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The EMR Program: Turning Seconds into Lives Saved

In New Orleans, when every second counts, the difference between life and death isn’t just how fast an ambulance arrives – it’s whether someone on scene is trained and equipped to act before it does. That’s the motivation behind the EMR (Emergency Medical Responder) Program that NOPJF helped launch in partnership with NOPD and the New Orleans Emergency Medical Services (NOEMS).

Why this program matters

NOEMS currently operates at roughly 70% of full staffing capacity. That staffing gap, combined with the city’s elevated rate of gunshot wounds, traumatic injuries and high-risk scenes, means patrol officers often arrive first – sometimes before EMS can safely enter. The EMR program equips those officers with medically-certified training and the tools to begin lifesaving care in those crucial moments. Thanks to a generous grant from Ochsner Health, 50 automated external defibrillators (AED’s) were also provided to the officers to be used during critical incidents. Police1

What we accomplished in 2024-2025

Real-world impact

The program isn’t just about numbers—it’s about lives saved.

Strengthened partnerships and recognition

Here’s a breakdown of what the program achieved:

 

A key moment came when NOEMS, NOPD and Ochsner Health announced a donation of 50 AEDs tied directly to this initiative. WDSU
The collaboration underscores a shift in New Orleans: not just policing, not just EMS – but a united front to save lives sooner.
By equipping officers with medical training and gear, we’re turning first-on-scene into first-care-on-scene.

Challenges and what’s next

No large-scale innovation is without its hurdles. Key areas include:

How the Impact 59 Grant fueled the expansion

The Impact 59 grant was a legacy program for Super Bowl LIX that awarded $3.5 million to 65 nonprofit organizations in the Greater New Orleans area. The grants were intended to create a lasting positive impact by funding projects in key areas like youth development, workforce training, education, health and wellness, and equity and inclusion. The program was a collaboration between the Super Bowl LIX Host Committee, Entergy, the NFL Foundation, the New Orleans Saints, Ochsner Health, Venture Global, and United Way of Southeast Louisiana. Thanks to the Impact 59 Grant:

Moving forward—beyond the grant

While the grant provided the jump-start, sustainability is already in motion:

Why this matters for New Orleans

In a city that faces unique challenges – the high rate of violent injury, trauma scenes, resource limitations – training police officers to act as emergency medical responders is a smart, proven strategy. It means that when a call comes in, no one must wait for the “code 4” or the ambulance to be cleared for entry. An EMR-officer is already there – trained, equipped and ready.


This is public safety reinvented: speed, skill, equipment, collaboration.

We are proud of what we’ve achieved so far: 24 officers trained or training, 500 belt-mounted kits assembled, 25 trauma kits distributed, eight districts covered. But we’re just getting started. With your support, NOPJF, NOEMS, and NOPD will continue to turn seconds into saved lives, and make New Orleans safer for everyone.

Want to support the EMR program or learn more? Visit https://nopjf.org/donate/ or email Matthew@NOPJF.org

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