Choosing a medical transport provider is not a minor operational decision. For hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, and families arranging patient transfers, the company you hire directly affects patient safety, discharge timelines, readmission risk, and your facility's reputation. A late ambulance holds up a hospital bed. A no-show means a missed dialysis appointment. An unqualified crew can turn a routine transfer into a clinical incident.
The problem is that medical transport companies vary enormously in quality, and it is not always obvious from a website or a sales pitch which ones deliver consistently and which ones cut corners. Many facilities discover the difference only after a string of late pickups, billing disputes, or patient complaints.
This guide provides a structured, 10-point checklist you can use to evaluate any medical transport provider, whether you are selecting a new partner, auditing your current one, or comparing multiple companies side by side. For each item, we explain why it matters, what questions to ask, what red flags to watch for, and what a strong answer looks like.
The 10-Point Evaluation Checklist
1 Licensing and Accreditation
Medical transport is regulated at the county and state level in California. Any company operating ambulances in Los Angeles County needs authorization from LA County EMS Agency. In Orange County, it is the OC EMS Agency. Non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) providers operating wheelchair or stretcher vans in the City of Los Angeles must hold an LADOT permit. State-level permits from the California Highway Patrol (CHP) cover ambulance vehicle inspections and safety standards.
What to ask
- Which county EMS agencies have authorized you to operate?
- Do you hold current LADOT permits for non-emergency vehicles?
- Can you provide copies of your CHP inspection reports?
- Are your permits current, or are any under renewal or probation?
Red flags
- The company cannot name the specific agencies that regulate them
- Permits are expired or "pending renewal" for an extended period
- They operate in a county without county-level authorization
How WCA measures up
West Coast Ambulance holds active permits from LA County EMS, OC EMS, and LADOT, along with all required state-level certifications. These have been maintained continuously since the company was founded in 2002.
2 Service Range
Some transport companies only provide NEMT—wheelchair and stretcher van services. Others operate ambulances but lack specialty care capabilities. The most versatile providers offer a full spectrum: wheelchair transport, stretcher vans, BLS ambulance, and SCT/CCT transport. Having a single provider that covers the full continuum simplifies logistics and reduces the number of vendor relationships you manage.
What to ask
- What levels of service do you offer? NEMT only, or ambulance as well?
- Do you provide SCT/CCT for ventilator-dependent or critical patients?
- Can you handle bariatric transports and long-distance transfers?
Red flags
- The company subcontracts ambulance or SCT/CCT calls to third parties
- They claim to offer services they are not licensed for in their operating counties
- No clear distinction between their BLS and SCT/CCT capabilities
How WCA measures up
WCA provides the full spectrum: wheelchair, stretcher, BLS ambulance, and SCT/CCT—all operated in-house with no subcontracting. In Kern County, WCA offers NEMT services only, and is transparent about that regional limitation.
3 Staffing Model
How a company staffs its vehicles has a direct impact on training consistency, accountability, and patient care quality. There are three common models: W-2 employees who work under the company's direct supervision and training programs; independent contractors (1099) who may work for multiple companies simultaneously; and gig-style platforms that match available drivers to open requests much like a rideshare app.
W-2 employment means the company controls hiring standards, ongoing training, drug testing, background checks, and disciplinary processes. Contractors and gig workers operate with far less oversight, and the company has limited ability to enforce quality standards.
What to ask
- Are your crews W-2 employees or independent contractors?
- What is your hiring process and background check protocol?
- How do you handle training and continuing education?
- What is your crew turnover rate?
Red flags
- The company uses a contractor or gig model but downplays it
- Crews are not identifiable by uniform or company ID
- High turnover or inability to provide turnover data
- No structured onboarding or continuing education program
How WCA measures up
Every WCA crew member—EMTs, drivers, registered nurses, and respiratory therapists—is a W-2 employee. WCA does not use contractors or gig-style staffing. This allows the company to maintain rigorous training standards and direct accountability for every transport.
4 No-Show and On-Time Performance
Reliability metrics are the single most important data point in evaluating a transport provider's day-to-day performance. A provider that is frequently late or misses pickups entirely creates cascading problems: delayed discharges, missed appointments, angry patients, and frustrated staff. Vague assurances about reliability are not enough—you need specific, measurable data.
What to ask
- What is your current no-show rate? (Ask for the exact number.)
- What is your on-time performance rate, and how do you define "on time"?
- Can you provide monthly performance reports for my facility?
- What happens when a crew is going to be late—how are we notified?
Red flags
- They cannot provide specific percentages for no-show or on-time rates
- They define "on time" with a generous window (30+ minutes)
- No formal performance reporting or KPI tracking
- Excuses rather than data when asked about reliability
How WCA measures up
WCA maintains a 0% no-show rate and 98.5% on-time performance across more than 5,000 transports per month. These metrics are tracked in real time and available to facility partners on request.
5 Coverage Area and Base Station Locations
Response times are a function of geography. A provider with a base station 45 minutes from your facility will inevitably have longer response times than one stationed nearby. The number and location of base stations also indicates a company's capacity to handle volume and cover a wide service area without overextending.
What to ask
- Where are your base stations located?
- Which station would primarily serve our facility?
- What is your average response time for our area?
- Do you have the capacity to handle surge demand or multiple simultaneous requests?
Red flags
- Only one base station for a large geographic area
- The nearest station is far from your facility
- They cannot provide average response time data by zone
- Crews routinely start from home rather than a staffed base
How WCA measures up
WCA operates five base stations strategically positioned across Southern California: Burbank (headquarters), Lancaster, Baldwin Park, Orange, and Bakersfield. This distributed model ensures short response times across Los Angeles County, Orange County, and the Antelope Valley.
6 Insurance and Billing Capabilities
Medical transport billing is complex, particularly when Medi-Cal, Medicare, or commercial insurance is involved. The right provider handles prior authorizations, submits claims, and manages denials—so your staff does not have to. A provider without billing infrastructure shifts that burden to your facility or to the patient's family.
What to ask
- Do you accept Medi-Cal, Medicare, and commercial insurance?
- Do you handle prior authorization and claims submission in-house?
- What is your clean claims rate?
- How do you handle denied or rejected claims?
- Can you bill facilities directly for contract accounts?
Red flags
- They accept only cash or private pay
- Authorization and billing are the facility's or patient's responsibility
- No dedicated billing team or no data on claims performance
- History of surprise-billing patients
How WCA measures up
WCA accepts Medi-Cal, Medicare, and most commercial payers, and handles prior authorization and claims submission with an in-house billing department. Facility accounts receive direct billing with transparent invoicing.
7 Clinical Oversight
A transport company is a healthcare operation, and it should be governed like one. Clinical oversight means having a Medical Director who establishes protocols, a quality assurance (QA) program that reviews patient care reports, and a structured process for handling adverse events. Without this infrastructure, clinical standards are informal and unenforceable.
What to ask
- Do you have a Medical Director? What is their role in day-to-day operations?
- What clinical protocols govern your BLS and SCT/CCT crews?
- Do you have a formal QA/QI program? How often does it review cases?
- How do you handle adverse events or patient complaints?
Red flags
- No Medical Director, or a Medical Director in name only with no active involvement
- No written clinical protocols or standing orders
- No QA program or inability to describe their review process
- Patient complaints are handled informally without documentation
How WCA measures up
WCA operates under active Medical Director oversight with established clinical protocols for every service level. The company maintains a formal QA program that reviews patient care reports, identifies trends, and drives continuous improvement. SCT/CCT transports are staffed by licensed registered nurses (RNs) and respiratory therapists (RTs), providing hospital-level clinical expertise during critical transfers.
8 Fleet and Equipment
The condition of a company's vehicles and equipment says a great deal about how they operate. Well-maintained, modern vehicles break down less, provide better patient comfort, and reflect a company that invests in its operations. Equipment standards—Stryker power cots, cardiac monitors (for ambulances), ADA-compliant wheelchair vans—are not optional luxuries. They are baseline requirements for safe patient handling.
What to ask
- How many vehicles are in your fleet, and what is the average age?
- What cot and stretcher systems do you use? (Stryker Power-PRO is the gold standard.)
- Are all wheelchair vehicles ADA-compliant?
- What is your preventive maintenance schedule?
- Do you have backup vehicles available in case of breakdowns?
Red flags
- Fleet age is vague or over 10 years on average
- Manual cots instead of powered lifting systems
- Vehicles appear poorly maintained or dirty
- No preventive maintenance schedule or records
How WCA measures up
WCA operates a fleet of 45+ vehicles equipped with Stryker Power-PRO cots, maintained on a rigorous preventive schedule. All wheelchair vehicles are ADA-compliant. BLS ambulances carry vital sign monitoring equipment, and SCT/CCT units are outfitted with cardiac monitors, ventilators, and IV pumps for the highest acuity patients.
9 Dispatch Capabilities
Dispatch is the operational nerve center of any transport company. A professional dispatch operation means certified Emergency Medical Dispatchers (EMD) or Emergency Telecommunications personnel (ETC), real-time vehicle tracking via GPS/AVL, and the ability to handle requests around the clock. The dispatch team's competence determines whether your call is handled efficiently or lost in a queue.
What to ask
- Is your dispatch center staffed 24/7/365?
- Are dispatchers EMD or ETC certified?
- Do you have real-time GPS tracking on all vehicles?
- What is your process for handling priority or stat requests?
- Can facilities submit requests electronically, or is it phone-only?
Red flags
- Dispatch is not available 24/7, or after-hours calls go to voicemail
- No real-time tracking—dispatchers cannot tell you where your vehicle is
- Dispatchers lack medical transport training or certification
- No electronic request options or automated confirmations
How WCA measures up
WCA's dispatch center operates 24/7/365 with certified dispatchers and real-time GPS/AVL tracking on every vehicle. Facilities can submit transport requests electronically or by phone, with automated confirmations and real-time ETA updates.
10 References and Reputation
A company's track record is the most honest indicator of future performance. Years in business, facility testimonials, and the ability to provide references on request all signal stability and reliability. A company that has been operating for two decades has weathered economic cycles, regulatory changes, and industry shifts—and is still standing.
What to ask
- How long have you been in business?
- Can you provide references from facilities similar to ours?
- How many transports do you complete per month?
- Have you had any regulatory actions, suspensions, or sanctions?
Red flags
- In business less than three years with no established track record
- Unable or unwilling to provide facility references
- History of regulatory sanctions or permit suspensions
- Vague or evasive about transport volume
How WCA measures up
West Coast Ambulance has been in continuous operation since 2002—over two decades of service. The company completes more than 5,000 transports per month and is happy to provide references from hospitals, SNFs, and healthcare systems across Southern California.
Bonus Questions to Ask During Your Evaluation
Beyond the core checklist, these additional questions can reveal important details about a provider's operations and culture:
- What is your process when a patient's condition changes during transport? Look for clear escalation protocols, not improvisation.
- How do you handle complaints from patients or facilities? A mature company has a formal process with tracking and follow-up.
- Can you accommodate recurring transports (e.g., dialysis three times per week)? Consistency of crew assignment matters for patient comfort.
- What happens if your crew arrives and the patient's acuity is higher than expected? A full-spectrum provider can upgrade on the spot. A single-service provider sends the patient back to the queue.
- Do you have a dedicated account manager for facility partners? A single point of contact for issue resolution is a sign of a mature operation.
- How do you handle hospital discharge transports during peak hours? Ask about capacity planning and whether they pre-stage vehicles for high-volume facilities.
Signs It Is Time to Switch Providers
Watch for These Warning Signs
If your current medical transport provider exhibits any of the following patterns, it may be time to evaluate alternatives:
- Chronic late arrivals — More than 5% of pickups are late, or "late" is becoming the norm rather than the exception
- No-shows without notification — Even a single no-show without advance communication is a serious failure
- Billing disputes and surprise charges — Frequent invoicing errors, unauthorized charges, or inability to resolve billing questions
- Patient or family complaints about crew conduct — Unprofessional behavior, rough handling, or lack of empathy during transport
- Inability to scale — Your volume has increased but the provider cannot keep up, leading to longer wait times
- Communication breakdowns — Difficulty reaching dispatch, no ETA updates, or conflicting information from different staff members
- Lack of transparency — The provider is unwilling to share performance data, refuses to address concerns, or blames other parties for failures
- Regulatory issues — You learn the provider has received sanctions, permit suspensions, or is operating outside their licensed scope
Switching providers requires planning, but staying with an underperforming company carries real costs: delayed care, patient safety risks, staff frustration, and potential liability. If you are experiencing these issues, begin your evaluation process now rather than waiting for a critical failure.
Printable Evaluation Checklist
Use this summary to score providers side by side. For each item, note whether the company meets the standard, partially meets it, or fails to meet it.
Medical Transport Provider Evaluation Checklist
- Holds all required county EMS authorizations, LADOT permits, and state certifications
- Offers the full range of services your facility needs (NEMT through SCT/CCT)
- Employs all crews as W-2 employees with structured training and oversight
- Provides specific no-show and on-time performance data with monthly reporting
- Operates multiple base stations with short response times to your location
- Accepts Medi-Cal, Medicare, and commercial insurance with in-house billing and authorization
- Has an active Medical Director, written clinical protocols, and a formal QA program
- Maintains a modern fleet with Stryker power cots, ADA compliance, and preventive maintenance
- Runs a 24/7/365 dispatch center with certified personnel and real-time GPS tracking
- Has been in business for 5+ years with verifiable facility references and strong transport volume
Making Your Decision
No provider is perfect, but the best ones are transparent about their capabilities and limitations. They provide data, not just promises. They welcome scrutiny rather than deflecting it. And they invest in the infrastructure—employed crews, base stations, fleet maintenance, clinical oversight, dispatch technology—that makes consistent performance possible.
If you are evaluating providers for a hospital, SNF, or healthcare system, we encourage you to hold every company—including West Coast Ambulance—to the standards outlined in this checklist. The right partner will welcome the conversation.
Ready to see how WCA measures up for your facility? Contact us to schedule a consultation, request references, or arrange a base station tour. You can also call our dispatch team directly at 800-880-0556—we are available 24/7/365.