What is a Flight Nurse?
Trusted online nursing community, EveryNurse, defines a flight nurse as, “a nursing professional that is trained to provide medical care to patients while they are transported to a medical facility.”
Typically, there are two routes you can take as a flight nurse: civilian or military, but we’ll get into this later.
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If you are interested in providing hands-on emergent care to trauma patients, pushing through the adrenaline rush of flying in an aircraft, and ensuring the safety and stability of your patient as you quickly travel from one location to the next, then a flight nurse sounds like the profession for you!
What is their Role?
Remember the movie, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles? For a flight nurse, it’s more like planes, helicopters, and jets!
All these methods of transportation are utilized by healthcare professionals in order to transport patients from a wreckage, disaster, or other facility.
Flight nurses are responsible for:
- Checking vitals
- Tracking records
- Medication administration
- Intubation (some cases)
- Performing medical procedures
Although this is not an all-encompassing list, it gives you an idea of what the role entails.
Oh, and I forgot to mention, if a physician is not on board, flight nurses have the scope of practice to perform intubation, insertion of chest tubes, and other advanced procedures that RNs normally wouldn’t get to do in a hospital setting!
How awesome is that?!
On top of this, a flight nurse must ensure that there is both appropriate and sufficient quantities of medical equipment on board to care for the critically-ill patient upon arrival.
Think of a flight nurse as an ICU nurse in a more emergent situation and with less access to resources, while flying thousands of feet above the ground — no big deal.