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Critical care transport.

Ventilation that moves with the patient

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Intelligent transport ventilation. Supporting you and your patients during critical care transport

When transporting a ventilated ICU patient, you want to maintain a level of care that closely matches bedside conditions — including the quality of ventilation.
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Maintaining ICU-level therapy in a mobile setting

Your patients might be leaving the ICU, but their ventilation needs remain just as complex. During transport, you want to maintain high-level respiratory therapy and still have full access to modes, monitoring, and precision settings — all while navigating unfamiliar or moving environments.

  • Use the same advanced modes, lung-protective strategies, and monitoring capabilities you rely on in the ICU
  • Adapt to rapidly changing patient conditions en route
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Adapting to rapidly changing patient conditions en route

A patient can deteriorate quickly during transport. You need a ventilator that responds just as fast, giving you clear feedback, quick access to alarms, and the ability to adapt ventilation settings in seconds.

  • Intelligent, adaptive ventilation modes that keep the patient within defined target ranges
  • Continuous oxygen management
  • CPR ventilation feature
Dr. Ralf Huth

Customer voices

We use the HAMILTON-T1 for intrahospital transport and transfers to other hospitals. This ensures that the patient receives the same quality of ventilation during transport as at the bedside.

Dr. Ralf Huth

Senior Physician Interdisciplinary Pediatric ICU
Center for Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Mainz, Germany

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Bridging the monitoring gap

In the ICU, you can rely on labs, ABGs, and imaging to guide the ventilation strategy. In transport, you often have to manage without these tools. That is why you depend on real-time waveforms, trends, and intuitive data displays to support clinical decisions on the go.

  • Visualization of lung mechanics (Dynamic Lung)

  • Volumetric capnography and SpO2 monitoring

  • Trends and loops

  • Wide array of monitoring parameters

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No worries about tight space, vibration, or power limitations

Ambulances, helicopters, and medical aircraft combine limited room with a lot of movement. Your ventilator has to be compact, stable, and able to run without mains power, while staying firmly in place in any conditions.

  • Portable: Easily transportable by healthcare providers across different platforms

  • Extended run time: One integrated and one hot-swappable battery (optionalA​), as well as AC and DC power connectors

  • Self-sufficient: Independence from compressed air due to the high-performance turbine

Our 360° services

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Ready when you are. Your partner for prehospital transport care

The Hamilton Medical Prehospital Team is committed to delivering comprehensive services and support around mechanical ventilation during transport in prehospital settings.

Our solution for critical care transport

Footnotes

References