Great North Air Ambulance Service

GNAAS revels adaptations for Isle of Man services

12/10/2023

The Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) has revealed the crucial adaptations it has made to enable it to serve the Isle of Man.

Since March 2022, GNAAS and Manx Care have been working together to develop a Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) for the Isle of Man.

The introduction of a HEMS service and an enhanced emergency air bridge allows patients who are seriously ill or who have suffered a major trauma to be taken directly from their community on the Isle of Man to a centre of excellence in the UK for emergency medical treatment.

Working closely with paramedics from Isle of Man Ambulance Service (IMAS), GNAAS’ critical care team, which consists of a doctor and paramedic, can provide patients with advanced levels of pre-hospital care, including anaesthesia, blood transfusions and surgery.

Since launching the new service, the critical care teams at GNAAS, based at Langwathby, Cumbria, and Teesside in the North East, have responded several times to a variety of incidents.

To allow for the extended flight over water to the Isle of Man, which is 35 minutes, GNAAS had to make several adaptations, both to their aircraft and the staff training.

The charity’s aircraft have had flotation devices fitted to them in case of needing to ditch in open water to help remain afloat. These help to keep the aircraft buoyant and allow time for the team to escape, and there are also rescue rafts fitted to the aircraft.

Approximately £250,000 was invested in fitting floats to the helicopter. These floats need maintaining yearly and additional ones need to be fitted to their other aircraft to ensure their team can always be available to respond.

In addition to a survival brief every day and needing to review wave height over the Irish Sea as part of the aviation brief, the team are required to wear a personal flotation device when flying to the island.

To ensure all team members are appropriately skilled on the required actions in the event of a water landing, they have been introduced to “dunker tank” training. This involves team members being submerged in a simulated airframe and allows them the opportunity to rehearse exiting the aircraft in water. The simulation is carried out in both light and darkness to increase the degree of realism and prepare the team for any possible scenario that they may encounter.

Since the partnership began, GNAAS has responded to the Isle of Man by helicopter 33 times and transferred many patients to specialist hospitals in the UK.

GNAAS' services cost £8.5m per year to run, covering not only the Isle of Man but the North East, North Yorkshire, and Cumbria in the UK.

Funding is in place until April 2024 and the charity hopes to continue responding to incidents for many years to come, but to ensure this is possible it needs the support of the community.

GNAAS does not receive government funding and therefore needs to raise £8.5m a year to remain operational. The charity has launched a raffle with a top prize of £10,000 to help it meet rising demand of its services. Tickets costs £1 each and are available now at gna.as/raffle_2023

About GNAAS

  • The Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) is a charitably funded air ambulance service which provides life-saving care throughout the North East, North Yorkshire, Cumbria and Isle of Man.
  • They operate two helicopters 365 days a year and also operate a night-time service in the North East and Cumbria on rapid response vehicles.

  • The aircraft cover an area of more than 8,000 square miles and on board are specialist doctors and paramedics who effectively bring the hospital to the patient.

  • The level of skill and expertise of the on-board team mean they respond to the most critically ill and injured people, giving them the best chance of survival.

  • GNAAS is a progressive organisation which has pioneered pre-hospital care in the region.
  • The latest techniques, equipment and drugs are constantly being evaluated to ensure the charity can provide the best care possible for their patients.

  • 2022 marked the service providing 20 years of life-saving care. Throughout this time, they have responded to more than 23,500 incidents across the region, with road traffic collisions being the most frequent type of incident responded to by the team.

  • They do not receive Government funding and must therefore raise £8.5m a year through public donations to remain operational.

For more information visit: https://www.greatnorthairambulance.co.uk/ or follow @gnairambulance on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn and TikTok

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Images

The team with the Pride of Cumbria
The team with the Pride of Cumbria
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Helicopter in the Isle of Man
Helicopter in the Isle of Man
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Dunker tank training
Dunker tank training
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