Healthcare Packaging July/August 2020

Page 11

COLD CHAIN CORNER

Transport Bag Offers Pre-Hospital Blood Protection on Air Ambulances KEREN SOOKNE, DIRECTOR OF EDITORIAL CONTENT

Pre-hospital care given by first responders can be critical to a patient’s survival: the ability for responders to give a transfusion at the scene of an incident could be lifesaving for a patient suffering significant bleeding and blood loss. Many Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) first responders including some in Europe are using Pelican BioThermal’s Crēdo ProMed transport bag, including Great North Air Ambulance Service, London’s Air Ambulance Charity and Yorkshire Air Ambulance. The medical transport bag is designed to protect health products, ensuring lifesaving blood products can be used at the scene of emergencies before the hospital. One of the latest air ambulance charities to implement Crēdo ProMed is Essex & Herts Air Ambulance (EHAAT) in the UK, which now carries blood supplies on board its helicopters and Rapid Response Vehicles (RRVs). Since introducing blood on board they have carried out 48 transfusions. Scott McIlwaine, operations manager at EHAAT, said, “The decision to start carrying blood products on board our helicopters and RRVs was a major one for the charity, one which has significantly improved the care that can be delivered to patients.” “It was important for us to make sure that our critical care teams had the right equipment. That includes containers to ensure the blood is stored, transported and the correct temperature is maintained in the field for periods of up to 24 hours. After comprehensive research we selected Pelican BioThermal Crēdo ProMed transport bags, and they have never let us down,” added McIllwaine. EHAAT’s helicopters and RRVs carry packed red blood cells of type O Negative, which can be used on any patient. When required, these are given with plasma, the other major component of human blood. Together these form a vital replacement for patients who have lost blood. Other air ambulance deployments Dr. Anne Weaver, consultant in emergency medicine & pre-hospital care with London’s Air Ambulance said, “When we arrive at the scene of a serious incident, we often find a patient losing a signif-

icant amount of blood. In these cases every second counts and, as the first UK Air Ambulance to carry blood on board, we see the vital importance of being able to deliver transfusions on scene, pre-hospital, any time of the day or night.” “After extensive validation carried out with the Transfusion team at Barts NHS Health Trust, we found the Crēdo ProMed transport bag to be the most suitable and have used them ever since,” noted Weaver. “Carrying blood on board our aircraft and in our rapid response cars has undoubtedly been a big change and we continue to innovate to create the next generation of survivors in the capital.” At Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS), introducing blood on board has resulted in the administeration of more than 300 transfusions. Andy Mawson, Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) director of operations, said, “To those patients who need them, transfusions are a vital lifeline which only a few years ago would not have been available outside of hospital. Without the right kit in place to protect those precious blood and plasma products, the procedure would be futile.”

↑ Essex & Herts Air Ambulance (EHAAT) in the UK now carries blood supplies on board its helicopters and Rapid Response Vehicles (RRVs). Credit: ehaat.org

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