Trauma Hawk Aero-Medical Program

Traumahawk Air Ambulance

Departing a crash scene with a trauma victim.
Multi-Department Specifications
Air Ambulance Establishment Multi-Department Establishment in 1990
Helicopter(s) Owner/Operator Health Care District of Palm Beach County
Medical Treatment Provider Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue
Helicopter Specifications
Make Sikorsky S76-C+
Year Made 1999
Amount 2
Staffing
Multi Department Crew
Pilot/Flight Crew 1 - Health Care District
Medical Crew 2 - Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue
Medical Crew (EXT) Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue Paramedic & RN
Miscellaneous
Average Daily Flights 2-5

The Trauma Hawk Aero-Medical Program provides air ambulance services for Palm Beach County, Florida. On scene paramedics will decide whether or not a "Traumahawk" is necessary in a situation. On average, a Traumahawk is dispatched between 1 and 5 times a day for traumatic injuries, including those from vehicle accidents to sports injuries, as well as transport for stroke and cardiac patients. Operated by the Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue, the service uses two identical 1999 Sikorsky S76-C+ helicopters as air ambulances.

Contents

History

Prior to 1990, Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department helicopters were used for air transport of critically ill and injured patients to area hospitals. With Palm Beach County's population rapidly growing, it was evident that a formal countywide Trauma System was necessary. In November 1990, the Trauma Hawk Aero-Medical Transport Program was established with the purchase of a Bell 412 helicopter. The mission of the program is to save lives and reduce injury mortality through rapid transport of patients to specialized health care facilities such as; trauma, burn, spinal cord and pediatric hospitals. The helicopter was owned by the Health Care District of Palm Beach County. Originally,m the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department provided the pilots and performed the maintenance, and Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue provide two flight Paramedics.

Today, Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue, the Health Care District operates two air ambulances in Palm Beach County. The two Sikorsky S76-C+ Trauma Hawk air ambulances are identically equipped helicopters that can carry two patients each and up to four medical attendants if needed. The aircraft are available to respond and provide emergency services to all municipalities throughout Palm Beach County. On special occasions, the Traumahawk will be asked to provide emergency transportation for hospitals, and other Fire-Rescue departments throughout the state.

General information

The two Traumahawks are hangared at Palm Beach Int'l Airport in West Palm Beach, FL. They are located at the South-East corner of the airport, next to the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office hangar.

Crew Assignments

Each helicopter is staffed with one pilot, one Registered Nurse (RN) and one Paramedic. The RN's and paramedics are Palm Beach County Fire Rescue employees. Palm Beach County Fire Rescue maintains the Advance Life Support Transport License issued by the State of Florida. The pilots are Health Care District (HCD) employees.

How the Traumahawk is dispatched

To the Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue Communications Center (dispatch), the Traumahawk Hangar is known as "Station 82", however, the helicopters are paged as "TH1" and "TH2" or "Traumahawk A" and "Traumahawk B". They receive pages and alerts just like every other fire station in the county. When Fire-Rescue arrive on scene (vehicle accident, misc. traumatic injury, fall, etc.), Paramedics will asses the situation, and request that the Traumahawk be dispatched to the scene, via portable radios. In some cases, the dispatcher may automatically dispatch Traumahawk based on information that a 9-1-1 caller will give when calling in an emergency. The dispatcher will then page Traumahawk, and a crew will prepare for takeoff. Unless the call meets criteria for an "auto-fly" (confirmed shooting, multiple calls for a bad vehicle crash, etc.), the crew does not fly until on-scene Paramedics verify the situation to meet either "Trauma Alert", "Cardiac Alert", or "Stroke Alert" criteria, and they are told to do so by Dispatch. Both of the helicopters, as well as each crew member have portable radios for communication. Each radio is programmed with miscellaneous channels and Talkgroups within the Palm Beach County Motorola Type II SmartZone Radio System. (wiki) These radios are used to communicate with dispatch, police, and Fire-Rescue Paramedic already on scene. Most often, they are used to get patient/stability information from Paramedics on the ground, before they arrive. Once the patient is on board, the crew will change their radio channel to the hospitals radio channel, to which they are transporting. This communication structure has been demonstrated numerous times in the T.V. Shows "EMERGENCY!" and "ER".

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See also

References

External links