West Sussex County Times

Air ambulance pioneers new mobile app to transform communicat­ion with patients

- Bex Bastable bex.bastable@jpimedia.co.uk

Life-saving charity Air Ambulance Kent Surrey Sussex (KSS) has become the first UK pre-hospital health organisati­on to adopt a new app designed to help healthcare staff breakdown communicat­ion barriers with patients at the point of care.

Using flashcards with simple questions and explanatio­ns, CardMedic helps healthcare staff to communicat­e with patients who have visual, hearing or cognitive impairment, language barriers or who are impacted by staff having to wear PPE.

Language difficulti­es are particular­ly hard in emergencie­s where time is critical and it is problemati­c to get a translator or sign language expert to the scene.

Compulsory PPE for KSS’s

emergency doctors and paramedics since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic has made it even harder for patients to hear and to understand.

From next month, KSS’s team of 60 clinicians will be

able to use the CardMedic app on phones and iPads, helping them to communicat­e with patients so that they can provide reassuranc­e and also gather informatio­n that can influence critical decisionma­king for a patient’s treatment and on-going care.

CardMedic was founded in April 2020 by NHS anaestheti­st Dr Rachael Grimaldi and is based at The Oxford Trust’s Oxford Centre for Innovation. The app is simple and easy-touse, replicatin­g conversati­ons around common healthcare topics. It has been developed by clinical experts including speech and language therapists, learning disability nurses, audiologis­ts, psychologi­sts, critical care nurses and doctors to make sure the content is accurate.

A series of flashcards for different emergency situations has been developed and these will be used by KSS.

Leigh Curtis, executive director of service delivery at KSS, said: “Communicat­ion with patients is of paramount importance to pre-hospital emergency medical care and this has certainly become more difficult over the past year since we have been required to wear PPE.

“Our patients are often critically ill, having experience­d major trauma or resulting from a medical emergency. Communicat­ion can be vital to provide reassuranc­e and to improve outcomes. CardMedic will help us to communicat­e more clearly so that more of our patients are able to share informatio­n that can assist us in how we take care of them and so that we can help our patients understand more about what we are doing to help.

“The CardMedic app gives us an innovative tool to help us to continue to give the best possible care and response to our patients and we are delighted to be the first UK pre-hospital health organisati­on to adopt the new app.”

Dr Rachael Grimaldi, founder of CardMedic, said: “We are really proud to sign our first pre-hospital beacon site agreement with KSS to install the CardMedic app on phones and iPads used by their emergency staff.

“We hope that CardMedic will help emergency healthcare staff quickly understand patients’ needs where there are communicat­ion difficulti­es and explain their care in emergency situations.”

 ??  ?? Kent, Sussex and Surrey air ambulance is trialling the new app
Kent, Sussex and Surrey air ambulance is trialling the new app

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