Excerpts from wdsu.com:
The New Orleans EMS administered blood to a woman shot on Bourbon Street Sunday morning while she was still in the street. They say this is a rare ability for EMS services across the country and saves lives.
Thomas Mauro was the paramedic who gave her the blood using a Lifeflow device. He was able to get blood into the victim in just 10 minutes as opposed to the normal 40 or so minutes it can take to get victims’ blood in a hospital.
“Quick, rapid blood administration is the most important thing you can do besides getting them to the hospital as quickly as possible. I feel better now that I can make more of a difference than I could before,” Mauro said.
This was the 100th time New Orleans EMS was able to use this service since it launched almost exactly a year ago. They say they are seeing much better outcomes for people facing trauma that received the treatment, as opposed to those who didn’t in years past.
“My first ever blood administration the patient normally would not have done well but by the time we got that patient to the hospital they were talking, and they weren’t talking before,” Mauro said.
Other EMS services across the world are looking to them as an example and are trying to institute the practice in their own cities.
#1 by BMurphy on November 8, 2022 - 5:32 PM
More info and SOPs (NOEMS):
https://410medical.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/EMS-World-Supplement-NOEMS-Blood-Program.pdf
#2 by Chuck on November 8, 2022 - 4:50 PM
How are they storing the blood? What’s the shelf life? Before you had to account for the controlled substances, now you have to account for the onboard blood supply? Morning inventory….”We’re short a point of O+!” “Yeah…Jerry came in a little hung over yesterday, so we gave him a boost…..”
#3 by Shemp on November 8, 2022 - 11:48 AM
Yay! I’ll be in NOLA in a few weeks. Good to know that after I get stabbed EMS can refill me!
#4 by Michael on November 8, 2022 - 9:59 AM
As they say salt is for margaritas. Blood is for trauma
#5 by BMurphy on November 8, 2022 - 9:43 AM
An absolute game-changer!
#6 by Tim on November 7, 2022 - 8:56 PM
Very interesting. Things have changed a bit over the years. I remember when rubber gloves were optional and most of us never wore them back then.