Emergency Medical Services Day
Emergency Medical Services Day honors the lifesavers who race toward danger when others step back. These are the voices on the radio, the hands stopping the bleeding, the calm in the middle of panic.
Drive CPR/first-aid training enrollment and community appreciation campaigns by positioning lifesaving skills as a tribute to EMS professionals.
- 'Learn CPR in honor of EMS heroes' — partner with training centers to offer discounted classes during EMS Week
- User-generated gratitude campaign: share thank-you messages and drawings from community members to local EMS stations
- Behind-the-scenes content showcasing what EMS professionals actually do, tied to calls-to-action for first-aid training
- Workplace wellness angle: encourage companies to sponsor on-site CPR/AED training for employees as EMS appreciation
Emergency Medical Services Day emerged from broader efforts to recognize and strengthen modern emergency care. Organized EMS has not always looked the way it does today. In many places, early ambulance services were informal, inconsistent, or mainly focused on transport rather than treatment.
Over time, communities came to understand that what happens before a patient reaches a hospital is not “just a ride,” but a critical medical phase.
In the United States, a major turning point came in the mid-20th century, as traffic injuries and other emergencies exposed serious gaps in prehospital care. Public awareness and medical leadership pushed for improved training, standardized equipment, and systems capable of delivering a rapid, coordinated response.
As emergency medicine developed into a specialty, EMS evolved alongside it, creating protocols and educational pathways for responders who could bring hospital-level decision-making closer to the patient.
Emergency Medical Services Day is closely linked to National EMS Week, which was first proclaimed in the 1970s under President Gerald Ford. The purpose was twofold: to recognize the professionals providing emergency care and to educate the public about the importance of an organized EMS system.
That public education component was important then and remains just as important today, because communities function better when people understand when to call, what to do while waiting, and what EMS can and cannot provide.
As EMS matured, the idea of dedicating time to public recognition became more meaningful. Paramedics and EMTs were no longer viewed only as transport personnel. They became clinicians working in unpredictable environments with expanding responsibilities: interpreting vital signs, administering medications, managing airways, treating pain, assisting in complex rescues, and coordinating with hospitals in real time.
Emergency Medical Services Day also reflects how broad the field truly is. It highlights the wide range of roles involved in emergency response, including:
Over the years, community outreach has become a defining element of the observance. Many EMS agencies use the day to open their doors and make their work more understandable.
People can ask questions that usually arise only during a crisis: What happens when someone calls for help? How do crews decide where to take a patient? Why do responders ask the same questions repeatedly? What is the role of an AED? How does a dispatcher assist before responders arrive?
The day has also evolved as the profession itself has changed. Modern EMS often includes expanded, community-focused services in addition to emergency response. Some agencies take part in injury prevention programs, provide education on safe driving and seat belt use, offer car seat checks, and share guidance on fall prevention for older adults.
Others support public health goals by connecting patients to resources, reducing repeat emergencies, and encouraging follow-up care after a crisis. While details vary by system, the overall message remains the same: EMS is not only about dramatic rescues, but about continuous readiness and community safety.
At its core, Emergency Medical Services Day remains an invitation to look beyond the sirens and recognize the people behind the uniforms. It honors a profession built on competence and compassion, on showing up when outcomes are uncertain, and on caring for strangers in the way everyone hopes to be treated in their most vulnerable moments.
Learn Lifesaving Skills
Signing up for CPR training is one of the most direct ways to honor EMS professionals because it strengthens the chain of survival long before an ambulance arrives. Many community centers, training organizations, and fire departments offer classes that cover CPR and how to use an AED. Even a short “hands-only” session can build confidence in chest compressions, which can be crucial during a sudden cardiac arrest. It helps to learn more than just CPR. A basic first-aid class can cover wound care, burns, allergic reactions, choking relief, and how to recognize the warning signs of stroke. Some communities also offer bleeding-control training that teaches how to apply pressure, pack a wound, and use a tourniquet. These skills are not about replacing EMS; they are about buying time until professionals take over. To keep the learning practical, it can help to build a simple home plan after training. Identify where a first-aid kit will live, check that emergency numbers are accessible, and decide who will meet responders at the door. A few minutes of planning can prevent frantic confusion during a real emergency.
Say Thanks Creatively
A thoughtful message still goes a long way in a profession that is often asked to do more with less. Write a thank-you note for a local station, share a drawing from a child, or drop off a stack of supportive cards that crews can read between calls. The best notes tend to be specific: thanking responders for showing patience, for explaining things clearly, or for treating a loved one with dignity. If posting online, keep it kind and careful. Protect patient privacy, avoid sharing identifiable details, and focus on what EMS represents: readiness, skill, compassion, and public service. Creative tributes can be simple too, like a sidewalk chalk message, a handmade banner, or a community bulletin board of gratitude. Another meaningful option is to thank the entire system, not just the people in uniforms. Dispatchers and call takers often guide CPR over the phone, help frantic callers focus, and coordinate multiple responders at once. Recognizing their work highlights how many hands it takes to save a life.
Host a Community Event
A neighborhood gathering can be both celebratory and educational. Events work best when they are designed with EMS schedules in mind. Instead of expecting a long presentation, consider inviting a representative for a brief talk, a question-and-answer session, or a short equipment demonstration. Many people are fascinated by what is inside an ambulance, how vital signs are monitored, or how crews communicate with hospitals on the way in. Community events can also focus on safety. Set up stations for “when to call emergency services,” home fall-prevention tips, or a quick refresher on the signs of heart attack and stroke. Families can practice making an emergency call, learning how to share an address clearly, describe symptoms, and stay on the line when instructed. If donations are included, keep them aligned with local policies and real needs. Some agencies accept financial donations through official channels, while others prefer support for education initiatives or community programs. When in doubt, ask what is most helpful rather than guessing.
Support EMS Organizations
Support can mean money, time, advocacy, or simply being an informed neighbor. Some EMS systems are publicly funded, some are private, and some rely on volunteers. Each model has different needs, but most benefit from community backing for training, protective gear, and up-to-date medical equipment. Volunteering is another form of support in many places, especially where community-based response is common. For those who are not able to volunteer directly, supporting the people who do can matter just as much. That might look like providing meals at a training day, helping with a community fundraiser, or assisting with administrative tasks for an EMS support group. It also helps to support responder well-being. EMS work can involve long shifts, difficult scenes, and emotional strain. Encouraging a culture that values rest, mental health resources, and safe staffing is a community-level way of saying, “These professionals matter as people, not just as responders.” Emergency Medical Services Day Timeline1792 Larrey’s “Flying Ambulances” French surgeon Dominique Jean Larrey developed horse-drawn “flying ambulances” for Napoleon’s armies, creating one of the first organized systems for rapid battlefield evacuation and treatment close to combat. 1865 Civilian Hospital Ambulance Debuts The Commercial Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, introduced a horse-drawn ambulance service, often cited as the first organized hospital-based civilian ambulance program in the United States. 1869 Bellevue Hospital Ambulance Service Begins New York City’s Bellevue Hospital started a horse-drawn ambulance service, establishing one of the earliest continuous ambulance programs tied to a major municipal hospital in the United States. 1960 Modern Closed-Chest CPR Described William Kouwenhoven, James Jude, and Guy Knickerbocker report successful use of closed-chest cardiac massage, providing the scientific basis for modern cardiopulmonary resuscitation used by EMS providers. [1]1966 “White Paper” Catalyzes Modern EMS The National Academy of Sciences publishes “Accidental Death and Disability: The Neglected Disease of Modern Society,” highlighting preventable trauma deaths and driving reforms that shaped modern U.S. emergency medical services systems. [1]
Larrey’s “Flying Ambulances”
French surgeon Dominique Jean Larrey developed horse-drawn “flying ambulances” for Napoleon’s armies, creating one of the first organized systems for rapid battlefield evacuation and treatment close to combat.
Civilian Hospital Ambulance Debuts
The Commercial Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, introduced a horse-drawn ambulance service, often cited as the first organized hospital-based civilian ambulance program in the United States.
Bellevue Hospital Ambulance Service Begins
New York City’s Bellevue Hospital started a horse-drawn ambulance service, establishing one of the earliest continuous ambulance programs tied to a major municipal hospital in the United States.
Modern Closed-Chest CPR Described
William Kouwenhoven, James Jude, and Guy Knickerbocker report successful use of closed-chest cardiac massage, providing the scientific basis for modern cardiopulmonary resuscitation used by EMS providers. [1]
“White Paper” Catalyzes Modern EMS
The National Academy of Sciences publishes “Accidental Death and Disability: The Neglected Disease of Modern Society,” highlighting preventable trauma deaths and driving reforms that shaped modern U.S. emergency medical services systems. [1]
Share Stories and Raise Awareness
Sharing personal experiences can remind others that EMS is not an abstract service. It is someone showing up at 3 a.m. when a family is terrified, someone patiently explaining what will happen next, someone choosing the right intervention in a chaotic moment. Stories help others understand the scope of EMS and the importance of quick action. It can also be helpful to share practical awareness posts. Encourage others to learn CPR, keep house numbers visible, update emergency contacts, and create medication lists for older relatives. A simple reminder like “write down allergies and medications where responders can find them” can make a real difference on a real call. When sharing, keep it respectful. Avoid sensational details, don’t pressure responders to be featured, and focus on education and appreciation. The goal is to elevate the profession and encourage preparedness, not to turn someone’s worst day into content.