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  2. Medical evacuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_evacuation

    An AW109 helicopter evacuates a patient from the Tatra mountains in Slovakia. Medical evacuation, often shortened to medevac [1] or medivac, [1] is the timely and efficient movement and en route care provided by medical personnel to patients requiring evacuation or transport using medically equipped air ambulances, helicopters and other means of emergency transport including ground ambulance ...

  3. Column: As Eaton fire advanced, here's how employees rescued ...

    www.aol.com/news/column-eaton-fire-advanced...

    The Golden Rose Care Center in Pasadena, formerly called Rose Garden, was forced to evacuate, and some of the roughly 70 patients there had arrived just a few hours earlier from Two Palms.

  4. What to do if you have to evacuate without your medications - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/evacuate-without-medications...

    If you are having trouble contacting or getting the services you need from your health insurer, you can contact the DMHC Help Center at www.DMHC.ca.gov or 888-466-2219 (TDD: 1-877-688-9891) for ...

  5. Simple triage and rapid treatment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_triage_and_rapid...

    After all patients have been evaluated, responders use the START classifications to determine priorities for treatment or evacuation to a hospital. The most basic way to use the START classifications is to transport victims in a fixed priority manner: immediate victims, followed by delayed victims, followed by the walking wounded. [ 2 ]

  6. Air ambulances in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_ambulances_in_the...

    Air ambulances in the United States are operated by a variety of hospitals, local government agencies, and for-profit companies. Medical evacuations by air are also performed by the United States Armed Forces (for example in combat areas, training accidents, and United States Coast Guard rescues) and United States National Guard (typically while responding to natural disasters).

  7. Air medical services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_medical_services

    During World War I, air transport was used to provide medical evacuation – either from frontline areas or the battlefield itself.. In 1928, in Australia, John Flynn founded the Flying Doctor Service (later the Royal Flying Doctor Service), to provide a wide range of medical services to civilians in remote areas; these included from routine consultations with travelling general practitioners ...

  8. Stretcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretcher

    U.S. Marines transport a non-ambulatory patient, outside of Fallujah, Iraq in 2006. EMS stretchers used in ambulances have wheels that makes transportation over pavement easier, and have a lock inside the ambulance and straps to secure the patient during transport. An integral lug on the stretcher locks into a sprung latch within the ambulance ...

  9. Casualty movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualty_movement

    The final step is the patient transfer from the stretcher to the hospital bed. The use of wheeled stretchers, usually used in most developed emergency services, does not need much explanation, except that great care must be taken in order to avoid aggravating an unstable trauma.