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Oh, look.....propaganda!
Stephen Richey stephen.richey at gmail.comWed Jul 2 21:37:51 BST 2008
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Hubris is great ain't it? =============================== Medical Helicopter Crash Unlikely Here, Officials Say <http://ads.mgnetwork.com/RealMedia/ads/click_nx.ads/www.tbo.com/news/story.htm@Right1?x>By KEITH MORELLI <kmorelli at tampatrib.com> | The Tampa Tribune Published: July 2, 2008 TAMPA - The crash last weekend of two medical helicopters in Arizona that killed six people is unlikely to happen here because of all the precautions in place, said an Aeromed manager who oversees the landing and taking off of air ambulances at Tampa General Hospital. On any given day, helicopters can be seen hovering throughout the skies of Tampa. There are news helicopters, law enforcement helicopters, privately owned helicopters and the medical helicopters, which are shuttling patients with medical emergencies to hospitals. John Scott manages the Aeromed program at Tampa General, where such helicopters frequently. "We have lots of helicopters that land here," he said today. "We have all kinds of sophisticated systems in place here." There is Tampa International Airport nearby, which has a handle on every aircraft in the area, he said. Plus the hospital itself has a mini control tower which coordinates flights in and out of the hospital's landing zone. Communications frequencies are well-known among approaching pilots, he said. Redundancies in protocol mean a safer sky over the large hospital on Davis Islands, he said. He said he didn't know what happened in Arizona on Sunday, but, "I can say that I feel very comfortable with what we've got here, which are a lot of systems in place. We're vested in safety." Tampa General has three helicopters of its own. One is stationed at the hospital, while the others are in Sebring and Inverness. He couldn't say how many times a helicopter lands at Tampa General. "Some days, it's all day long," he said. "Some days it doesn't even happen." On Sunday, a helicopter taking a patient with a medical emergency from the Grand Canyon collided into another medical helicopter carrying a patient near a northern Arizona hospital. The crash killed six people and critically injured a nurse. The collision Sunday, east of Flagstaff Medical Center, barely missed a neighborhood, sparing the community from falling debris. An explosion on one of the helicopters after the crash injured two emergency workers who arrived with a ground ambulance company. They suffered minor burns and were taken to a hospital. A medical helicopter did crash in the Bay area eight years ago, killing the pilot and two crew members aboard. The aircraft was not transporting patients at the time. The crash occurred near Weedon Island in Pinellas County. A subsequent federal investigation concluded that the Bayflite helicopter was flying too low and attributed the crash to the pilot, 39-year-old Mark Wallace. Wallace had logged 4,367 flight hours and was at the controls of the Eurocopter BK117 as it flew from Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg to St. Joseph's Hospital in Tampa. The day was clear with a visibility of 10 miles, but the chopper flew into a 649-foot radio tower near Weedon Island and plummeted to the ground. Paramedic Erik Hangartner, 29, and flight nurse Alicia Betita-Collins, 51, died. Reporter Keith Morelli can be reached at (813) 259-7760 or kmorelli at tampatrib.com. -- Stephen L. Richey, CRT Aviation Injury Research Project Leader Saginaw Valley State University Phone: 248-366-4452
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