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Emerg Med J ; 28(10): 882-3, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20844092

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In a military setting, pre-hospital times may be extended due to geographical or operational issues. Helicopter casevac enables patients to be transported expediently across all terrains. The skill-mix of the pre-hospital team can vary. AIM: To quantify the doctors' contribution to the Medical Emergency Response Team-Enhanced (MERT-E). METHODS: A prospective log of missions recorded urgency category, patient nationality, mechanism of injury, medical interventions and whether, in the crew's opinion, the presence of the doctor made a positive contribution. RESULTS: Between July and November 2008, MERT-E flew 324 missions for 429 patients. 56% of patients carried were local nationals, 35% were UK forces. 22% of patients were T1, 52% were T2, 21.5% were T3 and 4% were dead. 48% patients had blast injuries, 25% had gunshot wounds, 6 patients had been exposed to blast and gunshot wounds. Median time from take-off to ED arrival was 44 min. A doctor flew on 88% of missions. It was thought that a doctor's presence was not clinically beneficial in 77% of missions. There were 62 recorded physician's INTERVENTIONS: the most common intervention was rapid sequence induction (45%); other interventions included provision of analgesia, sedation or blood products (34%), chest drain or thoracostomy (5%), and pronouncing life extinct (6%). CONCLUSION: MERT-E is a high value asset which makes an important contribution to patient care. A relatively small proportion of missions require interventions beyond the capability of well-trained military paramedics; the indirect benefits of a physician are more difficult to quantify.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services/standards , Emergency Medical Technicians/standards , Emergency Medicine/standards , Military Medicine/organization & administration , Air Ambulances , Attitude of Health Personnel , Emergency Medical Services/organization & administration , Emergency Medical Technicians/organization & administration , Emergency Medicine/organization & administration , Humans , Prospective Studies , United Kingdom
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