Critical Care Air Ambulance Air Transport of High-Risk Obstetrics Patient
January 28, 2012
Critical Care Air Ambulance Air Transport of High-Risk Obstetrics Patient
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Port Charlotte, Florida (Nasdaq) 24 January 2012
Air Critical Care LLC in Port Charlotte, Florida, announced the recent air-ambulance transportation of a high-risk obstetrics [Hrob] patients of 29 weeks, the medical transport company’s new and highly modern ultrasound equipment by the company doctor Hrob must implement newly appointed Blane M. Crandall operated, MD. The new ultrasonic device had the ability to monitor external heart of the baby and allowed Dr. Crandall to determine whether the mother sure you from the Caribbean island to his home town of Long Iceland, New York should be transported.
wait for the arrival of their first child, Michael and Tracey Sunday, chose a young couple from Long Iceland, New York to ring in 2012 with a cruise in the Caribbean. But his tropical cruise was early, as Tracey began to complications associated with pregnancy are empirical, while the ship in Nassau, Bahamas was interrupted dock.
“It was during the holidays. The hotels were full. We’re in a foreign country. It is our first child,” said Michael. The couple knew they needed an ambulance, air medical service company that she is hospitalized Winthrop, a Level III neonatal intensive care unit and certificate transport one of the few plants with a maternity ward in a neonatal intensive care unit, and combined.
is when a hospital doctor in the hospital case manager contacted Florida-based Air Critical Care LLC, a leader in the medical transport industry, air ambulance services. Led by Dr. Crandall, the air of emergency obstetric intensive care transport equipment in the new General Electric LOGIQ Book XP, used a compact ultrasound, which developed an advanced platform to deliver new levels of clinical value for health demanding environments, especially in aviation medical transport of patients Hrob in countries with lower health options, according to Crandall.
The diagnosis was that pre-eclampsia is a common disorder of pregnancy after 20 weeks, according to Crandall, who confirmed a secondary condition, diagnosed as Tracey on arrival at the hospital doctor. “A sub-part, prior obstetric diagnosis, in which the placenta to the cervix putting is what creates pools of blood in massive bleeding into the cervix opens,” said Crandall.
“Dr. Crandall uses ultrasound again three times during our trip to New York,” Michael said. “We knew we were in good hands.” With Advanced Critical Care Air external ultrasound heart rate monitor, Dr. Crandall was able to assess the baby’s heart rate and check the stability of a medical evacuation of patients Hrob.
“medical air transportation is not only beneficial, but essential for neonatal survival and morbidity,” said Crandall. “A high-risk pregnancy should be identified and appropriately controlled by the physician. Terms of multiple, leading to a high-risk pregnancy such as gestational diabetes mellitus [GDM], may be related to pregnancy or obesity lead to preterm birth may develop delays and result in a higher mortality rate. “
Sunday
Bayleigh Logan was on 31 December with a weight of 2 pounds, 15 ounces and was perhaps one of the last babies Winthrop University Hospital in 2011 were born in born.
leading medical transport, air ambulance Air Critical Care LLC provides worldwide 24 / 7 in the U.S. as well as air medical transport, with the support of a network of offices in the United States, including Michigan, New York, Arizona and Florida. In addition to Air Ambulance, Air Care LLC provides critical medical escort services and commercial services table on international flights.
For more information about the Medi-flight visit, or toll free at 800-550-0674 aircriticalcare.com.
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