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Hello,
I would say losing weight will help. It all depends on the program. Most have weight limitations. I fly in Chicago and three of the programs in this area do not have weight limitations. ( we have 2 nurses over 250 and 2 over 275 as well as a 300lb medic and several 250 lb medics). Now that is not the norm. We fly a newer BK117 and it can handle it. I know of several programs with 200lb and 210 lb weight limits. For our program you would need 5 years of experience including ICU as well as ED. We also like pre-hospital experience. You also must have per the State-ACLS, PALS, NRP, PHTLS or BTLS and TNCC or TNS. Within 1 year CFRN. Good luck.
Qanik
QUOTE=TraumaInTheSlot]Im 6 foot 290 lbs. i have almost 4 years er experience. i am interested in treating prehospital patients in a helicopter. it has always been a dream of mine.
i guess i better start eating less carbs...lol
some flight programs, like hospital wing in memphis, require all flight nurses to be EMT-basics. the program is only a semester, and EASY for nurses.
you might want to get certified in this while you are losing the weight.
also, if your hospital has a flight program, find out who the big cheese is(director of program, or head nurse of the flight team), and let them know you are there, and interested(that's what i've done)
i, too, am interested in becoming a CFRN, and have taken the appro. steps. just gotta(huff puff), lose the weight.....
a vast critical care background also helps.
lastly, you may want to consider ground transport. if nothing else, you get great experience, and if you still want flight, the DEFINITELY look at that.
Posted by TraumaInTheSlot: Im 6 foot 290 lbs. i have almost 4 years er experience. i am interested in treating prehospital patients in a helicopter. it has always been a dream of mine.
Just ask to pilots to offload some fuel! :rotfl:
i guess i better start eating less carbs...lol
Yes, and you want to get nimble and flexible. That also helps when the bird doesn't land the way you want it to. :rotfl:
I'm not big enough to fly...can't lift high enough to get the patient into the bird...
I do good to keep my weight in the 3-digit range, yet have never had trouble getting the patient into the bird. Just problems getting my flightsuit custom made :chuckle Usually there's an abundance of people just dying to help out onscene or at the airport. We have more problems with the patient being "launched" into the aircraft with the extra adrenaline of onscene personnel.
Blue skies!
Jen
TraumaInTheSlot
85 Posts
Im 6 foot 290 lbs. i have almost 4 years er experience. i am interested in treating prehospital patients in a helicopter. it has always been a dream of mine.
i guess i better start eating less carbs...lol