Myth and Marketing of the Golden Hour

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 11:32 AM
 Don’t ask me why but when I was a child, growing up in Miami my parents didn't try and get me to believe in Santa Claus.  Nevertheless, I find the “Yes Virginia There is a Santa Claus” story particularly appropriate for this post, which is about myths.

One of the most effective marketing tools of medical aviation is the not-even-close-to-being-true concept of the Golden Hour.  This myth is so successful, in fact that I hardly need to define it, but just to be safe, let me say simply that the Golden Hour is that all-important period when the ill or injured must be treated in order to have the best outcome.


Dr. John Morris photo courtesy Vanderbilt University Medical Center
The indiscriminate application of the Golden Hour translates into the hokum that when it comes to medicine, faster is better.  It sounds right. Better yet, it feels right, when inside your head a voice is screaming. “Get me to a doctor stat! I’m dyin’ here!”

But Golden Hour has a squishy grounding in science. The Annals of Emergency Medicine published a report on this subject earlier this year which you can read here. But for a summary, let me quote Dr. John Morris, medical director of Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s LifeFlight program who explained recently that rapid access to medicine may be beneficial if a number of other factors are present.

The type of injury and the overall health and age of the patient contribute to what Dr. Morris calls physiologic reserve. If your physiologic reserve is tapped out, you’ll want treatment in a hurry. But you can’t extrapolate that racing every accident victim to medical care in a helicopter improves outcome, ‘cuz it's just not true.

The Golden Hour, Dr. Morris told me, “Is a shortcut that works well in the lay community but when you start talking about how to run a health care delivery system such as helicopter transport, where you have to create guidelines which optimize capturing all of the people who need transport and minimize the capturing of those who don’t need helicopter transport, those guidelines become muddled.”

Muddled thinking is how thousands of people like Oscar Vaz get taken for a ride. Or in his case it was his 12 year old daughter who got the ride, and he got the $16,000 bill. Oscar’s ‘tween was in a Texas summer camp in the community of Marble Falls this past June when she hit her head in the shower. The first responders felt the need to airlift the child to a hospital in Austin where the child’s minor injury was treated and she was released to continue her stay at camp.

How could the paramedics have called this so wrong? I’m not the only one asking this question and certainly not just about the Vaz case. Across the country, the misuse of medical helicopters is beginning to get the attention of officials. A report issued last year by the Arizona Department of Health Services, concludes there is, “considerable overuse of air ambulance for trauma victims with non-life threatening injuries.” The report cites a “need for accurate data and on-going analysis.”

From his position as director of Vanderbilt’s LifeFlight program, here’s Dr. Morris’s take on the matter.  

Generally speaking in the United States, medical helicopters are operated in two different environments, aviation-based and medically-based. The aviation-based, for-profit companies have multi-million dollar balance sheets that entice Wall Street investors.  These companies swoop into large population areas, strike up relationships with public safety agencies and get their phone numbers on the rapid dial of first responders.

As Dr. Morris characterizes it, “speed is the most important product” that these air ambulance companies deliver.  

Hospital-based programs by contrast have no aviation expertise, “They focus on medicine rather than speed and rather than get the patient to hospital, they get the hospital to the patient,” Dr. Morris said.  This means that the helicopter is more than a machine to move people. It is a portable medical suite, so that treatment begins at the scene.

Then, even after the patient has arrived at the hospital and been tucked into a bed, the people responsible for determining the need for air transport are accountable for their decision. They learn from each patient so judgment improves with experience.

The ability to follow up and learn is missing from the Vaz case. Private air ambulance companies have a temporary, entirely episodic involvement in the patient’s care.

Lest this sound like I’ve drunk the Vanderbilt Kool Aid, let me say that Dr. Morris is not alone in the opinion that medically based programs are better for individual patients and public health policy.

Tom Judge, the executive director of LifeFlight of Maine and the former director of the Association of Air Medical Services says he’s dismayed at the evolution in the industry. Helicopter companies did the math and figured out that there was big money to be made in private helicopter ambulances. “They said ‘we can do this by ourselves and make a greater profit’”, he explained to me. “That’s what business people do and that’s what they’re supposed to do. But they were doing that in the middle of a medical enterprise.”

In arguing the other side, Air Method’s Craig Yale told me the for-profit factor benefits patients.  “It’s part of why the community-based programs are viable,” he said in an interview last year. “They can develop the critical mass that a single program is not able to do.”

One might almost believe in the win-win, a private enterprise/public benefit scenario that Yale describes, if a few gnawing facts didn’t keep resurfacing.

Helicopter ambulances are being used unnecessarily as often as half the time according to some studies. Patients are being put at risk because of the unabated safety crisis in medical helicopters.

The only way to believe that critical mass in this industry is good news is to believe in the myth of the Golden Hour. And now you know Virginia, why this is a story the air ambulance industry won’t stop telling.
  

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