Modes of Transport
Children's Transport Team provides the following modes of transportation: ambulance, rotor wing and fixed wing aircraft.
- Since 1988, Children's Hospital has partnered with local ambulance vendors to provide ground transportation from referring facilities. The interior of each ambulance is equipped as a mobile intensive care unit, while maintaining a child-friendly environment.
In collaboration with the Herma Heart Center, a mobile ECMO program was developed in 2004. This makes Children's Transport one of only four transport programs in the country to transport children on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, a type of heart/lung bypass.
- Flight for Life (FFL) helicopter transport program, sponsored by Children's Hospital and Froedert Hospital, has provided rotor wing service with Children's Transport since the team's inception in 1988. When a patient's acuity requires the fastest available means, a helicopter transport is arranged. Children's Transport and FFL provide transport service to a diverse patient population. The helicopter can be converted quickly to accommodate an isolette for an inter-facility transport of a premature infant, or a gurney needed for an 18-year old involved in a motor vehicle crash.
- Fixed Wing medical transport service is considered when the referring health care facility is located outside a 200-mile radius of Children's Hospital. The aircraft is medically equipped to provide safe transfer of the most critical patients. Along with the ambulance and helicopter, the fixed wing aircraft is able to accommodate either a gurney or an isolette. The addition of the Aerosled, a system that puts less physical strain on personnel, means the patient can be easily and safely transferred from the aircraft to the ambulance for ground transport from the airport to Children's Hospital.
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