“…More specifically, paramedics consider EMS to lack the appropriate resources to help patients with mental illness (McCann et al, 2018a) or that mental illness is not a life-threatening condition and, therefore, the use of emergency services in these situations is inappropriate (Ford-Jones and Chaufan, 2017;Prener and Lincoln, 2015). Two themes emerged across several studies in regard to the source of paramedics' frustration: one, that attending calls related to mental illness draws resources away from "more important" jobs (Rees et al, 2018;Hutchison et al, 2019) and two, that the EMS system was not appropriately resourced to help patients with mental illness without physical illness or injury (Cook, 2020;McCann et al, 2018a). Rees et al (2018) reported common problems for paramedics when attending calls related to mental illness include compassion fatigue as a result of attending the same type of job (e.g.…”