Please get me out of here: The difficult decision making in fit-to-fly assessments for international fixed-wing air ambulance operations

Introduction: With international travel for leisure and business almost back to pre-pandemic levels, demand for repatriation due to illness and injury abroad is increasing [1,2]. In any repatriation, there is considerable pressure on all involved to organize a rapid transport back home. Delay in suc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Main Authors: Alex Veldman, Michael Diefenbach, Laurent Taymans, Bettina Vadera, Joseph Lelo, Yann Rouaud
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tmaid.2023.102613
https://doaj.org/article/bd7826ae68c748a1bc8590b30cd9db89
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Summary:Introduction: With international travel for leisure and business almost back to pre-pandemic levels, demand for repatriation due to illness and injury abroad is increasing [1,2]. In any repatriation, there is considerable pressure on all involved to organize a rapid transport back home. Delay in such action may be perceived by the patient, relatives, and the public as an attempt by the underwriter to hold off on an expensive air ambulance mission [3-5]. Methods: Review of the available literature and analysis of assistance and air ambulance Companies’ infrastructure and processes to identify risk and benefit of executing or delaying aeromedical transport for international travellers. Key findings: While patients of almost any severity can be safely transported over great distances in modern air ambulance aircraft, immediate transport is not always in the patient's best interest. Each call for assistance requires a complex and dynamic risk-benefit analysis with multiple stakeholders involved to achieve an optimized outcome. Opportunities for risk mitigation within the assistance team include active case management with clearly assigned ownership, as well as medical and logistical experience with knowledge on local treatment opportunities and limitations. On the air ambulance side, modern equipment, experience, standards and procedures as well as accreditation can reduce risk. Conclusions: Each patient evaluation remains a highly individual risk-benefit assessment. Optimal outcomes require a clear understanding of responsibilities, flawless communication and significant expertise among the key decision-makers. Negative outcomes are mostly associated with insufficient information, communication, inadequate experience or a lack of ownership/assigned responsibility.