Stakeholders · Emergency Medical
Ætheris for
EMS Agencies
The golden hour is not metaphor — it is medicine. AWCMP automatically notifies EMS the moment a vehicle departs the roadway, reclaiming the minutes that determine whether a rural crash victim survives.
The average crash-to-EMS arrival time in rural corridors without automatic detection exceeds 30 minutes — not because medics are slow, but because nobody called. In low-traffic rural zones, a crash can sit unwitnessed through multiple daylight cycles. That delay is the difference between a trauma patient and a fatality statistic.
Ætheris AWCMP eliminates the discovery gap entirely. When a vehicle departs the roadway, sensors confirm the event and push a notification directly to EMS dispatch within seconds — with GPS coordinates, corridor identification, and departure severity data. Paramedics are activated while the crash scene is still hot.
For EMS agencies stretching thin resources across vast rural territories, AWCMP is the early warning system that turns impossible coverage ratios into manageable ones.
What Ætheris Brings
What EMS Gets
from AWCMP
The Golden Hour is a real medical window. For traumatic brain injury, internal hemorrhage, spinal cord trauma, and crush injuries, outcomes degrade rapidly after the first 60 minutes. In rural corridors today, EMS often arrives 45–90 minutes post-crash — not because of slow response, but because no one triggered the response. AWCMP triggers it automatically.
Instant CAD Crash Notification
Confirmed vehicle departure events push directly to Computer-Aided Dispatch in seconds. EMS units are activated before any 911 call — often before bystanders have even noticed the crash.
Precise GPS Scene Location
Exact coordinates for every event — no rural address ambiguity, no wrong-turn delays. Medics navigate directly to the point of impact, not to a general vicinity.
Off-Grid Alert Reliability
AWCMP operates on mesh radio with satellite backup — alert capability survives in zero-cell zones where rural crashes are most likely to go undiscovered. No cellular service required for life-saving notification.
Air Medical Routing Intelligence
Corridor data from AWCMP — including terrain profiles, landing zone proximity, and crash frequency mapping — informs air medical pre-positioning and routing decisions for high-volume wildlife corridors.
Response Time Documentation
Automated event timestamps and notification logs provide EMS agencies with verifiable response time data — valuable for grant applications, performance reporting, and service area planning.
Wildlife Strike Severity Context
Large animal collision events (deer, bear, elk) carry predictable injury patterns — airbag deployment, windshield intrusion, sudden deceleration trauma. AWCMP species data helps medics anticipate trauma profiles before arrival.
What EMS Brings
What EMS Agencies
Unlock for Ætheris
Outcome Data
EMS run reports contain patient outcome data that no other source provides — linking AWCMP crash detections to clinical results and enabling genuine measurement of whether faster notification saves lives.
Incident Confirmation
EMS arrival reports confirm true-positive detections — crash occurred, injuries present, scene secured. This validated data improves AWCMP detection accuracy and reduces false activations over time.
Research Partnership Potential
Outcome-linked crash data creates publishable research on rural EMS response time improvement — valuable for NSF research funding, academic partnerships, and peer-reviewed validation of AWCMP's safety impact.
Advocacy for Deployment
EMS medical directors and agency leadership carry credibility with county health authorities, state EMS offices, and rural hospital networks — all of whom influence where AWCMP deployment is prioritized.
Partnership Pathway
Give Your Crews the
Call They Need
We are building partnerships with EMS agencies and trauma centers in rural Texas corridors. If your service area has roads that swallow crashes in the dark, we need to talk.