100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

'Looking forward to the challenges': new members join rescue chopper crew

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Developer launches latest over-50s resort with 200-plus homes

A seniors community with more than 200 homes and resort-quality living is set to be built on the Sunshine Coast. Stockland has launched Halcyon Dales, More

Survey indicates end of feral horses on island

Research suggests that feral horses have disappeared from Queensland's largest island, north of the Sunshine Coast. Ground and drone searches have shown no evidence of More

Photo of the day: beetle play

“These beetles were playing with each other. Nature on the Sunshine Coast is so vibrant. My children, husband and I love it,” writes Michelle Liptak. If More

‘Funky’ new Thai eatery introduces poolside dining

A high-profile beachside location has been transformed into a new Thai restaurant with its own pool area and a menu designed by a renowned More

More police on Coast roads for Operation Mistletoe

Police are ramping up their presence on Sunshine Coast roads for summer. Operation Mistletoe launched on Friday to help foster safer roads for drivers, riders More

Latest news: highway crash; trains suspended

Monday, December 16, 12.30pm: Two stable patients were transported to Nambour Hospital following a single-vehicle crash on the Bruce Highway southbound at Rosemount at More

Two new RACQ LifeFlight Rescue critical care doctors are joining the Sunshine Coast chopper crew, after undergoing rigorous training to become retrieval registrars.

Dr Eleanor Nicholson Thomas is one of them, leaving her role as an emergency medicine registrar at Gold Coast University Hospital to perform rescues and retrievals.

“I wanted to join LifeFlight ever since I started my emergency training,” she said.

“I’m really excited to go out and be the first doctor to see the patient and really make a difference in their care. I love to be in the helicopter and I am looking forward to the challenges ahead.

“I first found out about LifeFlight by seeing the doctors coming in with the patients. They’d usually done a really good job of managing the patient in the first instance.

“Seeing how good they are at what they do was really inspiring and is one of the reasons why I wanted to do the job myself.”

Dr Nicholson Thomas is among a group of 25 doctors who will be starting work on aeromedical helicopters and jets across Queensland, after completing an intensive training week with instructors from the LifeFlight Training Academy, which prepares them for the many challenges of retrieval medicine.

“I’m quite an adventurous person, so I like snowboarding and bungee jumping, so this is the kind of stuff that gets me excited,” she said.

LifeFlight chief aircrew officer Nathan Minett said one of the most important and challenging aspects of the training was learning how to be winched to and from a chopper.

“Some of our patients are in remote areas – that could be a mountainside, that could be in the bush that’s not accessible. We need to be able to insert our paramedic and doctor into that environment so they can care for the patient and ultimately recover them,” he said.

“Whilst it’s not something we do every day, there is a chance that they could go out next week and be tasked to a job on the side of a mountain or otherwise that entails winching them in to save that patient.”

The exercise teaches double lift techniques, when two crew members are winched. The doctors also learn how to bring a stretcher patient safely into the aircraft.

“So, they’re practising the two skillsets in the aviation environment that we really need them to embed and make sure that they know really well,” he said.

LifeFlight has helped save countless lives.

The retrieval registrars were also strapped into a metal helicopter simulator, which is then dunked underwater in different emergency scenarios, as part of Helicopter Underwater Escape Training (HUET).

“It is highly unlikely that they’re ever going to use it, but it’s a safety issue and this can be developed for if the aircraft had an issue and had to go to the ground,” LifeFlight HUET manager Mick Dowling said.

The doctors were also put through their paces in a series of simulated emergency scenes at the Queensland Combined Emergency Services Academy at Whyte Island, near the Port of Brisbane.

They were faced with some of the confronting realities of pre-hospital care, in realistic scenarios including a worker injured in a confined space and in need of evacuation from a ship, a near-drowning incident in a backyard pool and a car crash with fatalities and survivors.

The majority of the RACQ LifeFlight Rescue critical care doctors’ work is performed on behalf of Queensland Health, tasked by Retrieval Services Queensland, within Queensland Ambulance Service.

Like stories that inform, connect and celebrate the Sunshine Coast? So do we. Join an independent local news revolution by subscribing to our FREE daily news feed at the bottom of this article.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share