Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Australia's Flying Doctors


                                              Busy Medical Service
     Wireless, wings, and stethoscopes---Down Under that refers to the Royal Flying Doctor Service. I looked forward to and was fascinated with the interesting visit to the service  in the middle of the Australian Outback.
    In a small auditorium we viewed a fantastic film of the Service in action, learning that the service started in1928 with one plane. Today, in Alice Springs, the Service operates with six doctors, six nurses, six pilots, three planes and three engineers.  The goal is to do three clinics a day or 1000 a year in the Outback.
    Everyone works a 12-hour shift for two days, has one day off and then repeats. The  annual budget is 9-million dollars. Tourists involved in accidents, many at Uluru or Ayers Rock, account for 18% of their calls, and most of the averaged five evacuations a day are also from Uluru.
     A drug box containing 100 drugs packaged by number, not name, is kept at numerous outposts around the country. Much prescribing is  done by phone. The Service at Alice Springs covers an area of 70 kilometers in any direction from the city. The population of this area, including the city, is approximately 16,000. The pilots have access to 150 air-strips. The entire Service covers 2.3 million square kilometers.
    Today the Service is in the hands of six mainland sections, each having one or more radio control stations. There are 16 base locations around the country from which Flying Doctors operate. In total the Service employs 27 doctors, 58 nurses, 65 pilots, 34 engineers, 51 admin staff,46 mechanics and other staff and 9 general hands.
    No other service in the world operates over such a vast territory providing such a comprehensive health service. They are not merely an aerial ambulance, but a remote area health care provider. They are 2 hours or less from each location. What a fantastic service and outfit!

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