keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419177/top-10-tips-on-safety-from-the-air-medical-transport-industry
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Hough, Philip Nawrocki, Tyler McCardell, Gregory Parker
The air medical transport industry places a high value on developing and maintaining a culture of safety due to the higher risk nature of its operations. The dynamic nature of response and transport, inherent risks involved with flight, lack of supporting resources, weather conditions, and austere nature of the transport environment are all factors that highlight the need for enhanced safety. As such, the air medical transport industry has developed a robust and unique approach to provider and patient safety involving many tactics not otherwise used in other areas of health care...
April 2024: Critical Care Nursing Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419176/lifeflight-case-studies-lessons-learned-from-notable-flights
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian Mikolich, Geoff Shank, David Thomas
Air medical providers are responsible for the care of an incredibly diverse patient population. When it is time to transport a patient, providers must be prepared for complex situations, each requiring different skills, medications, and critical thinking. Scene flights will have providers landing and providing care in the prehospital setting where an interfacility transport requires the patient to be taken from one hospital to another. Specialty flights require special equipment, personnel, and aircraft preparedness to be completed...
April 2024: Critical Care Nursing Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419175/implementation-and-management-of-a-flight-program
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Candice J Myrgo
Air medical transport of critically ill and injured patients began during World War II. Now air transport has become an integral part of health care, nationally and internationally. With the development of portable medical equipment critical care has extended beyond the hospital by bringing critical care to the scene or to rural hospitals. Air medical programs transport critically ill and injured patients by helicopter or airplane while continuously providing critical care enroute. These transports are interfacility from accident scenes, disaster areas, and remote locations where the patient is transported to a tertiary care center so that definitive care will be provided...
April 2024: Critical Care Nursing Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419173/ahn-lifeflight-45-years-in-the-making-current-condition-and-capabilities-of-air-medical-transport
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Annale Yobbi
In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the skies have become a battleground against time in a world where every second counts. Since its inception in 1978, a revolution has occurred in emergency medical services, with LifeFlight Helicopters soaring to new heights in emergency treatment and transport. This article will explore the transformation of helicopter emergency medical services through the decades, where every rotor blade spins with a mission to save lives and rewrite the rules of survival. Allegheny Health Network's LifeFlight is a rotor-wing (helicopter) aeromedical transport service that provides rapid emergent transport for critically ill and injured persons...
April 2024: Critical Care Nursing Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419172/the-history-of-vertical-flight-and-air-medical-transport
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cassandra Asberry, Donny Copper
Vertical flight was sought-after by scientists for centuries, finding early beginnings in children's toys and slowly developing into the modern helicopter. For centuries, true success was elusive, and many machines failed to achieve safe, controlled flight. Despite slow progress, vertical flight enthusiasts were unrelenting and continued trialing new concepts until one finally rose above the rest. As technology advanced, the critical role of helicopters in medical evacuation became apparent. Throughout recent history, continuous progress in vertical flight technology has led to widespread and multifaceted use of helicopters in civilian and military medical operations...
April 2024: Critical Care Nursing Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38344048/e-fast-ultrasound-training-curriculum-for-prehospital-emergency-medical-service-ems-clinicians
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clever M Nguyen, Krista Hartmann, Craig Goodmurphy, Avram Flamm
AUDIENCE AND TYPE OF CURRICULUM: Audience and type of curriculum: This hybrid, asynchronous curriculum is designed for prehospital clinician colleagues, including but not limited to emergency medical technicians (EMT), advanced EMTs (AEMT), EMT-paramedics (EMT-P), critical care EMT-Ps (CCEMTP), critical care transport nurses (CCTN), and certified flight registered nurses (CFRN) to learn and practice ultrasound fundamentals in the setting of a standardized extended focused assessment with sonography in trauma (E-FAST) exam...
January 2024: Journal of education & teaching in emergency medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37756506/prehospital-critical-care-blood-product-administration-quantifying-clinical-benefit
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Randall Hough, Sylvan Charles Cox, Erica Chimelski, Fred G Mihm, Joshua M Tobin
BACKGROUND: Prehospital blood transfusion has been widely practiced in the military and is drawing renewed scrutiny after many years of civilian use. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this article is to quantify the benefit derived from prehospital transfusion of blood products. METHODS: Deidentified data were extracted retrospectively from the flight records of a critical care transportation program between April 2018 and January 2020. Patients who were transported before a prehospital blood transfusion protocol were compared with patients after initiation of the blood transfusion protocol...
November 2023: Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing: DCCN
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37625178/crush-injury-and-simulated-flight-effects-on-muscle-gene-expression-in-female-mice
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barbara S Schneider, Juli Petereit, Liyuan Zhang, Joachim G Voss
BACKGROUND: Aeromedical evacuation provides critical care during long-distance transport of injured victims between medical facilities. Often, these victims sustain muscle trauma related to mechanical insults, such as crush. Understanding the effects of flight on injured muscle is important because the aircraft cabin represents an external environment with mild hypoxia-the cabin's altitude is 2,438 m instead of sea level. Because mild hypobaric hypoxia can alter gene expression in normal muscle and affect recovery patterns, it is beneficial to examine whether this type of hypoxia may also alter injury-related genes...
September 2023: Nursing Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37565016/safety-and-feasibility-of-long-distance-aeromedical-transport-of-neonates-and-children-in-fixed-wing-air-ambulance
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alex Veldman, Stefanie Krummer, Dirk Schwabe, Michael Diefenbach, Doris Fischer, Sophie Schmitt-Kästner, Cornelia Rohrbeck, Ruby Pannu
In cases of critical injury or illness abroad, fixed-wing air ambulance aircraft is employed to repatriate children to their home country. Air ambulance aircraft also transport children to foreign countries for treatment not locally available and newborns back home that have been born prematurely abroad. In this retrospective observational study, we investigated demographics, feasibility, and safety and outcomes of long-distance and international aeromedical transport of neonates and children. The study included 167 pediatric patients, 56 of those preterm neonates...
September 2023: Journal of Pediatric Intensive Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37462596/patients-air-medical-transport-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-a-retrospective-cohort-study
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandre de Souza Vieira, Greiciane da Silva Rocha, Lilia de Souza Nogueira
INTRODUCTION: Air medical transport during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic was essential for transferring critically ill patients. This study aimed to comparatively analyze air-transported patients with and without coronavirus disease 2019 according to their clinical condition and complications that occurred during the flight. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study that analyzed the digital records of adult patients transported by fixed-wing aircraft from the interior of the state of Amazonas to the state capital Manaus, Brazil, from June 2019 to May 2021...
June 19, 2023: Journal of Emergency Nursing: JEN: Official Publication of the Emergency Department Nurses Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37448628/measured-task-load-in-directed-observers-versus-active-participants-undergoing-high-fidelity-simulation-education-in-a-critical-care-setting
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Devlin-Hegedus, Matthew Miller, Sean Cooke, Sandra Ware, Clare Richmond
OBJECTIVES: The use of directed observers in high-fidelity simulation education is increasingly common. While evidence suggests similar educational outcomes for directed observers compared to active participants in technical skills, it remains uncertain if this benefit also exists for senior clinicians, especially in mental workload. We sought to compare the workload between active participants and directed observers using an objective measure. METHODS: We performed a prospective, repeated-measures observational study during the New South Wales Ambulance Aeromedical Operations induction training from 2019 to 2020...
August 2023: AEM Education and Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37356887/the-2022-certified-flight-registered-nurse-pulse-survey
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janie Schumaker, Kimberly D Bronow, Jacqueline C Stocking
OBJECTIVE: The Certified Flight Registered Nurse (CFRN) credential independently validates a registered nurse's advanced knowledge, skills, and abilities in the unique specialty of flight nursing. Introduced in 1993 and celebrating its 30th anniversary in July 2023, the CFRN is held by over 5,500 registered nurses. The purpose of the 2022 CFRN pulse survey was to better understand the ways CFRN-certified registered nurses value this national flight nursing specialty credential. The CFRN survey is a companion to the 2022 Certified Transport Registered Nurse pulse survey, which focused on the Certified Transport Registered Nurse critical care ground transport nursing credential...
2023: Air Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37158441/crush-injury-and-simulated-flight-effects-on-muscle-gene-expression-in-female-mice
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barbara S Schneider, Juli Petereit, Liyuan Zhang, Joachim G Voss
BACKGROUND: Aeromedical evacuation provides critical care during long-distance transport of injured victims between medical facilities. Often, these victims sustain muscle trauma related to mechanical insults, such as crush. Understanding the effects of flight on injured muscle is important because the aircraft cabin represents an external environment with mild hypoxia-the cabin's altitude is 2,438 m instead of sea level. Since mild hypobaric hypoxia can alter gene expression in normal muscle and affect recovery patterns, it is beneficial to examine whether this type of hypoxia may also alter injury-related genes...
May 9, 2023: Nursing Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36632717/critical-care-flight-nurses-role-within-secondary-aeromedical-services-and-the-inter-hospital-transfer-of-patients-with-acute-spinal-cord-impairment
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Heather McCurdy
AIM: To highlight the role of secondary aeromedical services and required knowledge of Critical Care Flight Nurses (CCFN), in facilitating the safe inter-hospital transfer of patients with acute Spinal Cord Impairment (SCI) from a Major Trauma Centre (MTC) to a specialist SCI centre. METHOD: literature search. RESULTS: There is significant demand for secondary aeromedical services in order for patients with acute SCI to be transferred to a SCI centre within 24 hours of injury...
January 12, 2023: Contemporary Nurse
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36322202/organizational-culture-as-a-determinant-of-outcome-in-teams-implications-for-the-pediatric-cardiac-specialist
#15
REVIEW
Colin J McMahon, Edward J Hickey, Lars Nolke, Daniel J Penny
Although enormous effort has focussed on how to build an effective culture in the business community, relatively little effort has addressed how to achieve this in the hospital environment, specifically related to the field of congenital heart disease teams. The examination of culture in pediatric cardiac care is particularly important for several key reasons: first, it represents high-stakes medicine, second, there are multiple stakeholders requiring collaboration between cardiologists, surgeons, anaesthesiologists, perfusionists, nursing staff, and allied health care professionals, and finally, both the patient and the family are intimately involved in the care pathway...
March 2023: Pediatric Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35595344/statin-administration-for-st-elevation-myocardial-infarction-during-rotor-wing-transport
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bennett H Lane, Adam L Gottula, William R Hinckley
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of statin administration by a critical care transport medicine (CCTM) team during rotor wing transport for ST-elevation myocardial infarction patients to a percutaneous intervention-capable center. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study at a single CCTM program after an intervention focused on statin administration for ST-elevation myocardial infarction that included a formulary change and a single brief educational presentation to flight physicians...
May 2022: Air Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35307141/the-roles-and-contributions-of-certified-transport-registered-nurses-in-critical-care-ground-transport-today
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer L Esslinger, Sue L Parrigin, Amy Grand, Kimberly D Bronow, Jacqueline C Stocking
Registered nurses are core members of critical care ground transport teams because of their education, experience, and scope of practice. Advances in medicine, technology, and equipment, combined with regionalization of specialized care and, most recently, the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, necessitate that transport nurses possess specialized knowledge, skills, and abilities. National specialty certification in ground transport nursing via the Certified Transport Registered Nurse (CTRN) offers registered nurses a process to validate their expertise...
March 2022: Air Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34597867/resource-utilisation-for-patients-brought-to-a-major-trauma-centre-by-helicopter
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander H B Wright, Eleanor S Freshwater, Robert Crouch
BACKGROUND: Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) allow critical care personnel to attend incidents alongside transporting patients to hospital. The study site is a UK based emergency department and major trauma centre, accepting flights from a wide geographical area. AIMS: To characterise the impact of HEMS on a major trauma centre clinical resources and the impact of the UK regional trauma network launch on HEMS asset provision. METHODS: Flight case-mix data were obtained from Emergency Department (ED) records (non-trauma patients) and from the Trauma Audit and Research Network database (trauma patients)...
November 2021: International Emergency Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34109078/aeromedical-transport-of-critically-ill-patients-a-literature-review
#19
REVIEW
Alan Araiza, Melanie Duran, Salim Surani, Joseph Varon
The aeromedical transport of critically ill patients has become an integral part of practicing medicine on a global scale. The development of reliable portable medical equipment allows physicians, emergency medical technicians, and nurses to transport wounded and diseased patients under constant critical care attention. Air transportation involves utilizing a fixed-wing (airplane) or rotor-wing (helicopter) aircraft to accomplish different types of transports ranging from scene responses to international transfers...
May 7, 2021: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33908642/a-qualitative-study-portraying-nurses-perspectives-on-transitional-care-between-intensive-care-units-and-hospitals-wards
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Suzanne Forsyth Herling, Helene Brix, Lise Andersen, Liz Daugaard Jensen, Rie Handesten, Heidi Knudsen, Dorthe Gaby Bove
INTRODUCTION: The transition process from the intensive care unit (ICU) to hospital ward may impact the illness trajectory and compromise the continuity of safe care for ICU survivors. ICU and ward nurses are involved with the transition and are responsible for the quality of the transitional care. AIM: The aim was to explore ICU and ward nurses' views on assignments in relation to patients' transition between ICU and hospital ward. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative study with 20 semi-structured interviews with ICU nurses and ward nurses and analysed data by content analysis...
April 28, 2021: Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences
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