Agree. One would have to be the ultimate cyborg to be unaffected.
Not sure how Dugie's flight program is setup, but for the fixed wing programs we have delt with, most of their patients are from the, "Post Hospital to another, Pre Hospital" setting. Most of the Fixed Wing flights are transfers when a patient might be in a more stable condition, (maybe not stable in the literal sense, such as, vent patients, post surg, life support, cancer..etc), but have a host of stabalizing medical interventions prior to flying to another location. Same applies when we fly a patient hospital to hospital. However, what makes fixed wing different from a roto wing operation is that we, "usually" fly to street scene. Whether it's medical related or trauma, the mechanism of injury is usually sudden and very chaotic. And if you have friends that work in the Fire Service, such as myself or Mike D

you know how messy and out of hand a scene can become, esp if it is a street scene, such as a MVA, (car crash) with fatalities. Things are happening very fast, on the ground, and once we have establish patient care inside the aircraft.
And, I hope I don't sound like a total tool bag when I say this, it doesn't matter to us, (at that very moment) if it is 80 year old Grandma Jones that has had a massive MI (heart attack/cardiac arrest), or the 4 year old little girl who has major trauma to her body because of the car accident she was in has ripped her to pieces, we focus on what it is we have to do to make the outcome a little better. We are far to busy to think about this child and she losing massives amounts of blood, are job is to control it, and replenish it with IV fluids. In the back of our minds, you might attach yourself to this 4 year old, but the reality of it is that we, "Just don't"! Our attachment time or emotional connection comes after we have landed on the pad, and gotten the patient to the ER or Surgery and away from us. Only then, is when we might hit our emotional wall and we try to take care of each other, talk, we have support groups that are usually on the spot, to help those of us who need to cope with the traumatic situation we have just done. We take in the moment, we listen to our co-workers and vise versa, and we pack up, clean up and ready ourselves for the next flight. But, we do remember each and every face and each situation. And when we are fortunate enough to have done a good job that makes a difference, we try to go visit that patient, because we have become a small, but an important area of their lives and the lives of their families. That part is what makes Air Med Transport worth it. But, it is no different than working on a Fire Dept/Medic Unit service. Public Safety is one of the greatest jobs in the world, bar-none. But, that's only my opinion. I'm lucky to serve my city in both services!