B.C. air ambulances barred from landing at 7 hospitals - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:45 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. air ambulances barred from landing at 7 hospitals

Air ambulance services to seven hospitals on the South Coast and Vancouver Island have been suspended and likely won't be restored for about two more days, according to the company that provides the service.

Helijet says it's a paperwork issue; Transport Canada suggests it's about safety

Air Ambulance services are still out at seven hospitals on the B.C. South Coast and Vancouver Island. The company that operates the service, Helijet, has applied for a temporary exemption. But Transport Canada has yet to issue one. (CBC)

Air ambulance services to seven hospitals on the South Coast and Vancouver Island havebeen suspended and likely won't be restored for abouttwo more days, according to the company that provides theservice.

The air ambulances have not landed sincelast Friday after Transport Canada informed Helijet, the carrier contracted to provide air ambulance services to several B.C hospitals, thatit's not complyingwith federal landing regulations at some hospital landing pads.

As a result,Helijetwithdrew its services from several hospitals includingVancouver General Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, Surrey Memorial Hospital, Nanaimo General and B.C. Children's Hospital.

Rick Hill, Helijet's vice president, commercial and business programs, described the problem as an "administrative" issue that it isaddressing.

And it has applied to Transport Canada for a temporaryexemption that willallow it to continue to land at so-called H-1 helipads,which have the most restrictive rules.

That exemption won't solve the issue, Hill said, but it will give Helijet time to sort out the matterwith Transport Canada and the manufacturer.

The air ambulances are made in the U.S.by Sikorsky.

Helijet seeks temporary exemption

Hill said he expects to get the exemption in about 48 hours.

But in the meantime, seven B.C. hospitals don't have air ambulance services.

"This is not an optimal situation," said Jodi Jensen, chief operating officer for B.C. Emergency Health Services,

"Our preference obviously is, when you have a seriously ill or injured patients, that you want to be able to transport them to the receiving facilities as quickly as possible."

GayleDuteil, president of the B.C. Nurses Union, also expressed concern about the suspension of air ambulance services at some B.C. hospitals.

The air ambulances are "a very major part of our patient transport system," Duteil said, adding, "but wealso need to ensure that the patients and the staff are safe."

Transport Canada did not respond to an interview request. But a spokesperson said in an emailthat the issue is about the safety of air ambulance landing sites.

Sau Sau Liu said Transport Canada could not comment on Helijet's exemption application.

Jensen said with air ambulance services outat some hospitals, patients are flown to a nearby airport, then driven by ambulance to hospital. Paramedics trained to treat critically ill people are with the patients the whole time.

The landingissue for the Helijet air ambulanceswas first noted last spring by a routine Transport Canada inspection, Hill said.

Problem stems from performance manual: Helijet

Hesaid the problem stems from an interpretation of the performance standards in the manufacturers manual.

That manualsuggests the Sikorskyhelicopters don't have the performance capacity demanded by Transport Canada to land at certain helipads, classified as H-1, which have the strictest standards because they are surrounded by other buildings among other things..

Hill said the Helijet helicoptersdo have theperformance capacity, and it'sworking with Transport Canada to correct the error.

"It's really an administrative issue that we're out of sync, and therefore Transport (Canada)is saying: 'You'renot in compliance with landing at these airports.'"

However, Jensensaid the helicopters were barred from landing because they don't meet certain safetyrequirements outlined by Transport Canada.

In a statement, aTransport Canada spokesperson said the issue concerns safety.

"Recent Transport Canada inspections, discovered areas of non-compliance affecting operations at several hospital heliports, in particular helicopter performance and night operations," the statement said.