Flight nurse
A flight nurse is a registered nurse specializing in the field of providing comprehensive pre-hospital, emergency critical care, and hospital care to a vast scope of patients. The care of these patients is generally provided during aeromedical evacuation or rescue operations aboard helicopters, propeller aircraft, or jet aircraft. On board a rescue aircraft, is a flight nurse, accompanied by flight medics and respiratory practitioners, as well as the option of a flight physician for comprehensive emergency and critical transport teams. The inclusion of a flight physician is more common in pediatric and neonatal transport teams.
A critical care flight nurse must be able to deal with all age groups with broad critical emergencies. With no physicians on site, the nurses scope of practice is expanded. The critical care experience is transferred over to a flight nurse with impacting factors such as altitude and changes in pressure, gravitational forces, and weather. Some patients may experience exacerbations because of factors related to the cabin environment, including hypoxia, limited mobility, gas expansion, and the risk of injury related to turbulence. Resources for definitive care are limited. Aeromedical evacuation crews coordinate with other organizations to plan for the safe and timely care and evacuation of patients. Crews must be prepared for patients with trauma and mental health illnesses.
Roles and duties
Here are the duties and responsibilities of a flight nurse:- Flight nurses work as a member of an aeromedical evacuation team on helicopters and propeller or jet aircraft
- Responsible for planning and preparing for aeromedical evacuation missions
- Expedite the mission and initiate emergency treatment in the absence of a flight physician
- Provide in-flight management and nursing care for patients
- Evaluate individual patient in-flight needs
- Act as a bridge between medical and operational aircrews and support personnel to promote patient comfort
- Responsible for maintaining patient care, comfort and safety
- Care for patients with both medical and traumatic issues
- Request appropriate medications, supplies and equipment to provide care to patient
- Must have training in mechanical ventilation, , vasoactive medications and intensive care skills
- Specialized clinical skills in conjunction with knowledge, theory, education and expertise in hospital and pre-hospital environments, are required
- Perform advanced medical procedures without supervision of a doctor, such as intubation, ventilator management, chest tube insertion, intra-osseous line placement, central line placement, intra-aortic balloon pump management, management of pacing devices, titration of vasoactive medications, pain management, administration of anesthetic medications for intubation, and in some cases, emotional and family care
Education
- License as a registered nurse
- 2–3 years of critical care experience and/or mobile intensive care unit experience.
- Advanced cardiac life support certificate
- Pediatric advanced life support certificate
Certification process and skills
According to the Association of Critical Care Transport, critical care transport providers must document a minimum of 3,700 patient contact hours or have a minimum of 5 years' experience with direct patient care to have the necessary qualifications to act as a transport provider in addition to being a licensed RN in the state of transport. These providers must minimally have BLS or ACLS certifications.
The next step in progressing in this role is to obtain an Advanced Transport Certification including the CFRN and CTRN. This certification allows the nurse to provide a higher and more inclusive level of care.
After two years of critical care transport experience, the nurse can become a critical care transport provider. This allows the nurse to assume the role of primary caregiver for the patient who is being transferred.
By allowing the nurse to assume the role of primary caregiver during critical care transport, the nurse is afforded more autonomy and a wider scope of practice. Each state and each country has its own scope of practice for the critical care transporter, or flight nurse. Based on skills that the nurse has trained in, they may perform tasks such as intubation, thoracostomy with or without mechanical ventilation, chest tube placement, management of cardiovascular devices such as Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation or Ventricular Assist Devices, in-flight ultrasound, and initiation of pharmacological interventions. These skills may only be performed by the nurse, who is practicing within their scope of practice and who is trained to competently complete these skills.
Additional requirements may include:
- Neonatal Resuscitation Program
- Nationally recognized trauma program such as Pre Hospital Trauma Life Support
- Basic Trauma Life Support, Trauma Nurse Core Course, or Transport Nurse Advanced Trauma Course
- Certifications such as Critical Care certification, Certified Emergency Nurse, or Certified Flight Registered Nurse
- EMT or EMT-P certification with field experience
- Simulation programs to prepare flight nurses have been shown to adequately mimic real world scenarios, In a study conduct at Case Western Reserve University's flight nurse program students reported that the flight simulator had felt like an actual rotor cuff transport. Additionally, heart rates were tracked to measure the stress response and rates were increased from 77 before the simulation to 100 at the peak, at the conclusion HR resolved to 72, the p value was <0.001.
Credentialing
- Certified Emergency Nurse
- Certified Flight Registered Nurse
- Critical Care Registered Nurse
Types
Civilian
- Works for hospitals, federal, state and local governments, private medical evacuation firms, fire departments, and other agencies.
Military
- Army Air Force Evacuation Service
- Member of aeromedical evacuation crew
- Senior medical member of aeromedical evacuation team on Continental United States
- Works in intra-theatre and inter-theatre flights to provide in-flight management and nursing care
- Plan/Prepare aeromedical evacuation missions and prepa detailede facilitation plan
Flight Nursing's Role in Community Health