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STAR Flight
(Shock Trauma Air Rescue) began operation in
1985, to provide Advanced Life Support
response and transport to the citizens in
the outlying areas of Travis County. Soon
after the program's inception the helicopter
began to be used on a more regional basis as
it is today. Over the past couple of years,
the Travis County EMS has added many
ambulances to better service outlying county
communities. This expansion has helped free
the STAR Flight helicopter for
more responses in the surrounding nineteen
county service region. Recent changes in
dispatch procedures mean our helicopters are
essentially on a first-call, first serve
status.
In 1993 STAR Flight
enhanced its operations to include
helicopter rescue, land/water rescue,
wilderness/SAR (search and rescue), and fire
suppression. Scene flights and
hospital-to-hospital transfers comprise over
ninety percent of STAR Flight
responses.
2006 is going to involve more change and
advancement for the program than any other
time in STAR Flight's history.
With new aircraft (EC 145’s), Night Vision
Goggles, direct hoist capability,
advancements in our medical practice
including new medications, ventilators and
invasive monitoring capability, new rescuer
harnesses and operations vests, neonatal and
pediatric acute care transport teams, 2006
will be very exciting and full of activity.
Stay tuned for internet site changes
detailing all the above advancements,
pictures, media files, marketing team
contact information and more. STAR
Flight wants to wish everyone a safe and
happy 2006!
So that's the
brief story. For a more complete
history here are several articles from our
Spring 2004 Newsletter... |
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By Casey Ping, STAR Flight Program
Manager
The
STAR Flight program
began service in May 1985. At that time the
program was a partnership between Travis
County, the City of Austin EMS and the city
owned and operated Brackenridge Hospital.
Travis County funded the aircraft, including
aviation personnel (pilots and mechanics)
and expenses. The Austin EMS department
provided the flight paramedics,
communications center and the medical
equipment. Brackenridge Hospital provided
the flight nurses, crew quarters and
aviation facilities at the hospital (helipad
and fuel system). The original focus of the
program was to provide advanced life support
to the rural areas of Travis County.
Each organization established
a chain of command (Chief Pilot, Chief
Flight Paramedic and Chief Flight Nurse) for
their respective groups and retained full
authority for their respective personnel,
including maintaining separate training and
clearance processes. Each entity had its
own set of policies and procedures. This
created situations in which conflicts
developed between the various independent
but interacting systems. While this worked
during the early years, as the program
flight volume increased and the complexity
of the mission evolved, especially the
addition of inter-facility transports and
broader public safety missions, conflicts
developed concerning the priorities of the
various program partners. Each organization
had its own ideas on the best way to solve
these issues. This was further complicated
by the fact that the City of Austin entered
into the long-term lease agreement with the
Seton Healthcare Network for the management
and operation of Brackenridge Hospital.
Seton immediately began looking for ways to
better meet their air-medical needs. This
introduced additional competing pressures on
a flight program that was already one of the
busiest in the nation. During this time City
of Austin and Travis County were dealing
with a rapidly expanding service requirement
and population increases that required the
STAR Flight program to
meet the demand within Travis County. Any
excess resources, although limited, were to
be used to meet the out-of-county demand. In
1998 STAR Flight
responded to 2500 mission requests with one
staffed aircraft. This number is exceptional
in the air-medical community with most
programs adding staffing of a second
aircraft when they approach 1200 missions
annually. Ultimately, the Seton Healthcare
Network chose to outsource their air-medical
services to a private vendor. The withdrawal
of this partner and their flight nurse staff
resulted in the City of Austin and Travis
County being faced with a decision regarding
the structure, staffing, mission and
operation of STAR Flight.
These discussions took place at the highest
levels of the City and County governments.
Their decisions forever changed the
STAR Flight program and have
had significant and long lasting impact. The
changes undertaken were to:
Create the position of
program manager to manage the daily aspects
of the STAR Flight
program with the goals of unifying program
personnel and establishing a consistent
mission and direction.
Bring all program personnel
(flight paramedics, flight nurses, pilots,
mechanics and communications personnel)
under the management of Austin-Travis County
EMS. This required the hiring of flight
nurses to work directly for A-TECMS.
Undergo an independent
assessment of program quality, leading to
accreditation within two years by the
Commission for Accredited Medical Transport
Systems (CAMTS). This process provided a
structured approach to review program
structure and as a frame work to facilitate
ongoing program improvement. Accreditation
was achieved in 2000 with STAR
Flight becoming the first public safety
program in CAMTS history to become
accredited.
Develop a program-specific
marketing strategy that would allow
STAR Flight personnel to
develop relationships with the surrounding
public safety agencies and medical
community. These relationships are critical
to the future success of the program.
Determining that STAR
Flight would remain a regional resource
for Central Texas with the approval of the
Travis County Commissioners Court.
These changes have resulted
in significant improvement in the management
of a complex air-rescue program and have
created the environment that allows the
STAR Flight crews the
ability to work with a common direction. The
new structure allows the program to be
proactive in the ever changing air-medical
environment and to focus improvement efforts
on the customers and patients we serve. The
STAR Flight program
personnel feel that the changes outlined
above have resulted in a significant
improvement in the program for the patients
as well as the public safety and healthcare
professionals we interact with on a daily
basis.
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Backwards Through the Fog
By
Skip Gibbons, STAR Flight Pilot, with help
from Mark Wilson, Gordon Bergh, Frank Urias,
Jim Allday, Bill Needles, Steve Janda, Ed
Strout
, and George Morgan
A
lot of details blend when trying to recreate
the opening days of STAR
Flight. A few paramedics selected from
City of Austin EMS (Gordon Bergh, Allan
Boutwell, Robin Cope, Chuck Morrison, David
Stone, Ed Strout, Clancy Terrill) teamed
with a few nurses from Brackenridge Hospital
(Valerie Calogero, Betty Parker, Donna
McSwain, Sherry Stewart, Ellen Swan, Rick
Waring, Mark Wilson) and a handful of pilots
from Travis County (Larry Edwards, Skip
Gibbons, Merlin “Spanky” Handley, Larry
Stone) to fly the new EMS helicopters
capably maintained by a contract vendor
(Dave Simpson).
This was the dawn of airborne EMS for
Travis County and what a learning process it
was!
Standards of operation that
were customary in the EMS and hospital
environments slowly, and sometimes
painfully, evolved into standards that
matched or exceeded those of the helicopter
medical transport industry. The pilots
started with a 6-day on, 3-day off schedule
(12 hours shifts) with the paramedics
working the standard 24-hour shift and the
nurses responding from their normally
scheduled shift as triage nurse in the
Brackenridge Emergency Room. Shifts for all
crewmembers today consist of 4 days on and 4
days off (12 hours shifts) commonly used in
helicopter EMS. On top of that, our crews
work as dedicated teams (pilot, paramedic
and nurse) during those scheduled work
assignments.
The paramedics and pilots
were originally housed in a stark dorm room
in the old nursing student dormitory on the
I-35 frontage road. It had been unused for
some time and was slated for eventual
demolition, so the only occupants were the
flight crew, one or two isolated office
workers and a population of rodent
residents. Homemade blowguns were used for
recreation or self-defense, depending on
your opinion of the rats. The original
helipad was a concrete pad poured on the
empty lot at the corner of 15th Street and
I-35, directly in front of the old
dormitory. The approach path into the
helipad was along I-35 and then nearly
vertical for the last 150 feet into the
helipad. The patient was loaded into a
retired ambulance and driven around the
hospital to the ER. Within a year or so, a
new helipad had been built on the west side
of Brackenridge (adjacent to the ER) with
living quarters below the helipad that
housed both the flight crew and the Medic-3
ambulance crew. With a few modifications,
we are still there today.
Initially, responses to calls
were quite unique. The paramedic and pilot
would respond alone to calls within Travis
County and the nurse would join the crew on
calls outside Travis County. Within a short
time, the nurse would fly on hospital
transfers as well. While the pilot and
paramedic would respond from the dorm room
near the old helipad on the east side, the
nurse would have to run from the ER on the
west side of Brackenridge, through the
hospital, to join the crew at the running
helicopter prior to lift-off.
It’s been quite a transition
as our aircraft have changed over the
years. Our original “big” ship was a Bell
206L3 LongRanger, while using a Bell 206B
JetRanger as the “backup”. Those aircraft
did not have the modern customized EMS
interior so common in the industry today.
It wasn’t long before we saw the usefulness
of a larger aircraft—a snorkeler who had
been accidentally shot with a spear gun
would not fit in the helicopter with the
spear protruding from his chest and the
emergency response crews were very
uncomfortable trying to cut the spear off as
they watched it pulse with each beat of the
patient’s heart. In 1990 we
enthusiastically put the new Bell 412 in
service as the new “big” ship, replacing the
JetRanger. We kept the LongRanger as the
“backup” and Travis County hired George
Morgan as the Manager of Maintenance.
George worked hours at the airport getting
things squared away on the new aircraft
prior to releasing it into service.
Unfortunately, we didn’t have the external
start “fox carts” we now use and the
aircraft battery was partially drained
during the crew prep phase at the old
airport and subsequent flight to the
Brackenridge helipad. On our very first
call, a collision in the early morning hours
on I-35 in Georgetown, the 412 after landing
and shutting down WOULD NOT START.
For weeks afterward, the media followed the
412 and the headlines read “did Travis
County buy a lemon?” We solved the problem
with the purchase of an external start cart
and subsequent flights passed successfully
and uneventfully. The 412 certainly enabled
some unique positive experiences as well,
like the baby delivered in-flight by Paul
Kuper and Laura Criddle after the mother was
injured in a vehicle collision. Also, the
larger aircraft allowed three and
four-patient transports that would have been
impossible with a smaller aircraft.
The arrival of the 412
created opportunities for operational growth
but highlighted the difficulties of
maintaining and operating two different
aircraft. Medical and rescue missions were
drastically changed any time we moved from
one aircraft into the other. The increased
capability of the 412 expanded what the
crews could do, from the number of patients
to the amount of water that could be carried
for aerial firefighting. The crews had to
be trained on two different aircraft and the
maintenance staff had to deal with keeping
special tools, parts, equipment and training
for each aircraft instead of the two
same-type aircraft we use today.
These issues led to the
purchase of two EC135T1 helicopters in
1999. The new Eurocopter EC-135s enabled
the maintenance crew to focus on parts and
tooling for only one type of aircraft and
allowed the flight crews to standardize the
equipment and mission regardless which
helicopter was in service.
Besides the aircraft changes,
our hangar facilities have experienced the
largest transformation since the “Early
Days”. Dave Simpson and all subsequent
maintenance technicians, including our
current maintenance director, George Morgan,
had to endure the deplorable conditions in
the old hangar located at the old Robert
Mueller Airport on 51st street. We actually
rented only part of a large metal hangar
that was essentially a shed with walls that
we shared with several other airplanes...no
insulation, no heat, a locally manufactured
cage that served as parts storage and tool
room, and the hangar access door which could
be opened with a pocket knife. The
maintenance office area was drafty, cold and
leaked in the rain. In 1999, with a
taxpayer supported bond, we moved into the
state-of-the-art facility in which our
maintenance and administrative staff
currently operate. This facility, located
in northeast Austin, houses both
administrative and maintenance offices, a
hangar which easily fits both helicopters
along with a rescue boat or two, as well as
housing and kitchen facilities for flight
crews. It also contains an often-used
training classroom and a storage area for
Special Operations rescue equipment. Pocket
knives and credit cards no longer work in
the absence of actual keys. With the flight
facility becoming a high security area, we
now use electronic card readers for access.
STAR
Flight
is widely accepted now as a
lifesaving vehicle and is usually welcomed
into the yards and neighborhoods of some
very anxious and sometimes desperate
people. Early days of the program, though,
took some selling since the helicopter was
actually going to reduce the number of ALS
units physically located in the county.
Medic-9, station at Hwy 71/FM 620 was
changed to a BLS unit (Aid-16) as STAR
Flight was designated the
county ALS response unit. Residents of the
Hudson Bend/Lakeway area had come to rely on
the short response time of Medic-9 bringing
paramedics to their front door and were none
too happy when they were told that the unit
now bringing ALS to their homes was
responding from downtown Austin. As
STAR Flight became a regular
responder to the lake areas, people became
more comfortable with its response times and
even more pleased with the transport time to
the hospital.
The program’s inaugural
response was a great example of helicopter
acceptance—or NOT. That flight was
dispatched with Chuck Morrison (Flight
Paramedic) and Skip Gibbons (Pilot)
responding to a cardiac arrest at a rural
home near Lake Travis. We were using a
leased Bell 206 with no STAR
Flight or EMS markings on the
exterior. The elderly woman who had called
911 for medical assistance for her husband
was not happy at all as the helicopter
scattered her chickens upon landing. On the
return flight, people actually threw rocks
at us from the shores of Hippie Hollow on
Lake Travis, assuming we were just
sightseers. People are a little friendlier
now.
It’s been quite a ride for
STAR Flight from 1985 to
the present. Sometimes smooth, sometimes
bumpy, but always interesting since that
first flight.
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STAR Flight Public Safety
Operations
By
Casey Ping, STAR Flight Program
Manager
STAR
Flight
began operation in May of 1985, and as the
name Shock Trauma Air Rescue (STAR)
implies, there has been a public safety role
since the program’s inception. In the early
years this role was not clearly defined and
was limited because of the capability of the
program’s original aircraft.
STAR
Flight
began service with a Bell 206L as the
primary aircraft and its smaller sister, a
Bell 206B, as the backup. These are the
most common helicopters in general aviation
today but have some substantial limitations
when it comes to EMS and rescue operations.
During those early days the
flight crews did not have specialized rescue
training or equipment. The crews would
literally make it up as it came along and
did the best they could. While this is not
the beginning of a model helicopter rescue
program, there were successes. The program
began to realize some of the limitations of
the current operation and their aircraft.
This prompted Travis County to replace the
206B with a larger and more capable Bell
412. The new aircraft offered substantial
new capabilities that had not been available
to date. Program personnel began to explore
these capabilities and ways to improve the
services delivered. To better understand and
develop these capabilities, the public
safety mission was broken into categories
for further investigation and
recommendations.
Fire Suppression
The Bell 206 aircraft
previously operated by STAR
Flight had limited external load
capability, especially in the medical
configuration. The Bell 412 offered
substantially increased capacity for both
external and internal loads. This included
the ability to transport fire personnel to
difficult access areas and take an active
role in fire suppression activities through
aerial water drops. A Bambi Bucket was
purchased and several aviation management
personnel traveled to other areas of the
United States to observe fire suppression
activities to learn first-hand about their
training programs. This program remains
active today and the fire mission volume is
dependant on those weather conditions that
impact the frequency of wild land fires.
STAR Flight can provide
both suppression and observation support at
these incidents. Suppression activities are
normally limited to daylight hours unless
the pilot has been there during the day and
there is a clear threat that justifies
flying after dark. This is a decision that
must be reached jointly by the Fire Incident
Commander and the STAR
Flight pilot.
NOTE: Fire Missions are
automatically approved within Travis County
or at the request of a Travis County agency.
Approval is required for missions outside of
Travis County. This usually occurs while the
requesting agency is still on the phone and
has proven to be very timely. Most fire
missions are considered Priority 3 and the
on-duty aircraft can be diverted to higher
priority missions (generally medical or
rescue missions).
Search and Rescue
As stated earlier STAR
Flight has always been involved in
rescue operations, but it was clearly
evident in the early days of the program
that the crews had neither the necessary
training nor equipment to offer a high
degree of success and to effectively manage
the risk of these missions. Because of
these reasons, equipment was purchased and
training provided to alleviate these
shortcomings. Some flight crew members had
previously been involved with helicopter
rescue training which was being conducted in
Kerrville as a result of the Comfort, Texas
flood. The initial training was a
partnership between the Kerrville Fire
Department, the Texas Department of Public
Safety (DPS) and Rescue 3 International.
In an interesting side note,
it was during this time that there were
significant issues between the partners
(Travis County, Austin EMS and Brackenridge
Hospital) about the program direction of
STAR Flight. During this
period the flight nurses were provided by
Brackenridge Hospital, and while many of the
flight nurses attended the initial rescue
training, they were prohibited from further
participation in rescue activities (training
or operations) because of the liability
concerns of their employer. This left
STAR Flight with some
equipment and training but short of rescue
personnel. Several options were considered,
including partnering with the Austin Fire
Department. AFD was not able to meet the
staffing requirements, so members of Austin
EMS Special Operations began to receive
helicopter rescue training. Rescue 3
International provided crew chief training
to the flight crew and helicopter rappel,
water insertion and short-haul training for
STAR Flight and EMS
Special Operations personnel. This system
was a burden to Austin EMS because it
required taking an EMS Special Operations
ambulance out of service. The coordination
of getting the EMS crew and helicopter
together was cumbersome, requiring them
either to meet at the helipad, enroute or at
the scene. Shortly thereafter the Seton
Network decided to stop their direct
partnership with Travis County for
air-medical services and removed the flight
nurses from the STAR Flight
program. This created the opportunity for
STAR Flight to hire flight
nurses directly. Today flight nurses and
flight paramedics receive the same public
safety rescue training and are
interchangeable in the roles of crew chief
and rescuer.
In December 1998 the Travis
County Commissioners Court decided to
replace the aging Bell 412 and 206L models
with the Eurocopter EC135. The EC135 had new
technology as well as increased performance
and efficiency. Several benefits of this
acquisition included:
Two aircraft of the same type
No decrease in mission
capability when the one aircraft was down
for maintenance
The aircraft were designed
with public safety air rescue missions in
mind. This contributed to decreased
preparation time (and quicker on-scene
times) for rescue missions.
Over the next several years,
STAR Flight personnel
continued to refine and expand the
capabilities of air rescue and patient care
in the rescue environment. This expertise
has extended to include state-wide responses
during significant flooding in partnership
with Texas Engineering Extension Service (TEEX),
the National Guard and Department of Public
Safety. In this role, qualified paramedics
and nurses are partnered with National Guard
helicopter crews to perform a variety of air
rescue operations during times of natural
disasters (mainly flooding). This includes
both a rescue and medical role.
Members of the STAR
Flight program are actively involved in
teaching helicopter rescue both nationally
and internationally. This allows program
personnel to refine their skills, learn new
things in a varied environment while sharing
the successes STAR Flight
has had in the past.
Today the air rescue
component of STAR Flight
remains a valuable resource for the citizens
of Travis County and the Central Texas area.
While actual rescue operations remain a
small percentage of the total mission
volume, it remains a viable tool to access,
stabilize and extricate patients that may
have had to otherwise wait considerable
time.
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Clinical History
By
Jim Allday, STAR Flight Clinical
Manager
In
the summer of 1984 a decision was made
between the City of Austin and Travis County
to utilize a helicopter as a cost effective
method of providing ALS care and transport
to the rural areas of Travis County.
I was tasked with
determining the medical crew staffing for
this helicopter, additional equipment,
supplies, and medication needs as well as
additional training needs. I had no
previous experience with air medical
medicine, so I proceeded to contact many of
the existing air medical services in the
country to determine how they operated.
After much information was
gathered and several hundred hours of
conversations were conducted, we had arrived
at a plan for this new air medical crew.
Flight physiology, including transport
medicine, along with an introduction to
critical care medicine was provided. All of
this was done to assist the crews in their
ability to handle the higher acuity patient
that is typically transported by flight
teams.
Within a few months of the
start of the program, Brackenridge Hospital
requested we respond to some of the outlying
hospitals for patient transfers to their
facility. Some of the patients were truly
beyond the capabilities of many of the EMS
agencies at that time. The potential for
non-traditional EMS interventions during
transport might be needed. Brackenridge
stated that they would be willing to send an
ER nurse along for the flight. With that
development, the Flight Nurses became a
permanent fixture of the program.
STAR
Flight
was a Travis County tax-payer supported
program, so the initial focus was on calls
originating within Travis County. What this
meant was that a need for STAR
Flight within Travis County always took
precedent over a call originating outside of
Travis County, even if the Travis County
call came after the out-of-county request.
As STAR Flight’s call
volume increased, this diverting from
out-of-county calls to in-county calls
became more prevalent. As a result, our
out-of-county customers began to lose
confidence in our service completing their
dispatched mission. Over the years,
STAR Flight’s expanded
usefulness into rescue work, law enforcement
assists, and fire suppression requests
demonstrated that STAR
Flight was no longer a Travis County
asset, but instead had become a Central
Texas asset. With that realization, the
program became less focused on Travis County
needs and more focused on Central Texas
needs. The result was a more patient-focused
approach which meant that typically the
first request for STAR
Flight would be honored first. So now
sometimes the more distant, out-of-county
patient would receive STAR
Flight more readily than the in-county
patient, who may still be at a distance from
definitive care, but was still closer to an
ALS ground unit than the out-of-county
patient.
In the late 1980s and early
90s, the need for a larger helicopter became
evident as our patients were of a higher
acuity requiring more devices, supplies, and
medications to manage them. The need to
have more room to work on more than one
patient was obvious. We purchased the Bell
412SP and kept the Bell LongRanger as our
backup aircraft. We now were also capable
of transporting FOUR patients
at a time! With one moveable patient
stretcher tray on each side of the aircraft,
we could rapidly load two patients and
within five minutes, could reconfigure the
aircraft to handle four patients. It was
now easier to handle two or more patients
and with additional room for storage, we
began stocking the aircraft with more
equipment and supplies, including
non-invasive and SaO2 monitoring
capabilities for two patients.
During the 412 days, we also
began to really expand our rescue
capabilities, which translated into
additional medical equipment, supplies, and
packs so that we could bring medical
treatment to the patient’s side wherever
he/she might be.
In 1998, we took delivery of
our current EC135 helicopters - two
helicopters that were exactly alike except
for their tail numbers! This made working
out of either helicopter very easy. It also
greatly facilitated aircraft change-outs.
The EC135s were configured to allow for two
patient transports.
In the fall of 1999, Seton
Hospital outsourced many of its air-medical
needs, resulting in the loss of the
STAR Flight Nurses. We
immediately began staffing with two
paramedics while evaluating our future
staffing needs. With a review of national
air medical programs and an informal survey
of our local medical community, we elected
to continue to have a nurse/paramedic
medical crew configuration. Austin-Travis
County EMS had never hired nurses, so new
positions had to be created with a pay
scale, job requirements, and job
descriptions. In the spring of 2000, we
hired and began training our first
Austin-Travis County EMS Flight Nurses.
In the spring of 2001,
STAR Flight became the
first public safety agency to attain
Commission on Accreditation of Air-Medical
Transport Systems (CAMTS) accreditation.
This process afforded us the opportunity to
review every aspect of the program and make
some needed changes to improve the way that
we operated. It was a challenge for the
accreditation team as they encountered many
unique program elements of our public safety
service. This was a very proud
accomplishment.
Over the last few years we
have added some additional protocols to
provide for better airway management and
pain, agitation, and nausea management. We
now will take patients directly to the burn
center in San Antonio and to a closer trauma
center in San Antonio or Temple when
appropriate. We also take possible stroke
victims to specified stroke centers when
appropriate. In the coming year we hope to
add alternative IV access capability and to
enhance our ability to manage patients
having an active MI, experiencing cardiac
failure, or suffering from an aortic
aneurysm. We now have the capability of
providing warm IV fluids or blood (if
started at a sending facility) for our
patients to assist with re-warming and to
reduce hypothermia. This has been very
useful for rescue and trauma victims who
have been exposed to cold temperatures for
even short periods of time.
Two items recently approved
for use on STAR Flight
include the Cook-Melker Emergency
Cricothyrotomy Kit and the F.A.S.T.1 Adult
Intraosseus Infusion System. While
STAR Flight crews have always
had the option of using a surgical airway in
a patient who could not be intubated, the
Cook-Melker kit offers an additional device
to ensure a quick and patent airway. The
F.A.S.T.1 is a new technology which permits
faster, safer, and more reliable vascular
access in trauma patients in a state of
hemodynamic collapse.
The current STAR
Flight crews have extensive experience.
The Flight Nurses range from 7 to 20 years
experience and the Flight Paramedics range
from 7 to 25 years. Current certifications
maintained by the crews include: ACLS,
PALS, BTLS, ABLS, ENPC, TNCC, and TNATC.
Several of the Flight Paramedics are also
certified Critical Care Paramedics, while
several of the Flight Nurses hold either CEN,
CCRN, or CFRN certifications. We are
currently planning on purchasing 2-3 human
patient simulators to allow us to have the
ability to more frequently practice invasive
procedures while receiving feedback from a
“patient” in a variety of scenarios.
It’s been a tremendous
learning process since 1985. We’re proud of
the accomplishments we’ve made, and look
forward to working with you in the years to
come.
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