Auckland HEMS prehospital blood transfusion – coming soon to a helicopter near you

Bloody hell.

Pretty much summarizes the severe traumas that define the essence of our trade.

And sometimes, the answer to critical bleeding is to give blood.

We are grateful to our colleagues at Sydney HEMS, who advise: “blood is provided to transfuse patients with life-threatening bleeding after meticulous attention to hemorrhage control.”

Auckland HEMS is poised to begin providing prehospital blood as part of our bundle of critical clinical interventions. We are fortunate to collaborate with the New Zealand Blood Service and with our local District Health Board to provide this service. http://www.nzblood.co.nz

Herein, please find our training video. We welcome your feedback.

Our draft Blood SOP is undergoing usability testing with our clinical teams. Once finalized, we will share this for FOAM.

This is an unsystematic review of the current literature. A few themes are emerging:

1. There is now evidence of survival benefit in the military and in the civilian literature.
2. Beyond packed red blood cells, services are also exploring the use of plasma, and of whole blood.
3. Pouring in blood is frivolous without meticulous hemorrhage control.
4. If we are to forge strong links in the chain of trauma survival, these critically ill patients must move quickly to definitive care. We are working with our local trauma centres to move seamlessly from out of hospital into ED, Resus, Operating Theatres and Critical Care. Please share your experiences with us.
Dr Chris Denny, Auckland HEMS Medical Director
(Auckland HEMS team members click HERE for access to the draft SOP)
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References:

Pretrauma Center Red Blood Cell Transfusion Is Associated With Reduced Mortality and Coagulopathy in Severely Injured Patients With Blunt Trauma

Prehospital blood transfusion in the en route management of severe combat trauma: a matched cohort study

Initial UK experience of prehospital blood transfusion in combat casualties

The effects of prehospital plasma on patients with injury: a prehospital plasma resuscitation

The feasibility of civilian prehospital trauma teams carrying and administering packed red blood cells

Prehospital Transfusion of Plasma and Red Blood Cells in Trauma Patients

Emergency whole-blood use in the field: a simplified protocol for collection and transfusion

Blood Far Forward–a whole blood research and training program for austere environments

Australian Patient Blood Management Guidelines

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…and for simulation purposes, here is a blunt force trauma scenario:

An unidentified surfer discovers the hazards of being caught inside at a notoriously shallow reefbreak during the biggest swell in two years..

The benefits of HEMS – more than just statistics!

As demonstrated by the previous post, studies that show a benefit for HEMS receive significant exposure within the medical and prehospital community. Due to the nature of the work, often relatively short times providing care to patients, and heterogeneity of patient/pathology/environment, benefits in terms of statistically significant improved patient outcomes are difficult to demonstrate.

In this post, I thought I’d outline some of the non-measurable benefits that have resulted from the advent of the Auckland HEMS (specifically by combining the existing paramedic/crewman team with a hospital-based doctor).

1) Improved understanding influencing ED care

Those of us who have ventured into the prehospital environment have gained a new understanding of the specific challenges involved, including those around the interface between the prehospital and hospital environment. With our newfound experience and the guidance of our paramedic colleagues from St John and ARHT, the way patients are handed over by prehospital staff and received by ED staff has evolved. This is best explained in this post, which contains a video demonstrating an effective handover template and use of a whiteboard for significantly unwell patients. As an ED doctor receiving patients and leading a resus team , this sort of process feels like  significant improvement in patient care – even if proving it with statistics would be just about impossible!

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Auckland ED ambulance bay

2) More communication and teamwork

While working in HEMS, we have built relationships with pilots, crewmen, paramedics, and other ARHT employees. What has been surprising however is the extent to which communication has changed between ED doctors (not just the HEMS doctor team) and our St John paramedic colleagues who are NOT directly involved with the Westpac Helicopter. In addition to evolved handovers as discussed above, there seems to be a lot more dialogue between paramedics and doctors in our ED. We are fielding more questions and requests for feedback about patients that are delivered to us, more clinical queries and requests for information in general, requests for paramedics to attend ED mortality/morbidity reviews where appropriate. Speaking for myself, this a two way process – with more of an understanding of how the prehospital setting works, I can now request additional information from paramedics with the aim of improving the care I deliver.

Recently, the benefits of more communication and dialogue were demonstrated to me when two St John paramedics who had delivered a critically ill trauma patient became active resus team members a considerable time after their handover. I was leading a team dealing with severe haemorrhagic shock, a massive transfusion requirement, extremely poor vascular access, a reduced LOC, and a predicted difficult airway. The patient also had multiple long bone fractures, and with all the doctors in my team tied up dealing with the other issues, the two paramedics rapidly and effectively splinted the fractures for me. (Thanks guys – and feel free to leave your Sager traction splint in the ED annnnny time you like…!) I am unsure whether this sort of collaboration would have occurred prior to the ‘cultural change’ that seems to have arrived since the advent of HEMS, but now it feels like there are no barriers in place.

A valuable addition to the ED team..

A valuable addition to the ED team..

3) Active safety management

Placing hospital-based doctors in an aeromedical setting exposes them to the systems required in aviation, including those regarding safety management (watch this video if you haven’t already!) Medicine is traditionally some years behind aviation with regards to active safety management, and while aviation systems cannot be directly be ported directly to medicine (this, plus the process of moving on from aviation learnings into ED-relevant material is discussed on Resus Room Management – a great site that is well worth a look), there is much we can learn.

The involvement of the helicopter crewman in the medical resuscitation team lent itself well to checklist use (crewman have a lot of experience with checklists!), and the Auckland HEMS RSI checklist was the end result. The familiarity with checklists has started another culture change in our ED, and people are starting to realise their value. While Auckland ED has not yet adopted a formal RSI checklist, versions are already being used in our resus rooms, and have the potential to significantly improve the safety of our advanced airway management.

Involvement in HEMS has also allowed the medical team to gain experience with an online safety management system. ARHT uses Air Maestro, which is now being used by the trust to cover medical as well as aviation issues (many thanks to Armin Egli and Paul Robinson for sorting this one out!). While introducing something like this to ED would be a difficult undertaking, gaining experience with it through HEMS allows us to explore the medical uses while seeing in real-time how it improves the safety of aviation operations. Food for thought…

The comments above represent my thoughts about some of the non-measurable benefits of the Auckland HEMS trial. I’d love to hear your thoughts, please post comments below if you wish.

 

Prehospital Management of Traumatic Brain Injury

extradural-haematoma

To date, the most significant procedural capability the the addition of doctors to the ARHT Westpac Rescue Helicopter has provided has been RSI capability. Of the RSIs performed so far,  a significant proportion have been for severe traumatic brain injury (TBI).

With the exception of surgical intervention (which is required in a minority of cases of severe TBI), most other essential elements of severe TBI management can be provided in the prehospital setting – airway protection, optimisation of oxygenation, prevention of hyper- or hypo-carbia, support of cerebral perfusion pressure, and ICP control.

This paper, published in the Journal of Neurosurgery in 2008, reviews the evidence around the various elements of the pre-hospital severe TBI care ‘package’.

Take-home messages:

  • a period of hypoxia (PaO2<60mmHg) is associated with a 50% mortality rate and a 50% severe disability among survivors
  • in previous studies hypoxia has been a common complication of prehospital intubation for severe TBI, with up to 57% of patients experiencing transient hypoxia lasting a mean of 2.3 minutes (note – these studies frequently involved neither an RSI as we know it nor personnel who were appropriately trained and qualified; more recent evidence points to a benefit for prehospital RSI for severe TBI provided it is done well by appropriate people)
  • Tight control of CO2 after intubation has a significant effect on survival – in one large series patients with normal CO2 on arrival to ED had a 21% mortality, those with CO2 outside the normal range had a 34% mortality
  • Manual ventilation is associated with hypocarbia
  • A single episode of hypotension (systolic BP less than 90mmHG) doubles mortality
  • Management of hypotension in the field improves outcome
  • Transport by helicopter for patients with severe TBI improves odds of survival compared with ground transport (OR 1.6-2.25) – this may reflect the presence of more skilled personnel on the helicopter, careful attention to post-intubation ventilatory parameters, and transport to a trauma centre.