medical team

What kind of medical team is on board?

Each task receives personnel according to the patient's condition. Stable patients can travel with a certified flight nurse or paramedic, critical patients require an intensive care doctor or emergency the doctor was paired with a flight nurse in critical care. We deploy NICU for newborn or pediatric tasks, or PICU specialists with experience in aeromedical transfers. All staff are trained at height physiology, in-flight emergency management and aviation safety procedures.

medical team

Are your healthcare teams multilingual?

Yes. Because we operate internationally, multilingual ability is important. Our teams include english, French, Turkish, Arabic, German and Spanish speakers with clear communication hospitals, families, embassies and local authorities. This linguistic versatility also helps avoid misunderstandings during medical transfers or cross-border procedures.

medical team

Do health care teams bring medication?

Yes. The team carries task-specific drug kits that include emergency medication, sedation agents, pain management options, cardiovascular support drugs, antibiotics and pediatric or neonatal formulations when needed. All drugs are documented, approved and stored for aviation temperature-controlled containers if required.

medical team

Can your team practice sedation?

Yes. Sedation is implemented according to strict protocols that are compatible with international critical care standards. Ventilated patients, trauma cases, agitated patients or those who suffer from severe pain. The team continuously monitors blood pressure, oxygen saturation, ECG and ventilation to ensure safe and appropriate levels of sedation throughout the flight.

medical team

Are your teams certified in flight medicine?

Our flight doctors, nurses and medical assistants receive special air-medical training hypoxia, barometric pressure changes, cabin physiology and emergency procedures. Many are EURAMI accredited centers or aviation medical programs.

medical team

Who decides if a patient is fit to fly?

The ability to fly is determined by our post-examination medical director or primary flight doctor medical reports, imaging, laboratory values and consultation with the attending physician. If needed, if stabilization is requested before departure or the flight plan is adapted—for example, the lowest height of the cabin or additional oxygen supply.

medical team

Can a doctor talk to your medical director?

Yes. Direct communication is encouraged to ensure continuity of care. Our doctors are making changes clinical details, treatment plans, medication lists and transfer requirements with the hospital medical team before and after duty to avoid any gaps in patient management.

medical team

Do you provide palliative transfers?

Yes. Palliative flights give priority to comfort, dignity and emotional support. Our health teams provide this pain and anxiety is controlled, the patient is safely positioned and the family presence is checked supported when possible. These tasks are managed with exceptional precision and clarity communication with families.

medical team

Is blood transfusion possible during the flight?

Yes. The aircraft is prepared by cross-matching for situations requiring transfusion during transport units, convenient storage solutions and IV infusion equipment. Decision to conduct transfusion it is performed by the flight physician on the basis of real-time clinical evaluation.

medical team

How is the follow-up of patients done?

Patients are continuously monitored using aviation certified ICU equipment. This includes an ECG oxygen saturation, blood pressure, respiratory parameters, EtCO2 and temperature. The team as well conducts repeated clinical evaluations, manages medications, adjusts ventilation and documents all interventions during the flight, ensuring uninterrupted maintenance.