Emergency Medicine = Combat Aviation!

There is currently a huge amount of interest in lessons that medicine can learn from aviation, including concepts like CRM and the use of checklists. Efforts are being made to select and integrate these concepts into a form specific to emergency medicine – Andy Buck’s blog Resus Room Management is a great example of this, and is well worth a read.

Joe-NovakJoe Novak, an emergency physician who is a former F15 pilot (!) feels that due to its chaotic nature emergency medicine is analogous to combat aviation! These concepts are discussed in a lecture presented on Scott Weingart’s emcrit.org

Click HERE for the show notes and podcast

 

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In combat aviation:

  1. Aviate
  2. Navigate
  3. Communicate

In EM & Critical Care:

  1. Resuscitate
  2. Differentiate
  3. Communicate

“Total Immersion” Simulation…..!!

The Auckland Rescue Helicopter Trust (ARHT) works with multiple agencies, including NZ Defence, and has the good fortune from time to time to train alongside these groups.

On the 14th May we were invited to train in the ultimate in-situ simulation venue – the Royal New Zealand Navy Damage Control School with the RNZN Sea Safety Training Squadron. This involved fire training and vessel damage control (for this read blocking lots of holes letting water into a ship simulator…!)

Present were 5 ARHT crewman, our physical instructor, and several representatives from the New Zealand Police Search and Rescue unit.  I went along as the HEMS medic representative and to get an idea of how in-situ simulation is conducted in other services.  It was the epitome of a multidisciplinary team!

We started with the Fire-Fighting Training Unit (FFTU). After instruction of the use of the differing methods of fighting fires, donning fire-retardant suits, gloves and masks we firstly made up our own foam fire extinguishers, then used them on a gas fire. We also did the same on oil and diesel fires with fire blankets, CO2 extinguishers and lastly dry powder extinguishers.

fightingfire

alanafightingfire

We then moved on to the Damage Control Training Unit (DCTU).  After some brief instruction on ‘shoring up’ methods (how to block leaks in the ship), we moved into the unit for a tour before the real fun began. The DCTU is a faithful recreation of a section of a ship three decks high.  It is used to train Navy personnel in Damage Control (leak stopping and removal of flood water) and casualty evacuation. The DCTU uses hydraulics to simulate the rocking motion of a ship at sea; this enables students to experience the problems which can arise from the combination of motion and free surface water.

navy                                                               (The Simulator is is the background of this picture)

I was appointed team leader for my team of 7 – I was reliably assured this was due to me being small (5′), mouthy and Irish… It was a rather daunting prospect.  Even with the training and experience I have in a leadership capacity; I was now leading a team of people in something that I had no prior experience or knowledge of.  Add in the team-mix as described above, then lock us all in a confined space, with freezing cold water pouring (under massive pressure) in through multiple holes in the walls, roof and floor, plus darkness, smoke, noise and the motion of a rocking ship – doubly daunting…

Not surprisingly it was extremely difficult to keep overall situational awareness – I did most of the team leading being “hands –off”, but with my backside blocking a leak in the wall!  Despite this the team worked together brilliantly. We had allocated roles beforehand.  There was great use of closed loop communication, once a job was done those free returned to the team leader for further task allocation.  We managed to shore up all the major leaks in the engine room (where we started) then moved to help the second team out in the mess hall with further leaks.  We finished in waist deep water (waist deep if you were 6ft tall that is…!).

Escape was though an overhead hatch, weighed down by water from leaks in the decks overhead – again great teamwork was put to use getting the stronger team members up a rope ladder first to open the hatch against pressure and then help the rest up through the subsequent torrent of water.

There are cameras all through the DCTU – everything was filmed, the footage is then usually viewed in a de-briefing session following the scenario.  Unfortunately due to time constraints we didn’t manage to see the footage from our exercise.

A few colleagues were wondering what exactly an emergency medicine / HEMS doctor was doing on a Navy damage control exercise as (to quote) “it’s not something you’ll ever need to do… the ED is hardly going to sink…”.  However I feel there were multiple comparisons to this training and what we do every day in the workplace, be that in the ED or on the helicopter.  In-situ simulation aside, today proved an invaluable crisis resource management and team-building exercise for the ARHT group.  14 people from different services, with differing physical attributes and prior experience working together in a completely alien environment, doing something they have never done before…  It suddenly dawned on me this was no different to your usual gnarly trauma resuscitation crew on an ED night shift, except with maybe a few more lives at stake!

For more insight into how other high-performance services train to mitigate for the “fallibility of the human mind under great pressure” and how this can be translated into healthcare, see this post from the blog Resus Room Management. This has a link to the BBC Horizon documentary “How to avoid mistakes in Surgery” where Kevin Fong (a well-known Anaesthetist and Intensivist from the UK) explores human factors in medicine.

I would like to thank the instructors from the RNZN Sea Safety Training Squadron and also ARHT crewman Ati Wynyard for organising this very worthwhile training day.

Preparation for patient retrieval – podcast and checklist

The first RFDS aircraft

The first RFDS aircraft

While Auckland HEMS does not currently perform many inter-hospital transfers, we anticipate that we will be doing more of this work in the future.

Our colleagues in Australia do a lot of these missions, and have produced some great FOAM resources.

This audio clip (right click to save) is a podcast from Minh Le Cong at prehospitalmed.com, in which he, along with Cliff Reid and Brian Burns from Greater Sydney Area HEMS discuss pearls and tips in preparing the critical patient for retrieval and transport.

Minh’s page for the podcast is here, and includes a very useful post by Tim Leeuwenburg from ruraldoctors.net in the comments section.

Tim’s checklist for patient transport is located here.