Medical evacuation, often shortened to medevac<ref name="MW">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> or medivac,<ref name="MW" /> is the timely and efficient movement and en route care provided by medical personnel to patients requiring evacuation or transport using medically equipped air ambulances, helicopters and other means of emergency transport including ground ambulance and maritime transfers.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Examples include civilian EMS vehicles, civilian aeromedical helicopter services, and military air ambulances. This term also covers the transfer of patients from the battlefield to a treatment facility or from one treatment facility to another by medical personnel, such as from a local hospital to another medical facility which has adequate medical equipment.<ref name=":0" />
In Asia, according to Aeromedical Global (M) Sdn Bhd, medical evacuations via air ambulance can be performed via a single or dual stretched setup. According to patients medical condition, Emergency Air Ambulances will be equipped with relevant equipment (ventilators, Portable O2 Concentrator etc).
HistoryEdit
The first medical transport by air was recorded in Serbia in the autumn of 1915 during the First World War.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> One of the ill soldiers in that first medical transport was Milan Rastislav Štefánik, a Slovak pilot-volunteer who was flown to safety by French aviator Louis Paulhan.<ref>L'homme-vent, special issue of L'Ami de Pézenas, 2010</ref>
The United States Army used this lifesaving technique in Burma toward the end of World War II with Sikorsky R-4B helicopters. The first helicopter rescue was by 2nd Lt Carter Harman, in Japanese-held Burma, who had to make several hops to get his Sikorsky YR-4B to the 1st Air Commando Group's secret airfield in enemy territory and then made four trips from there between April 25 and 26 to recover the American pilot and four injured British soldiers, one at a time.<ref>Fries, Patrick. When I Have Your Wounded: The Dustoff Legacy (DVD), Arrowhead Films, 2013.</ref> The first medivac under fire happened in Manila in 1945 when five pilots evacuated 75–80 soldiers one or two at a time.<ref>Conner, Roger. Medevac From Luzon, Air & Space Magazine, July 2010.</ref>
See alsoEdit
- Aeromedical evacuation
- Air ambulance
- Air medical services
- Casualty evacuation
- "Medevac bill" (Australia, 2019)
- Medivac, Australian television series
- Shock Trauma Air Rescue Society