3.9 Article

United Kingdom Military Aeromedical Evacuation in the Post-9/11 Era

Journal

AVIATION SPACE AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 85, Issue 10, Pages 1005-1012

Publisher

AEROSPACE MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.3357/ASEM.4005.2014

Keywords

operational medicine; operational trauma; disease/nonbattle injury; patient transport

Funding

  1. UK Ministry of Defence (MoD)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Recent UK military operations in support of the fight against terrorism have resulted in UK military casualties. Movement of these casualties through the military medical chain requires a highly sophisticated aeromedical evacuation capability with worldwide reach. Recognition of the determinants of evacuation allows development to ensure optimal future configurations of military aeromedical evacuation services. Methods:The database recording aeromedical evacuations undertaken by the Royal Air Force was searched to provide demographic and clinical data for evacuations between 1 April 2003 and 31 March 2010. Diagnoses leading to evacuation were categorized according to International Classification of Diseases codes. Results: There were 21,477 medical evacuations undertaken. Analysis demonstrated 85.9% were for men and 86.5% were for military personnel, of whom 72.0% were in the army. The most common reasons for evacuation in military patients were musculoskeletal/connective tissue disorders (N = 9192; 50.0%), trauma (N = 1303; 7.1%), and mental health disorders (N = 1151; 6.3%). The most common reasons for evacuation in nonmilitary patients were musculoskeletal/connective tissue disorders (N = 734; 23.8%), genitourinary disorders (N = 325; 10.5%), and circulatory disorders (N = 255; 8.3%). Nontraumatic diagnoses were the determinants of evacuation in 92.9% of military and 95.1% of nonmilitary patients; 17.8% of trauma patients and 0.5% of nontrauma patients utilized high-dependency care. Discussion: The UK aeromedical evacuation system must have the capacity to evacuate large numbers of patients with non-traumatic diagnoses, but also the flexibility to accommodate smaller, more variable numbers of higher dependency trauma patients. The military medical chain must continually review the differing requirements of civilian patients transferred within their aeromedical system.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available