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carsickpuppy
30th Nov 2010, 11:12
Are there enough home-grown pilots for this plan, or will a few expats play a role?


30 choppers dedicated to aeromedical services
Pauline Wong

[email protected]

PETALING JAYA (Nov 29, 2010): The government plans to speed up emergency rescue and medical response throughout the peninsula with the use of about 30 helicopters dedicated to providing aeromedical services.

Hospital Kuala Lumpur Emergency and Trauma Unit head Datuk Dr Abu Hassan Asaari Abdullah said today the plan to use helicopters represented the “future of emergency medical response in our country”.

The plan mooted under the 10th Malaysia Plan, is expected to be fully implemented by 2015. Under the plan, the helicopters are expected to be distributed and given jurisdiction over the northern, central and
southern zones.

Abu Hassan said a task force under the National Security Council had been set up to co-ordinate and integrate all emergency rescue teams, including the Red Crescent, police, the fire and rescue department, to create a seamless unit that will respond quickly and efficiently to rescue victims in emergency situations, and this includes medical response by air.

Speaking at the second International Conference on Pre-Hospital Care and Emergency Communications Systems, he said a proposal to buy the helicopters had been submitted to the Economic Planning Unit in the Prime Minister’s Department.

As part of the conference, the Simpang Ampat express bus tragedy of Oct 10 , in which 13 people died, was re-enacted with the use of a rescue helicopter from Eurocopter. It was shown that a helicopter could have hypothetically saved the victims who did not get timely medical aid as ambulances were stuck in the jam along the expressway after the multi-vehicle collision.

Following the accident, police air unit commander Senior Assistant Commissioner Datuk Chuah Ghee Lye had suggested that it was high time Malaysia set up an air ambulance service to help victims who needed urgent medical attendance after an accident.

“Transporting victims quickly to hospitals will ensure they receive medical care quickly,” he said, adding that although setting up such a service would involve a high cost, it would benefit the nation in the long term, especially when faced with critical moments.

Chuah had said the police air wing was not adequately equipped to provide such medical rescue services.

Abu Hassan said emergency air medical rescue in the peninsula was ad hoc and there was no formal air rescue service.

“If the need is dire, helicopters from the military, police force or fire department would be called in to transport critical patients to the nearest hospital.

“Currently, the standard guideline for the use of a helicopter is only when it will take more than three hours to reach the victim by land,” he said.

However in East Malaysia, there are nine helicopters for rescue and medical response, as well as several others for use by the Orang Asli Affairs Department.

Abu Hassan declined to say if the 30 helicopters would be bought from Eurocopter, but the Eurocopter EC135 is already in use in Sabah and Sarawak.

A top-of-the-range, fully-equipped EC145 helicopter costs US$8 million (RM24 million).

spinwing
30th Nov 2010, 19:46
Mmm ....

And I would suggest that the EC 145 is NOT the machine to do the job .....

Its little legs and limited payload available are insufficient for the task!

NOW ..... Let the arguing begin ..... :E

t_total
1st Dec 2010, 11:32
I thought they were already meant to have a service. Kuala Lumpur is in West Malaysia

Malaysia to launch air ambulance service Scribbles of my Mind (http://doctorzhivago.wordpress.com/2008/01/02/malaysia-to-launch-air-ambulance-service/)

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan. 2 (Xinhua) — Malaysia is expected to launch air ambulance service later this year, the newspaper The Star said on Wednesday.
The Malaysian Fire and Rescue Department said that it would setup an air ambulance unit this year and 20 people had been sent to the United States for training before doing practices at local hospitals.
The department currently had six helicopters and it hoped that it could obtain two more this year as it was launching the service nationwide.
The department also hoped to train more than 600 paramedic officers in the next two years.

ecureilx
2nd Dec 2010, 09:53
And I always thought Malaysia can rustle up a few rotories when there is a great anti-govt demo as I saw during the anti-ISA march - a few Twin Stars orbiting and used to block the marches efficiently that nobody got through the mobile barricades, and also when they run the anti-racing ops on the NS Highway - I had the opportunity to see a atleast 3 AS 355s virtually movie style landed in the midst of the Highway, to round up the suspects ..

Yah, truly asia ...:ok: :ok: