Skip to main content

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT

News

Vanderbilt LifeFlight Moves Airplane to Lebanon (Tenn.) Municipal Airport

PRESS RELEASE

LEBANON, TN—Vanderbilt LifeFlight announced March 7, 2022, that it has moved its fixed-wing air ambulance from the Nashville International Airport to the Lebanon Municipal Airport.

The move comes as Nashville International Airport continues to grow, and the Lebanon Municipal Airport will allow for crews to respond more quickly to emergency requests, according to a release. LifeFlight had been a fixture at the Lebanon Airport from 2004 to 2020, having a helicopter (LifeFlight 1) based there. That aircraft was moved to Gallatin in 2020.

The aircraft is equipped with a multi-function ventilator, cardiac monitors, medical oxygen, compressed medical air, IV pumps and an array of medications.
The Vanderbilt LifeFlight fixed-wing air ambulance, a medically configured Pilatus PC-12, sits in front of the FBO at the Lebanon Municipal Airport. Photo: Josh Bowling.

The Lebanon Municipal Airport was chosen for several reasons, including Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s commitment to a growing investment in Wilson County. Vanderbilt has a hospital there, a ground ambulance base, and now its airplane base.

“We no longer have to wait in line for someone to pull our aircraft out of the hanger or refuel,” said Keith Evans, MSN, Air Medical transport manager with Vanderbilt LifeFlight. “The Lebanon airport has ILS and GPS approach. And its proximity to Nashville, along with less traffic for getting in and out, made it the perfect spot.”

The base has a staff of five pilots, two mechanics and 10 medical crew members. Staff are on site 24-7.

Vanderbilt LifeFlight started offering fixed-wing service in 2004.

The medically configured Pilatus PC-12 has a range of 1,742 miles, can cruise at altitudes of up to 30,000 feet and at speeds approaching 300 miles per hour. The PC-12 can take off from, and land on, runways as short as 3,000 feet, making it an ideal aircraft for rural communities. The Pilatus PC-12 has an extra wide 53-inch cargo door for easy loading and unloading of medical equipment and patients, including bariatric patients.

The flight crew is trained to transport neonatal, pediatric and adult patients, as well as high-risk obstetrics, multisystem trauma and burn patients, and organ transplant recipients. The program also performs repatriation flights. The aircraft is equipped with a multi-function ventilator, cardiac monitors, medical oxygen, compressed medical air, IV pumps and an array of medications.

Vanderbilt LifeFlight is operated by VUMC in partnership with Air Methods Corp. Medical and ground ambulance services are provided by VUMC. Since 1984 Vanderbilt LifeFlight, accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Medical Trauma Systems (CAMTS), has flown more than 40,000 patients. 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement