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Journal Article

Citation

Wilkinson B, Garwood J, Langford S. Air Med. J. 2018; 37(2): 115-119.

Affiliation

Royal Flying Doctor Service (Western Operations), Jandakot, WA, Australia. Electronic address: stephen.langford@rfdswa.com.au.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.amj.2017.12.002

PMID

29478575

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Patients can be transferred many hundreds of kilometers with acute mental health disturbance for specialist mental health services in Western Australia.

METHODS: A retrospective notes review of Royal Flying Doctor Service Western Operations records was undertaken over a 4-month period. Patients were identified from the transfer database by mental health diagnosis. Benzodiazepine and antipsychotic doses were converted into a reference drug per class for comparison.

RESULTS: One hundred ten patients underwent air transfer in a total of 130 flights. Over 80% of patients were involuntary patients being transferred for specialist psychiatric evaluation and management in an inpatient mental health unit. Over half of the patients required no in-flight sedation, and around 80% of patients were managed with standard doses of first-line agents (haloperidol, midazolam, and diazepam). A small number of patients required alternative agents for refractory sedation, most commonly ketamine and propofol. There were no statistically significant differences for in-flight medication by sex, ethnicity, or substance misuse status.

CONCLUSIONS: The rate of in-flight incidents including violence remained low. Transfers of patients with acute mental health disturbance are challenging, and quality preflight assessment and in-flight care are required to minimize the associated risks.

Copyright © 2018 Air Medical Journal Associates. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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