The Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) has found that stretchers acquired for the new Irish Coast Guard rescue helicopter operator are not compliant with safety regulations.
As The Sunday Independent reports, air crews have been told that casualties can only be carried if they are placed sitting up and secured in one of the passenger seats on the AW189 helicopter flown by Bristow Ireland.
Commenting on the development, former Irish Coast Guard director Chris Reynolds has said to have patients sitting up in the aircraft is “madness”.
Reynolds, who has already been critical of the timeline for transition from outgoing operator CHC Ireland to Bristow Ireland, said it was yet one more instance where “whoever was handling the procurement contract” for the Irish Coast Guard “didn’t know what they were doing”.
Former Irish Coast Guard director Chris Reynolds
The directive issued to Bristow Ireland from the IAA affects helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) flights in the AW189 helicopter, which would include medical evacuations from offshore islands and inter-hospital transfers.
A Bristow Ireland spokesman said that this “temporary restriction does not impact patients who can be seated on the aircraft and does not apply to any search and rescue (SAR) flights, which constitute the significant majority of our operations”.
Bristow Ireland has four AW189s currently based in Ireland as it undertakes a transition from outgoing operator CHC Ireland at the four Irish Coast Guard helicopter bases – Shannon, Dublin,Sligo and Waterford.
The AW189 is currently flying from Shannon, which normally conducts medical evacuations from offshore islands and mountainous areas, and is being phased in at the other three bases over the next ten months. After several months of delays, it transferred to 24-hour readiness at Shannon on March 31st.
CHC Ireland crews who have been offered jobs with Bristow are undergoing training in the new aircraft, which has a more confined rear aircraft capacity for handling casualties than the Sikorsky S-92 helicopters operating in Ireland since 2012.
Reynolds explains that the Sikorsky S-92 allowed stretchers to be wheeled in the back door, but the AW189 does not have this facility and air crews have to treat patients “on their knees”.
“Bristow was hoping to use a normal winching stretcher in the new aircraft, but the IAA has said it cannot be secured and isn’t safe, which means proper stretchers will have to be acquired for the AW189, then certified and this may require modifications to the aircraft,” he said.
Aran island resident and retired GP Dr Marion Broderick has called for clarification from the Irish Coast Guard.
“If only seated patients can be accommodated, what is supposed to happen to our seriously acute cases, the majority of whom would need to be on stretchers? ”Dr Broderick asked.
A Bristow Ireland spokesman said it had obtained approval from the IAA to conduct HEMS operations ahead of launching Coast Guard search and rescue helicopter operations at the Shannon base in December 2024.
“This week, the IAA issued restrictions that modifications to the stretcher arrangement were necessary to meet HEMS regulatory approvals,” the helicopter company spokesman said.
He said the temporary restriction would not affect search and rescue flights, being a “significant majority” of operations. Nor would it affect patients who can be seated on the aircraft, he said.
“As we work to understand this restriction we are simultaneously investigating a specialist modification to promptly address the issue,”he said.
“The national response is unaffected, and bases continue to operate a synchronised service, providing a network of emergency support for HEMS and SAR taskings across the country,”Bristow Ireland’s spokesman said.
Read more in The Sunday Independent here

















































