I fLy pLaNeS
Living an Honest Life
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2003
- Posts
- 129
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.......Be very cautious about the particular operation. Many operators let their flights be dictated and run not by the pilots but by the medical personnel. The nurses tend to make a lot more money than the pilots, and their opinions tend to carry more weight. In such an operation, when a pilot makes a safety of flight decision and the nurse tries to countermand it, the safest and best choice is to walk away. Always be prepared to do that if the need be...and be prepared for that occasion to arise if you operate in the ambulance business for very long.
A woman has been run over by her own truck. She slid off the road in a snowstorm. While standing outside her truck, the truck was struck by another vehicle and it went over here, pinning her and inuring her. She has been extricated and has experienced not only physical trauma, but a heart attack. Weather is low at the pickup airport, a rural field with minimal facilities. Weather is low at the destination airport, some 200 miles from the pickup field. Due to road conditions this woman cannot be transported by ambulance; it's up to you. If you don't pick her up, she will die. What do you do?
At the outfit I'd like to get on with, they don't even tell you the circumstances of the patient. They only ask if the flight is possible.
Yes, it's hard to put that information aside when the patient roles up in an ambulance and your company is stupid enough to put a distraught family member in the right seat with you.Having a life in the balance adds a dynamic that most of us wouldn't ever have to consider for most any other trip we fly.
that's my $0.02 worth.
Yes, it's hard to put that information aside when the patient roles up in an ambulance and your company is stupid enough to put a distraught family member in the right seat with you.
I flew my share of transplant teams and expediting was even worse than normal air ambulance missions.
Many missions require leaving with no idea about actual weather conditions, it's just part of the program when there is no instrument approach at the destination. Maybe not the best paying job in the world but very rewarding.
When I flew LifeFlight the hospital's standard request was "Check the weather, call us back if it's OK." Never any mention of the patient.
I have a hard time believing you were cool and collected about anything considering how defensive you are on your self imposed pedestal that you make for yourself.while the medical crew arrived and boarded...to do it right. I knew others who subscribed to the panic mentality..."It's an emergency. Just go!" Very, very wrong
I operated ambulance in the same area and always found a way to do it legally, in compliance with the regulation. It's a shame you were unable.My experience includes neonates, transplant teams and normal transport stuff, predominantly in New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona. Many airports have no instrument approaches, and with MEA's from 10,000 to 16,000 feet, most reports were useless, were there ways to do it legally, yes.
Perhaps. In my many years of aerial firefighting emergency operations, law enforcment surveillance and emergency operations, and air ambulance/air evac emergency operations, etc...I suppose I never found the need to panic and break rules like you did. Chances are I did it a lot longer and a lot more than you, over a substantially wider area of operations...but perhaps given a few more years of experience I'll learn to place imagined needs above the safe and legal operation of the aircraft, too.Sorry, I didn't live in your perfect world and think you may be just a bit naive for thinking there is one, I am a long way from ambulance operations now and still haven't found it.
You advocate violation of the regulation. Interesting.Maybe I didn't live in your perfect world, in my 135 experience, rules were broken, the key to safety in my opinion is not necessarily following all the rules and regulations, but knowing your own limitations. With 10+ years experience in 135, I have yet to see an operator that doesn't occasionally break the rules.
Panic? How do you assume that I've panicked, I don't ever recall panicking in my experience as a pilot, maybe you can refresh my memory. As I said, in my experiences in 135 operations, there were no operators that I worked for the complied fully with regulations. I really don't think you have a clue what a real professional is, I have had a very successful career and can receive recommendations from all still in business.professional
Please state the name of the air ambulance companies you worked for, chances are that I am familiar with them, I was in that area from 81 to 96, I would be curious to know what companies in that area were complying fully with regs.You can justify your illegal operation any way you like. It's wrong, of course. Justification is the narcotic of the soul. You, apparently, are an addict
I operated ambulance in the same area and always found a way to do it legally, in compliance with the regulation. It's a shame you were unable.