LifeLine (medical transport)

N197LL landing at Hulman Field, Terre Haute
N192LL on IU Methodist Helipad

[1][2][3] IU Health LifeLine is Indiana's first critical care transport system in the state, commencing air medical transport operations on July 15, 1979 from Methodist Hospital Indianapolis. Their first patient transport took place July 16, 1979, a horrific vehicle accident on Hwy 37 in Morgan County. Since that time, IU Health LifeLine has transported more than 90,000 accident-free patient transports.

LifeLine is a combined program, providing comprehensive services to all age groups. The Adult LifeLine crews consist of a Pilot, Flight Nurse, and Flight Paramedic. The Neonatal/Pediatric Crews (3) are based out of Indianapolis and consist of a Registered Nurse, Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT), and/or Neonatal Nurse Practitioner and focus on critically ill children and newborns. Additionally, all medical crew members are required to maintain certifications pertinent to their scope of practice (CFRN, FP-C, CCRN, RRT-NPS).

LifeLine helicopters fly throughout the State of Indiana. LifeLine's fleet consists of one MBB/Kawasaki BK 117 and five Eurocopter EC 145 twin-engine helicopters with an average cruise speed of 150 miles per hour. LifeLine is an IFR (instrument flight rule) program which allows them to fly when other services can not due to poor weather conditions.

Each outlying base (Lafayette, Terre Haute, Columbus, and Richmond) operate an adult Mobile Intensive Care Unit or MICU for when meteorlogical conditions/IFR do not permit air medical transport.

LifeLine utilizes the most up-to-date, state of the art equipment available, including: Zoll X series monitors, Hamilton T-1 ventilators, Maquet balloon pumps, iStat blood analyzer and GE V-scan ultrasound. LifeLine was the first and currently the only air transport provider in the state that carry blood products. They carry four units of O-negative on every mission and they have provided this service since 1996. Partnering with IU Health Methodist Trauma Services, an additional benefit being utilized is field trauma surgeons. This program allows trauma surgeons the ability to travel to the scene of an accident, anytime anywhere throughout the state. They can perform life saving surgical procedures for extended entrapments or farm machinery injuries and then continue care during transport.

LifeLine provides comprehensive critical care medical transport service access across Indiana and portions of Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio with bases located at:

To learn more about IU Health LifeLine, click link: http://iuhealth.org/health-professionals/lifeline/

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.