Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Where to begin....... well got called on a Friday late afternoon one winter day to do a medivac from a reserve because one of the native police officers had hit himself with an axe chopping wood. Flew in on skiis, picked up him and his wife, landed back at base after dark on the ski strip. Officer seemed fine although he was complaining of a headache. I saw him in the Border Bar later that evening and by the condition he was in, no doubt would have had a severe headache the next morning!! One of many!!
You Can Love An Airplane All You Want, But Remember, It Will Never Love You Back!
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
MEDEVACs put money in the bank and hours in the book. Period.
Necessary, unnecessary, frivolous, or serious, if they tell me to go, and it's safe, I go.
Not my place to second guess the medical pros.
Look forward not backward boys and girls.
Necessary, unnecessary, frivolous, or serious, if they tell me to go, and it's safe, I go.
Not my place to second guess the medical pros.
Look forward not backward boys and girls.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
How about the classic 'Tylenol Shopping Trip'? I capitalize it since it's really a way of life. Pop a 1/2 a bottle of Tylenol(which doesn't do anything, btw), claim you had 4 bottles(4 might damage the liver a little bit), in comes the medevac, endure the charcoal treatment on the way to YWG, and presto! Free shopping trip in YWG!
Drinking outside the box.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
This is thread that will go nowhere fast, if we can learn anything from the past this would surely be a good example. Although I have seen things that make me go hmmmm I also recognize that I am not qualified to pass judgment on other peoples medical needs.
This thread is designed too and will undoubtedly lead to nothing more than racial slurs and the perpetuating of a stereotype, is that the best you can come up with to generate some controversy on this site?
This thread is designed too and will undoubtedly lead to nothing more than racial slurs and the perpetuating of a stereotype, is that the best you can come up with to generate some controversy on this site?
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Four1oh wrote:How about the classic 'Tylenol Shopping Trip'? I capitalize it since it's really a way of life. Pop a 1/2 a bottle of Tylenol(which doesn't do anything, btw), claim you had 4 bottles(4 might damage the liver a little bit), in comes the medevac, endure the charcoal treatment on the way to YWG, and presto! Free shopping trip in YWG!
It's federal stimulus for the Winnipeg economy!

Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
I did it for 12 yrs in the Maritimes and in my experience 5% definitely had a big stink(aka CYAY), probably another 10% you did wonder but then again I wasn’t a medical professional consequently my “diagnosis” didn’t have any weight.
If you were carrying a neo-natal, cardio or trauma team, well you knew and treated it as such. In my heyday, the first few nice days of spring ya got the bike accidents, the young buckos all liquored up. Ditto first snowfall late fall with the ski-do’s., probably their buddies.
But whatever, I did the job and can honestly say I (we) saved many a life, new born, young/old and whatever the circumstance that what’s counts – bar none!
There were issues of race/color during my time but I rose above that – wasn’t my style.
If you were carrying a neo-natal, cardio or trauma team, well you knew and treated it as such. In my heyday, the first few nice days of spring ya got the bike accidents, the young buckos all liquored up. Ditto first snowfall late fall with the ski-do’s., probably their buddies.
But whatever, I did the job and can honestly say I (we) saved many a life, new born, young/old and whatever the circumstance that what’s counts – bar none!
There were issues of race/color during my time but I rose above that – wasn’t my style.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Dude, I could say that about any thread. Why bother posting if we're all so worried about the low percentage of morons out there?Hot Fuel wrote:This is thread that will go nowhere fast, if we can learn anything from the past this would surely be a good example. Although I have seen things that make me go hmmmm I also recognize that I am not qualified to pass judgment on other peoples medical needs.
This thread is designed too and will undoubtedly lead to nothing more than racial slurs and the perpetuating of a stereotype, is that the best you can come up with to generate some controversy on this site?
Drinking outside the box.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
I flew medevacs for a year and a half in northern Saskatchewan, and then again in northern Ontario.
If it was safe to do the trip, we did the trip. I trained as a pilot, not a doctor or nurse, so it would be pretty high-horsey of me to presume I knew any better than they did about the patient's condition, or about the best course of action.
There are lots of medevacs that could be called into question - does it make sense to take a dying person back home if they are unconscious and are going to die anyway? Does it make sense to take a smoker for cancer treatment? Does it make sense to take an elderly man down for prostate cancer treatment when it's likely he will die of natural causes before the slow-growing cancer gets him? Those are all calls that are left up to the professionals, not me.
Besides, I sure as hell wouldn't want a bad call on my conscience. Imagine refusing to take a person for treatment because you have decided they don't 'really' need it, and then they die. My biggest fear in this life is hurting or killing a passenger, and that would fall under that category for me.
Who would I be to say "You sir, are able to walk, so this flight isn't necessary". All I see is how they look as they are boarding the aircraft - I don't see any medical history, nor do I see the big picture - the person might have several medical conditions that interact in such a way as they appear to be okay, but in fact aren't.
I have been on flights where healthy-looking people have blown heart valves in mid-flight, so I wouldn't put a whole lot of weight behind my 20-second assessment of their condition before I go sit up front and drive the plane.
If it was safe to do the trip, we did the trip. I trained as a pilot, not a doctor or nurse, so it would be pretty high-horsey of me to presume I knew any better than they did about the patient's condition, or about the best course of action.
There are lots of medevacs that could be called into question - does it make sense to take a dying person back home if they are unconscious and are going to die anyway? Does it make sense to take a smoker for cancer treatment? Does it make sense to take an elderly man down for prostate cancer treatment when it's likely he will die of natural causes before the slow-growing cancer gets him? Those are all calls that are left up to the professionals, not me.
Besides, I sure as hell wouldn't want a bad call on my conscience. Imagine refusing to take a person for treatment because you have decided they don't 'really' need it, and then they die. My biggest fear in this life is hurting or killing a passenger, and that would fall under that category for me.
Who would I be to say "You sir, are able to walk, so this flight isn't necessary". All I see is how they look as they are boarding the aircraft - I don't see any medical history, nor do I see the big picture - the person might have several medical conditions that interact in such a way as they appear to be okay, but in fact aren't.
I have been on flights where healthy-looking people have blown heart valves in mid-flight, so I wouldn't put a whole lot of weight behind my 20-second assessment of their condition before I go sit up front and drive the plane.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Why does this subject always degenerate into accusations of racism?
Anyone who does not recognize the institutionalized submission of a race of people by confining them in pseudo prisons needs to be sent to xxx reservation to serve a life sentence.
After a while you too can call for a medivac to allow you a day parole.
Anyone who does not recognize the institutionalized submission of a race of people by confining them in pseudo prisons needs to be sent to xxx reservation to serve a life sentence.
After a while you too can call for a medivac to allow you a day parole.
The most difficult thing about flying is knowing when to say no.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
It should be mandatory for all Canadians to spend some time on a reserve/northern community only then will they realize there are two Canada’s one Doveloped with roads, housing, jobs, etc, and the other side that looks more like a cold version of Africa.
If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Yup, and we are spending untold millions to get young girls in school in that crazy place(Afgahn - an amenable cause in some respects.) and yet we have young girls subject to conditions just as brutal(in some ways) here at home, like those residental schools years past.
Canadian moral superiority - yeah like @#$!!!!
Canadian moral superiority - yeah like @#$!!!!
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
In my short time flying medevacs, I did a few tylenol taxi trips and most were not that urgent, However, it put the hours in my logbook so I dont really care.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
So you are content to have taxpayers money squandered as long as it puts hours in your log book?In my short time flying medevacs, I did a few tylenol taxi trips and most were not that urgent, However, it put the hours in my logbook so I dont really care.
The most difficult thing about flying is knowing when to say no.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Well, glad I'm not the only one that checked my licence to see if I had "Flybabe, M.D." stamped on there. LOL.
It's not up to me to question who's in the back and why. I had a LOT of walk ons - sure I questioned a few but I made my living on medevacs. I know things are a bit more abused in the rst of Canada, but Yukon really wasn't bad at all.
It's not up to me to question who's in the back and why. I had a LOT of walk ons - sure I questioned a few but I made my living on medevacs. I know things are a bit more abused in the rst of Canada, but Yukon really wasn't bad at all.
Courage is the price that life exacts for granting peace. The soul that knows it not,knows no release from the little things; knows not the livid loneliness of fear, nor mountain heights where bitter joy can hear the sound of wings.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
LifeJet wrote:MEDEVACs put money in the bank and hours in the book. Period.
Necessary, unnecessary, frivolous, or serious, if they tell me to go, and it's safe, I go.
Not my place to second guess the medical pros.
Look forward not backward boys and girls.
Touche!
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Who ever said that Medevacs where only for people who were on their death bed? In some cases, it comes down to the level of care available. If someone needs routine surgery and the nearest place is 1/2 day drive away, why can't they make use of an aircraft? I flew Medevacs for 10 years and I know for a fact that the 60 minutes of flight time required to transfer a patient to the city and back was cheaper than the ground transfer that would take upwards of 8-10 hours. My point is that any patient has the right to get the highest level of care available regardless of their perceived status, an aircraft is just one of the tools available to transfer them.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Amen Again.LifeJet wrote:MEDEVACs put money in the bank and hours in the book. Period.
Necessary, unnecessary, frivolous, or serious, if they tell me to go, and it's safe, I go.
Not my place to second guess the medical pros.
Look forward not backward boys and girls.
In YEV if I recall, all medevac discharges were put on the next sched home. If you AWOL'd from the hospital or missed the reservation home, you were on your own dime to get back to your community. I remember hearing this did cut down on the bullshit, and perhaps more importantly, on the perception of bullshit.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
. . wrote:So you are content to have taxpayers money squandered as long as it puts hours in your log book?In my short time flying medevacs, I did a few tylenol taxi trips and most were not that urgent, However, it put the hours in my logbook so I dont really care.
Whatever...this has been going on for years. I'm sure in your earlier days you logged many hours flying "iffy" medevacs...did you complain to your local politician or were you just happy to be logging time and collecting somewhat of a paycheck?
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
True I did because you have no real idea whether it is an emergency or if it is not when you are given the trip.Whatever...this has been going on for years. I'm sure in your earlier days you logged many hours flying "iffy" medevacs
No, should I have? Would complaining to a politician be productive?...did you complain to your local politician
or were you just happy to be logging time and collecting somewhat of a paycheck?
When I was flying medivacs I was flying DC3's and PBY's for Austin Airways and logging time really was not an issue by that stage of my flying career, the pay was so so but better than driving a Beaver or an Otter.
I truly can not remember having to log time to get another job, somehow they just seemed to be there when I wanted one.
Also I have never ever been asked to produce a log book to get a job.
The most difficult thing about flying is knowing when to say no.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Let's hear about the unnecessary reroutes, altitude changes, and speed restrictions you have endured, either a long time ago, or yesterday.cpl_atc wrote:Let's hear about the unnecessary medevac flights you've done, either a long time ago, or yesterday.
Something stinks about this part of the industry...
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
I see what your saying Cat, its just that I was content to have taxpayers money squandered as long as it put hours in my log book cause that got me out of an atco trailer and more money to pay off student loans 

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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Hey, I'm happy for you at least someone got some benefit that worked for it. 

The most difficult thing about flying is knowing when to say no.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
After over a half a century of flying I can not remember even one trip that I refused to do that resulted in someone getting killed because of my decision not to fly.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
Good try, but our millions put no one in schools here. Yes we built some schools, but they are empty or used by sheep and donkeys. Our millions are used to support an unpopular government, of an unpopular state, conduct an unpopular war, in order to keep some jobs at home.Old fella wrote:Yup, and we are spending untold millions to get young girls in school in that crazy place(Afgahn - an amenable cause in some respects.) and yet we have young girls subject to conditions just as brutal(in some ways) here at home, like those residental schools years past.
Canadian moral superiority - yeah like @#$!!!!

Success in life is when the cognac that you drink is older than the women you drink it with.
Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
If the public knew what really went on up north and just how badly their tax dollars were wasted, I think you'd see this as front page news, protests in YOW and people demanding serious change.
The total BS medivacs that I've personally done that accomplished nothing more then fill my log book and take someone on a drug induced personal flight, would easily be the in hundreds of thousands of wasted tax payer dollars. I once had medcom tell us the patient missed her Bearskin flight (she had an appointment) so they called us. That was Northern ONT. I could rant with many other stories but I'd sound like an ass...
Working in the NWT was a whole different ballgame - The calls tended to be legit.
The total BS medivacs that I've personally done that accomplished nothing more then fill my log book and take someone on a drug induced personal flight, would easily be the in hundreds of thousands of wasted tax payer dollars. I once had medcom tell us the patient missed her Bearskin flight (she had an appointment) so they called us. That was Northern ONT. I could rant with many other stories but I'd sound like an ass...
Working in the NWT was a whole different ballgame - The calls tended to be legit.
The feet you step on today might be attached to the ass you're kissing tomorrow.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
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Re: Unnecessary Medevacs? Post here
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Last edited by Clearwater on Sat Oct 31, 2009 8:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.