Air ambulance
An air ambulance is an aircraft used for emergency medical assistance in situations where either a traditional ambulance cannot easily or quickly reach the scene or the patient needs to be repositioned at a distance where air transportation is most practical. Air ambulance crews are supplied with equipment that enables them to provide medical treatment to a critically injured or ill patient. Common equipment for air ambulances includes respirators, medication, an ECG and monitoring unit, CPR equipment, and stretchers.
Ambulance Crew and Passengers
The medical crew of an air ambulance varies depending on country, area, service provider and by type of air ambulance, but in most schemes may consist of one or more members of ambulance crew, such as an Emergency Medical Technician or Paramedic, sometimes a flight nurse, or in some cases, a physician.
Air ambulance pilots are required to have a great deal of experience in piloting their aircraft because the conditions of air ambulance flights are often more challenging than regular non-emergency flight services.
Depending on the equipment, crew composition, and condition of the patient, there is sometimes room for one or more passengers. Space in most Air Ambulances is very limited, so friends and family often must follow the air ambulance by other means.
History
- 1914–1918 - Early air amubulances were first tested by various military organizations.
- 1928 - The first air ambulance service was established in the Australian outback. This organisation became the Royal Flying Doctor Service.
- 1934 - The first civil air ambulance service in Africa was established in Morocco by Marie Marvingt.
- 1936 - A military air ambulance service evacuated wounded from the Spanish Civil War for treatment in Nazi Germany.
- 1946 - The first civilian air ambulance in North America was established by the Saskatchewan government in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada - this service is still in operation in 2007.
- 1947 - Schaefer Air Service, the first air ambulance service in the United States, was founded by J. Walter Schaefer of Schaefer Ambulance Service in Los Angeles, California. Schaefer Air Service was also the first FAA-certified air ambulance service in the U.S.
- 1977 - Flight For Life Colorado began in 1972 with a single Alouette III helicopter, based at St. Anthony Central Hospital in Denver, Colorado. It was the first civilian, hospital-based medical helicopter program in the U.S.
Cost
In the United States publicly owned air ambulance service is provided by the United States Coast Guard and other agencies in certain areas, usually at no direct cost to the individual; public air ambulance transport is usually by helicopter and involves shorter distances than privately owned air ambulance jets.[citation needed]
In the UK the service operates in two distinct manners. In Scotland the national parliament agreed to the state funding of the service however in England and Wales the service is funded on a charitable basis via a number of local charities for each region covered. A list of these can be found here: [1]
Biggest by Country
Canada
- Ornge (Ontario Air Ambulance) - Ornge operates the largest program of aero-medical transport in North America,with 33 aircraft stationed at 26 bases across the province of Ontario.
Czech Republic
Every year an Air Ambulance Show is held in the Czech Republic.
Germany
- DRF (Deutsche Rettungsflugwacht e.V.) - Organisation for air rescue with a fleet of more than 50 helicopters.
- ADAC - Germany's largest automobile club with a fleet of 38 air rescue helicopters.
- Bundespolizei - The German federal police.
- The German Federal Ministry of the Interior - 12 helicopters.
- Luftwaffe - Germany's air force.
United States
- STAT MEDEVAC - PA, OH, MD, and NY - Largest privately run rotary-wing air ambulance with a fleet of over 20 helicopters.
- BayFlite - FL - Largest hospital based rotary-wing air ambulance with a fleet of over 4 helicopters.