New Ambulance Service To Provide Chinese Language Health Care And Jobs To Brooklynites

Photo by Heather Chin/Sunset Park Voice.

Brooklyn’s Chinese American community now has its own ambulance company — the first on the East Coast — to address a growing need for paramedics and emergency medical technicians (EMTs) who speak Chinese dialects such as Mandarin, Cantonese, and Toisanese.

Launched in early April, the “historic” service is the brainchild of Dr. Gary Chen and Midwood Ambulance’s Director of Hospital Services Alonzo Rapisarda II and features two ambulances, staffed by a combined 25 Chinese-American EMTs, paramedics, dispatchers, and administrators — some of whom grew up in the neighborhoods they now serve.

Nelson Chan, a paramedic from Sheepshead Bay, in one of the two Asian American ambulances. (Photo by Heather Chin/Sunset Park Voice)

“I was looking for a career and took interest in health and like helping people, so I took the classes and became certified,” said 20-year-old Jie Wu of Sunset Park, who works as an EMT and hopes to eventually become a paramedic. “Then, at the Midwood Ambulance Service, they offered me the Asian American program and I thought, great! I like the senior [citizen’s] smile when they see me and hear me speak and know I can understand them. It warms my heart.”

Timotius Ong, 22, said his family in Sunset Park “thinks it’s pretty great” that he is working in and for his home community. The former Starbucks shift supervisor explained that after taking health tests to qualify for that job, he decided to take the EMS course and has been an official EMT for two months now.

“Being in this program is really good,” Ong told us. “I get to help patients who have a language barrier and make them comfortable.”

Some members of the team behind making the Asian American Ambulance a reality. (Photo by Heather Chin/Sunset Park Voice.)

Stories like this highlight how the Asian American Ambulance service — which is now available across Brooklyn to patients of all languages, ages, and backgrounds — is already impacting the community three-fold, say organizers: not only does it improve health care access to a growing portion of Brooklyn’s population, but it also provides “solid union jobs” for Chinese American youth, but sends a portion of its revenues back to the community, through the community nonprofit, United Chinese Association of Brooklyn (UCA)’s, programs for seniors and children.

“There is a lot of talk in the news about the need for good jobs, This is it,” said Rapisarda, who said Midwood Ambulance is working with the Teamsters to recruit and train new hires.

“Seniors, going into ambulances, are already distressed,” said UCA’s president, Steve Chung. “We need to communicate and be open to all the general public. Dr. Chen [pointed out that] we have to learn from the Jewish community with their ambulance to serve their community.”

To reach the Asian American Ambulance, call 718-530-9911.

Their base is in Bensonhurst/Gravesend, at 2593 West 13th Street.