Nova Scotia lifeflight is an air ambulance service that provides critical care transport for patients in Nova Scotia and the neighbouring provinces. It is part of the Emergency Health Services (EHS) system that delivers pre-hospital emergency care in the province. Nova Scotia lifeflight was established in 1996, but its origins can be traced back to the 1960s when the Canadian Forces’ No. 413 Squadron provided medical air transportation in the Maritimes under the military’s aid to the civil power provisions. The squadron used search and rescue aircraft such as the
CH-113 Labrador helicopter and the
CC-115 Buffalo and
CC-130 Hercules fixed-wing aircraft to transport patients from remote areas or between hospitals In 1996, the Nova Scotia Department of Health launched the first dedicated air ambulance service in the Maritimes in partnership with
CHC Helicopter Corporation and the Shock Trauma Air Rescue Society (STARS). The service was initially called EHS Air Medical Transport and used a
Sikorsky S-76A helicopter and a
Beechcraft King Air 200 fixed-wing aircraft to provide critical care transport for patients. The service also had specialized teams of paramedics, nurses, and physicians who could provide
advanced life support and trauma care. In 2001, STARS decided not to renew its contract with EHS, citing philosophical differences over management and fundraising. The service was renamed EHS LifeFlight and continued to operate under CHC Helicopter Corporation until 2008, when Emergency Medical Care Inc. (EMC) won the operating contract. EMC is a subsidiary of Medavie Health Services, which also operates ground ambulance services in Nova Scotia under contract for EHS. In 2007,
Transport Canada tightened regulations on flying over densely populated areas. LifeFlight, the only air ambulance service in the province, continued to land on hospital rooftops as safe single engine performance was demonstrated in a simulator. On April 1, 2016, Transport Canada required demonstrated single engine performance from the aircraft manufacturer. From that point on, LifeFlight operated from nearby
Point Pleasant Park, a city park with a helipad, from where EHS could transport patients by ground ambulance with a 15-minute drive to the nearest hospital. This continued until the older S76A model was replaced with two newer S-76-C+ helicopters on December 20, 2017. These newer helicopters did adhere to the regulations and allowed them to return to rooftop operations. In 2017, EHS LifeFlight added a second fixed-wing aircraft, a PAL Aerospace
Beechcraft 1900, to provide non-critical care transport for patients from Yarmouth and Sydney to Halifax. The new service reduced the travel time and increased the comfort for patients, as well as freed up ambulances and paramedics for local emergency calls. From the start of the air ambulance service on May 13, 1996, to December 31, 2003, there were 3,682 LifeFlight missions. Since then, the service has continued to grow and evolve, providing critical care transport for thousands of patients every year. As of 2020, EHS LifeFlight had completed over 15,000 missions. ==Operations==