Book Accommodation, Tours and Events with Norfolk Online News!
05 May 2022
You would have to be living under a rock not to have noticed the number of medical evacuations over the last two to four weeks. Without going into particulars, I’d like to dispel a few misnomers floating around the place about medical evacuations. Medivacs/ medevacs occur when the local health resources are either unable to treat a presenting patient or are unable to ascertain that a presenting patient has an illness, or injury that may lead to further complications. While most medevacs are to treat obvious injuries, or for patients clearly in need of further medical intervention, there are reasons for otherwise healthy-looking people to be medevac’d.
I seem to have a thing for oranges of late, so I’ll stick with the orange analogy, if you’ll entertain the idea. Looking at an orange we can usually tell what is going on, it looks good, might be a bit shiny, smells fantastic and is nice and firm when you give it bit of a squeeze. Problem is though, every now and then, you get one that is dry and chalky when you cut it open, or bitter to taste when you chomp in. Simplistically, people can present similarly, bumps and bruises can cover a multitude of further injuries, while medications can reduce a fever, or bring a heart rate down, they may be only masking an underlying, insidious complication.
CT scans are the gold standard for assessing patient disposition. A CT scan will find a spinal fracture that an x-ray will never pick up, can diagnose heart blockages or brain injuries that would never be detected under normal circumstance. For medical staff to be satisfied that a patient is at no further risk of injury, and that any presenting injury is detected, the CT scan has become a fundamental aspect of modern health care. Spinal injuries, heart blockages and brain trauma are a few of the life changing events a modern trauma centre will be able to detect and treat.
While all these medevacs do draw on volunteer resources, please do not consider there to be a risk to our normal operations. Covid has, and will continue to, affect how we live and to a minimal extent operate. As a group we have become adept at managing the challenges that the new environment has presented us with. St John Norfolk Island remains a volunteer service that operates 24 hours of every day, rain, hail, or shine.
Our next skill drill will be held on Tuesday, May 10, at 6:30 pm.
If you are interested in becoming a St John volunteer or, for more information, please email norfolk.island@stjohnnsw.com.au or james.garden@stjohnnsw.com.au