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Trauma Point Of Entry.
Louis N. Molino, Sr. LNMolino at aol.comFri Apr 25 19:46:36 BST 2008
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Since when do all states have staewide protocols? LNM Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T -----Original Message----- From: Anthony Caruso <medic541 at hotmail.com> Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 13:50:48 To:"Trauma & Critical Care mailing list" <trauma-list at trauma.org> Subject: Trauma Point Of Entry. LB, I'm not quite sure how it's political. EMT's on scene make the determination . If the patient(s) has been traumatized severely enough then they go to the appropriate hospital. State wide protocols dictate that. No way around it. Calling for a chopper is a tool that we have. What may be the underlying cause here is the lack of education possibly. More is needed to be able to identify the patients that have been severely traumatized and make the appropriate transport decision. My decision to transport who where and when has never been influenced by any political causes. Just my 2 cents. AMC. > To: trauma-list at trauma.org> Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 16:46:56 +0000> Subject: Re: (no subject)> > Sorry about that, I meant they are usually in the air once we call in 4-8 mins which they can get to a scene anywhere in the county within minutes, depending though on how we receive the call , we sometimes call while responding to let them know what we are going on and put them on standby which shortens there responce because they will go ahead to the aircraft, once we determine need we let them know to launch or not, Air Evac does flying standbys , they will launch and head your direction and we can cancel them dependant on need for airlft or not.> LB> -------------- Original message from "Andrew J Bowman" <andrewj.bowman at gmail.com>: -------------- > > > > How can you safely get a helicopter to a scene within 4 minutes of calling > > them? > > > > You call, they receive call, re-check weather, quick aircraft check, > > start-up, lift off, fly to scene, land, get out. > > > > Andrew > > > > > > > is just not acceptable! We have one of the four of Vanderbilt's BK's right > > > here at our local hospital, and if they are on the pad we can usually > > > either get them to a scene within 4-8 mins of calling for them, > > > > -- > > trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG > > To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: > > http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ > --> trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG> To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:> http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ _________________________________________________________________ Back to work after baby–how do you know when you’re ready? http://lifestyle.msn.com/familyandparenting/articleNW.aspx?cp-documentid=5797498&ocid=T067MSN40A0701A-- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/
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