Jim Mobley, RN, CEN, CFRN, EMT-P - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Jim Mobley, RN, CEN, CFRN, EMT-P

Description:

We Have an Aircraft Down! Lessons Learned From an Air Medical Crash Jim Mobley, RN, CEN, CFRN, EMT-P Chief Flight Nurse Mike Clumpner, MBA, NREMT-P, CCEMT-P, FP-C – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:120
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: MikeCl1
Category:
Tags: cen | cfrn | emt | jim | mobley | nurses | stress

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Jim Mobley, RN, CEN, CFRN, EMT-P


1
We Have an Aircraft Down! Lessons Learned From
an Air Medical Crash
  • Jim Mobley, RN, CEN, CFRN, EMT-P
  • Chief Flight Nurse
  • Mike Clumpner, MBA, NREMT-P, CCEMT-P, FP-C
  • Flight Paramedic
  • Regional One
  • Spartanburg, South Carolina

2
There is an Aircraft Down!
  • 911 Dispatcher Newberry County 911, where is
    your emergency?
  • Caller Uh, yes were out here on the
    interstate, and there is a crash out here
  • 911 Dispatcher Do what now?
  • Caller Im on the interstate
  • 911 Dispatcher Uh-huh
  • Caller Im on the interstate and there was a
    crash out here. LifeStar came and picked somebody
    up and we think the helicopter just crashed out
    here.
  • 911 Dispatcher You think the helicopter
    crashed?
  • Caller There is a helicopter that picked
    somebody up
  • 911 Dispatcher Right
  • Caller And the helicopterit just like fell
    out of the sky

3
(No Transcript)
4
Accident/Incident Reporting
  • United States Department of Transportation lists
    in FAR Part 830 the definition of an accident
  • An occurrence associated with the operation
    of an aircraft which takes place between the time
    any person boards the aircraft with the intention
    of flight and all such persons have disembarked,
    and in which any person suffers death or serious
    injury, or in which the aircraft receives
    substantial damage.

5
Accident/Incident Reporting
  • Serious injury is defined as
  • Requiring hospitalization greater than
    twenty-four hours within seven days of the
    accident
  • Results in fractures of any major bone(s)
  • Causes severe hemorrhages, nerve, muscle or
    tendon damage
  • Involves any internal organ
  • Involves second or third degree burns to more
    than five percent of the body

6
Accident/Incident Reporting
  • Substantial damage is defined as
  • Damage or failure which will adversely affect the
    structural strength, performance, or flight
    characteristics of the aircraft, and which would
    normally require major repair or replacement of
    the affected component.

7
Accident/Incident Reporting
  • Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    (OSHA) reporting
  • 1904.7(a) Basic requirement. You must consider
    an injury or illness to meet the general
    recording criteria, and therefore to be
    recordable, if it results in any of the
    following death, days away from work, restricted
    work or transfer to another job, medical
    treatment beyond first aid, or loss of
    consciousness. You must also consider a case to
    meet the general recording criteria if it
    involves a significant injury or illness
    diagnosed by a physician or other licensed health
    care professional, even if it does not result in
    death, days away from work, restricted work or
    job transfer, medical treatment beyond first aid,
    or loss of consciousness.

www.osha.gov
8
Air Ambulance Accidents
  • Since 1997 the air medical industry fleet has
    doubled to over 700 aircraft
  • Patient transports by air ambulance are
    increasing five percent a year
  • Although there is a rising trend in the number of
    accidents there is also a tremendous increase of
    aircraft in the fleet and population served by
    air ambulances

9
Air Ambulance Accidents
  • In the United States there was a twelve percent
    increase in flight hours between 1998 and 1999
  • Utilizing the exposure rate and normalizing it
    over time, medical helicopter accident rates per
    100,000 flight hours are lower than those of all
    helicopter operations, general aviation and
    scheduled Part 135 operations.

University of Chicago Safety Committee, A Safety
Review and Risk Assessment in Air Medical
Transport 2002
10
Air Ambulance Accidents
  • In the mid-1980s the rate of medical helicopter
    accidents was 13.42/100,000 flight hours
  • Averaged over the past five years 1999-2004, the
    medical helicopter accident rate has fallen to
    3.45/100,000 flight hours

Association of Air Medical Services (AAMS)
11
Air Ambulance Accidents
  • 300,000 medical flights are conducted annually in
    the United States
  • A study published in American Emergency Medicine
    found that between years 1998 and 2000, anywhere
    from 11,000 to 65,000 people would have died if
    they would not have been transported by air
    medical
  • A study published in the Journal of Trauma in
    2002 shows that air medical transport reduces
    mortality by twenty-four percent

12
Air Ambulance Accidents
  • The following agencies are actively working to
    lower the air medical accident rate
  • Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
  • National Aeronautical and Space Administration
    (NASA)
  • Association of Air Medical Services (AAMS)
  • Helicopter Association International (HAI)
  • National Association of EMS Pilots (NEMPSA)
  • International Association of Flight Paramedics
    (IAFP)
  • Air and Surface Transport Nurses Association
    (ASTNA)
  • Air Medical Physicians Associations (AMPA)
  • National Association of Air Communication
    Specialists (NAACS)

13
National Transportation Safety Board Investigation
  • Independent agency created in 1967
  • Ten field offices nationwide
  • Federal Go Team
  • Regional Go Team
  • Go Teams arrive at the accident scene as soon as
    possible
  • Team personnel depend on accident size
  • Average on scene investigation time of four to
    ten days

14
National Transportation Safety Board Investigation
  • Press briefings conducted regularly
  • "The Safety Board will disseminate to the public
    all information regarding the accident
    investigation, either through our Board Member,
    Public Affairs Officer or Investigator-in-Charge.
    We will hold regular briefings to the press.
    Please refrain from discussing the accident
    investigation in public, or giving information
    about it to the press. Any violation of this
    request will be considered a serious infraction
    of Board rules."

15
National Transportation Safety Board Regions
16
Continuing Mission/Re-training
  • Have all personnel conduct training as a team
  • If pilot error is found, then conduct specific
    training to address the problem(s)
  • All flight team personnel must attend the
    following
  • Team debriefing/critical incident stress
    debriefing
  • Crew resource management

17
Post-Crash Reflections
  • Stan Coss, Vice-President, Med-Trans Corporation
  • Critical to have a Post Accident Incident Plan in
    place prior to an accident and everyone must be
    familiar with the plan
  • Post Accident Incident Plan must be approved by
    the FAA prior to implementation
  • Scrutinize all statements made to the media for
    accuracy
  • Litigation may be influenced by employee
    satisfaction
  • Establish on-call administrators who can handle
    an accident anytime of day
  • Flight services must return to operations as soon
    as possible so that you dont lose established
    presence
  • After accident review/critical incident stress
    debriefing for all members of the flight team

18
Post-Crash Reflections
  • Renee Romberger, Vice President of Professional
    Services, Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System
  • Have the leadership team visible
  • Support families
  • Involve the community with the memorial
  • Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD)
    important
  • Re-start program when everyone is ready
  • Keep remaining crew members well informed

19
Post-Crash Reflections
  • Jimmy Greene, Director of Transportation,
    Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System
  • Be able to confirm the missing aircraft
  • Utilize flight tracking software
  • Be willing to justify the need for air medical
    transport and justify the pilots decision to fly
  • Have one public relations representative for the
    media
  • Immediately transport personnel data to crash
    site for law enforcement and coroner
  • Offer a public relations liaison to each family
  • Involve all members of the flight team in
    post-accident actions

20
Post-Crash Reflections
  • Doug Silk, REMT-P, Program Coordinator, Regional
    One Air Medical Service
  • Make every effort to notify families as soon as
    possible
  • Secure base to ensure no unauthorized personnel
  • Liaison with agency that requested mission
  • Start back operations when crew is ready
  • Use hospital/vendor legal team for advice
  • Ask questions of NTSB team, cooperate with them
  • Monitor crews for problems, afford opportunity
    for discussion

21
Post-Crash Reflections
  • Heidi Jameson, Marketing Manager, Spartanburg
    Regional Healthcare System
  • Establish Emergency Operations Center as soon as
    possible
  • Establish Public Information Officer
  • Press releases as soon as practical. Keep
    employees informed
  • Arrange media interviews, keep media informed
  • Cooperate with media
  • Give honest answers
  • Drill for similar occurrences

22
(No Transcript)
23
Contact Information
  • Jim Mobley
  • FlightNurseJim_at_aol.com
  • Mike Clumpner
  • mclumpner_at_regional-one.com

24
References
  • Bledsoe, E. Medical Helicopter Accidents in the
    United States A 10-Year Review. Journal of
    Trauma-Injury Infection and Critical Care.
    56(6)1325-1329, June 2004
  • University of Chicago Safety Committee. A Safety
    Review and Risk Assessment in Air Medical
    Transport. 2002
  • American Emergency Medicine. Cost Effectiveness
    Analysis of Helicopter EMS for Trauma Patients.
    2002
  • Journal of Trauma. Helicopter Transport and Blunt
    Trauma Mortality. 2002
  • Occupational Safety and Health Association.
    Available online at www.osha.gov
  • Coss, S. Personal interview. Conducted June 2005
  • Greene, J. Personal interview. Conducted June
    2005
  • Jameson, H. Personal interview. Conducted 27
    June 2005
  • Romberger, R. Personal interview. Conducted 28
    June 2005
  • Silk, C. Personal interview. Conducted 27 June
    2005
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com