156
Under the medicare program, medically necessary ambulance transport is where the patient's condition is acute and transport by other means will endanger the patient's life, limb or organs whether the transport by other means is available or not.
If medicare denied your claim because the transport did not fit their medically necessary definition, you have the right to appeal Medicare's decision. You can simply gather all the pertinent information, such as the ambulance transport record, emergency room notes, etc. and mail them to Medicare's contractor. For assistance in obtaining your ambulance transport record, please download from above, completing it accordingly, provide the appropriate documentation, and mail it to the address on the form.
TRANSPORT SERVICES
Item Charge
Basic Life Support Non-Emergency Transport $400
Basic Life Support Emergency Transport
$500
Advanced Life Support Non-Emergency Transport
$500
Advanced Life Support Emergency Transport, Level 1
$600
Advanced Life Support Emergency Transport, Level 2
$700
Interfacility Transport (one-way)
$200
Specialty Care
$800
Patient Deceased - treated but not transported (if transported, level of service rendered is charged)
$407
MILEAGE RATES
Item Charge
Mileage, charge per loaded mile
$10
SERVICES WITHOUT TRANSPORT
Item Charge
Advanced Life Support Level 1 services rendered without transport are billed at the Advanced Life Support non-emergency rate
$500
Advanced Life Support Level 2 services rendered without transport are billed at the Advanced Life Support Level 1 amount $600
Emergency Helicopter Response Preparation in addition to chargers for Advanced Life Support services
$300
MULTIPLE TRANSPORTS
For two patients transported simultaneously, the charge will be equal to 75% of the charge for the level of care given, plus 50% of the mileage charge
For three or more patients transported simultaneously, the charge will be equal to 60% of the charge for the level of care given, the applicable mileage charge divided by the number of patients on board
SPECIAL EVENTS AND MISCELLANEOUS RATES
Item Charge
Stand-by Time for ambulance and crew, per hour (minimum charge will be for three hours and charges will be rounded up to the next hour)
$160
Stand-by Time for ambulance and crew, per person per hour (minimum charge will be for three hours and charges will be rounded up to the next hour) $60
Wait Time for ambulance and crew, per half hour (minimum charge will be for three hours and charges will be rounded up to the next half hour)
$50
Medical Record Release
$5
Eligible conditions for the Special Needs Shelter include, but are not limited to:
· Being dependent on supplemental oxygen
· Being dependent on electricity for survival
· Official Diagnosis of: Dementia / Alzheimer’s Disease
Even if you have one of these conditions all applications are reviewed by the Department of Health Manatee for approval or denial.
to report a fire
to stop a crime in progress or about to occur
to report an accident
for serious medical problems
when life or property is endangered
If you are unsure whether you have an emergency, dial 9-1-1 and let the communications center decide what action to take.
for routine law enforcement inquiries
for weather information
for directions
for directory assistance
to complain about loud noises from neighbors
to report utility problems
Do not call 9-1-1 to report a power outage.
The County operates several sandbag filling locations ahead of significant storm events. Click here to see those locations.
Assistance is based on a sliding fee scale for Manatee County residents with incomes less than 200% of the Federal Poverty Level.
For questions and an appointment, please call (941) 749-3030.
When 9-1-1 callers receive our recorded message, it is not due to a staffing shortage. It can be due to a number of factors, including many people calling about the same problem. Do not hang up. Stay on the line and a call taker will answer your call as soon as possible.
EMS receives a small portion of property taxes collected each year. The County charges user fees to citizens and visitors to help make up the difference.
Your answers to these questions provide important information to the fire, medical, or police responders, and help dispatchers determine what type of response to send. They also determine what type of instructions the call taker will give you. These questions do not slow down how quickly help is dispatched to you.
Emergency medical services are billed to the person who received the care regardless of who called 911. Our fees are consistent with the surrounding county's pre-hospital providers. These fees are routinely evaluated and updated as needed. View our current fee schedule.
For any questions, call Digitech at (833) 855-4090 or our billing section at (941) 744-3981.