Английская Википедия:Great Western Air Ambulance Charity

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The Great Western Air Ambulance Charity (GWAAC) is a charity air ambulance service in South West England. It operates for the relief of sickness and injury, with a specialist paramedic in critical care and a critical care doctor, providing response by helicopter or car between the hours of 7:00 am and 1:00 am, 365 days a year. The service covers Bristol, North Somerset, Bath and North East Somerset, South Gloucestershire, Gloucestershire, and surrounding areas.

History

GWAAC was created in 2008. At launch, it operated a Eurocopter EC135, but as flying hours increased the funding was not available, so the charity moved to a MBB Bo 105 helicopter. In 2012, the charity started a campaign to raise the money needed to return to the EC135. The goal was reached in 2014, and in October the EC135 (registered G-GWAA) arrived at the base in Bristol Filton Airport.[1] The EC135 had a 40% increase in cabin volume, allowing the team to offer better inflight treatment. It had an extra seat, allowing medics to be trained on-board or a child patient to be airlifted with a parent. It can also land on elevated hospital helipads, and allows side loading. On 1 August 2017, GWAAC upgraded to an EC135 T2+ model, registration G-GWAC, leased from Babcock Mission Critical Services Onshore, which has more advanced features and a longer range.

In 2012, it was announced that Filton airfield, where GWAAC and the National Police Air Service (NPAS) had been based, was to close.[2] Their landlord, BAE Systems, agreed to find a new site and construct an airbase for the services.[3] A site was identified in South Gloucestershire, adjacent to the Almondsbury M4/M5 Interchange,[4] approximately Шаблон:Convert north of the Filton base. Planning permission was granted in August 2016.[5] Work started at the site in late 2017,[3] with both services moving to the new base in October 2018.[6]

In July 2018, GWAAC launched a public appeal to raise funds to buy the new airbase from BAE Systems,[7] following it being put up for sale during its construction. GWAAC raised £1.3Шаблон:Nbspmillion towards the purchase, which completed in December 2018.[8] NPAS remain on site as tenants of GWAAC. In September 2019, the new airbase was officially opened by Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester.[9]

Operations

Файл:GWAAC helicopter.jpg
A Great Western Air Ambulance helicopter during a callout.

The charity serves a population of 2.1 million. It has received grants in the past from the national government,[10][11] but does not receive operational funding from the government or National Lottery, and is normally funded by public donations.

In 2020, the charity raised income of £4.0Шаблон:Nbspmillion, including £190,000 from government grants.[12] It spent £4.1M, of which £2.6M was spent operating its helicopter and critical care cars.[12]

Within four minutes of an emergency call being received the helicopter can be in the air, and it can be anywhere within the region it covers in 20Шаблон:Nbspminutes.

GWAAC also operates critical care cars, used at night or when the helicopter is not feasible – for example due to the location of the patient, or the helicopter being at another job, or otherwise unavailable.

The specialist critical care team consists of a paramedic and doctor, who provide a remote emergency department to the patient. The crew carry blood and fresh frozen plasma to help treat patients who have suffered major trauma to stabilise them for transport, usually to a Major Trauma Centre, for adults or children. This has been found to result in significantly improved patient outcomes.[13][14] Local blood bike charity Freewheelers EVS assists NHS Blood and Transplant with the logistics of keeping the helicopter supplied with blood and plasma.[15]

In 2018, GWAAC were called to 1,887 incidents,[16] their busiest year since the service started in 2008.[17]

During the COVID-19 pandemic the service responded to COVID-19 cases, and crew members joined a team carrying out inter-hospital transfers for COVID-19 patients requiring intensive care.[18]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:Air ambulances in the United Kingdom