#Queensland
NEWS | AU LifeFlight Australia Air Ambulances

Queensland LifeFlight: 7,300 People Assisted in Record Year

RACQ LifeFlight, the air ambulance operator in Queensland, Australia, has provided assistance to 7,349 people in need over the past record-breaking 12 months, bringing the total number of people assisted to 81,000 since its establishment in 1979





Queensland LifeFlight: 7,300 People Assisted in Record Year
RACQ LifeFlight Rescue, July 19, 2023 - LifeFlight Australia has come to the aid of more than 81,000 people since our humble beginnings 44 years ago, spending 4,110 hours in the air during 2022-23.

The 2022-23 Financial Year was another record-breaking 12 months for LifeFlight Australia, with the service’s rescue helicopters, Air Ambulance jets, Critical Care Doctors, Flight Nurses and Paramedics helping 7,349 people in need.

We can trace our proud history in Queensland back to 1979 on the Sunshine Coast, when our first rescue chopper took off on its first mission from a base at the Big Cow on the Bruce Highway.

Since then, our fleet has expanded to multiple community helicopters, Air Ambulance Jets and medical bases around the state.

Crews on board our RACQ LifeFlight Rescue and LifeFlight Surat Gas Aeromedical Service (SGAS) rotary wing fleet helped 2,299 people and were called into action to assist Queenslanders in emergencies ranging from Search and Rescue operations in the outback, to winch rescues offshore or in rugged terrain, and medical emergencies in remote locations.

The Brisbane aeromedical team was part of the multi-agency response to the tragic Sea World helicopter crash on the Gold Coast in January, first landing at the crash site then airlifting a primary school-aged child to hospital.

The most common reason for our helicopter crews to be tasked directly to an emergency scene, was to attend serious motor vehicle incidents, involving two or four-wheeled vehicles, both off and on-road.

Motorist and road safety advocacy organisation RACQ has seen the number of fatalities and vehicle incidents increase, throughout their 30 year partnership as the naming right’s sponsor of LifeFlight’s community helicopter fleet.

Queensland LifeFlight: 7,300 People Assisted in Record Year
LifeFlight Bell 412 helicopter



RACQ spokesperson Lauren Cooney said “It’s simple. When you’re behind the wheel, make a commitment to get back to basics. Take road safety seriously and do everything you can to get to your destination safely”

On every mission, our patients receive the highest level of medical care from the moment a LifeFlight rescue chopper lands, as well as in-flight, thanks to our Critical Care Doctors, Flight Nurses and Flight Paramedics.

Dr Jeff Hooper, LifeFlight Director of Clinical Services and Governance said “They are able to go to the roadside scenes to stabilise patients and provide definitive care, like they would in a tertiary hospital or tertiary intensive care unit. Essentially our doctors, nurses and paramedics carry pretty much a mobile intensive care unit where they can do lots of procedures – whether that’s on the side of the road or within a small hospital, to stabilise patients and bring them to that higher level of care”

While there have been numerous dramatic rescue missions, much of LifeFlight’s aeromedical work involves Inter-Facility Transfers (IFT) – moving patients between medical facilities – ensuring all communities have equal access to the best possible healthcare, no matter where they are in the state.

“I think that the work we do for IFTs is really important to the people of Queensland – the majority of Queensland is a rural environment and people are a long way from really high levels of care,” said Dr Hooper.

“Our feeling is that every Queenslander deserves that opportunity to be rapidly transferred to a world class standard of care.”

LifeFlight’s Brisbane Airport base is also home to RACQ LifeFlight Rescue Air Ambulance jets, with another jet base in Townsville ensuring long-distance fixed wing aeromedical coverage the length of Queensland and beyond.

In the last Financial Year, the combined efforts of the LifeFlight Air Ambulance crews, who are also tasked by Retrieval Services Queensland, saw 473 people helped: 189 by Brisbane-based crews and 284 by Townsville-based crews.

“Our fleet of Air Ambulance jets provide an additional capability for LifeFlight,”said Dr Hooper.

“These tend to go on longer distance missions that would take even a couple of hours’ flying time to get to,” he said, “The majority of work is Inter-Hospital Transfers so coming from small hospitals and bringing those patients back to tertiary centres for an increased level of care, particularly intensive care type patients and transfers.”

Two LifeFlight Air Ambulance jets, one from each base, responded to a serious single vehicle crash on Norfolk Island in March.

Three patients, each suffering multiple injuries were airlifted to Brisbane for hospital treatment.

LifeFlight’s jet fleet consists of four Challenger 604 aircrafts which are custom fitted with spectrum stretchers which allows two patients to travel in each aircraft, both domestically and internationally.

Queensland LifeFlight: 7,300 People Assisted in Record Year
LifeFlight Challenger air ambulance





  See also


AU LifeFlight Australia Air Ambulances
Air Medical Ambulance Services
AU Queensland Local Governments     Government of Australia




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