flight nurse

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Warrior by Nelly

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Page 1: Flight Nurse

Warrior by Nelly

Page 2: Flight Nurse

What is a Flight Nurse?

• RN who provides prehospital and emergency or critical nursing care to all types patients during transportation from the scene to the hospital.

• You need extensive training and certification.

• Arch or Airvac requires 5 years of ICU experience.

Page 3: Flight Nurse

What do they do?

• Pick up• Transport• Stabilize• They provide more care than an EMT. Ie.

start an arterial line, intubate • They can get patients to where they need

to go faster than ground transportation

Page 4: Flight Nurse
Page 5: Flight Nurse

What goes down…

• Debbie’s experience shadowing a flight nurse.

Page 8: Flight Nurse

What do I need to do to do this?!• ARCH or Airvac 5 yrs of ICU, ER, or paramedic• Have to be a registered nurse in MO and IL• 1. Get Certified!

– Certified Emergency Nurse (CEN) – Certified Critical Care Nurse (CCRN) – Paramedic (EMT-P) – NOTE: The Certified Flight Registered Nurse (CFRN) is not included as a prerequisite. Obtaining the

CFRN without having flight experience is a bit like trying to take the CEN without ever having worked in an emergency setting.

• 2. Get Trained!– Basic Cardiac Life Support (BCLS) – Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) – Air-Medical Crew National Standard Curriculum – Any altitude physiology course (Karen Hamilton with Aeromedical Transport Specialists, Inc., offers a

course called "The Basics and Beyond: Aeromedical Concepts, her phone number is 804.874.4030. Karen's a bit O/C but as a result I would rate her course as "outstanding".)

– Trauma Nurse Core Course (TNCC) – Pre-hospital Advanced Life Support (PHTLS) – Basic Trauma Life Support (BTLS) – Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) – Neonatal Resuscitation Course (NRC) – Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD) (even if you don't join a team)

• Need to do shadowing such as a rotation in pediatrics, OB, med-surg floor.– It takes 80-100 hours of continuing education!

• Cox, M. (1999, February 15). SO, YOU WANNA BE A FLIGHT NURSE?!. Retrieved July 7, 2009, from http://www.seaox.com/wannabe

Page 9: Flight Nurse

Will I get a job immediately when I’m certified?

• Patience is a virtue…• Turnover rate is less than 5% a year

– Because this is such an amazing job!• Hang in there if you want to do this• If work at a hospital already you have a

better chance of getting on a team.• Especially if you know them. NETWORK!

Page 11: Flight Nurse

Where can I do this?• Childrens & Cardinal

Glennon have nursing teams but ARCH has the helicopter.

• ARCH has 12 locations that service Missouri and Illinois

• AirVac has 10 location that service MO and IL

• Every state has their own companies.

Page 12: Flight Nurse

Who do you take care of?

• Serve the whole community (including vulnerable populations)– Pediatrics– rural

• Locations that don’t have access to a Level I trauma center.

• The nurses that work for Children’s and Glennon transport patients from other hospitals.– They don’t do organ transport.

Page 13: Flight Nurse

Benefits this nursing role provides to the community

• Safe….• QUICK transportation to the hospital

• NOTE: Helicopter is much better transport than ambulance for a critical situation.

• When time is critical, air transport saves valuable minutes. They make a difference between life and death.

Page 14: Flight Nurse

Who does the flight nurse collaborate with?

• Works with paramedics and hospitals.– Paramedics at the scene– MDs give approval for orders– Dispatch regarding transfer patients to hospitals

• They also work with police officers and firefighters– Safely remove patients from accidents/scenes

• The scene can be chaotic but you’re there to get only one patient even if there is 20 patients at the scene.

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Page 16: Flight Nurse

How do you promote health and prevent disease in your environment?

• You will see nurses at the hospital DC “field IVs” or other lines started.– Why?

• These situations are dirty.– Before starting an IV, the flight nurse took 3 alcohol

wipes to clean a site and every wipe was filthy.

• You have to try to be as clean as you can while trying to get the patient to the hospital as quick as possible.

Page 17: Flight Nurse

what impact does a flight nurse have on the larger community

• They get a critical care patient out of a harmful situation.

• In rural areas, patients would be at the will of a hospital that may not have the ability to care for a critically ill patient.

Page 18: Flight Nurse

So you think you wanna do this? I DO!!!!

Reference

• 2009). ARCH air medical service - the leader in critical care air transport . Retrieved  July 3, 2009, from Arch Air Medical Web site: http://www.archairmedical.com/

• Cox, M. (1999, February 15). SO, YOU WANNA BE A FLIGHT NURSE?!. Retrieved  July 7, 2009, from  http://www.seaox.com/wannabe

• Gray Interactive Media , (2009 May 7). Flight nurse. Retrieved July 6, 2009, from  WJHG Web site: http://www.wjhg.com/the7scene/headlines/44563282.html#

• Nies, M.A, & McEwen, M (Eds.). (2007). Community/public health nursing. St. Louis:  Saunders. 

• Interview:  Chris, RN;Lisa, RN; Jim, Pilot