UnityPoint Health St Lukes Hospital Emergency Department

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Hours of Operation

  • Monday: Open 24 hours
  • Tuesday: Open 24 hours
  • Wednesday: Open 24 hours
  • Thursday: Open 24 hours
  • Friday: Open 24 hours
  • Saturday: Open 24 hours
  • Sunday: Open 24 hours


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Don't Delay Emergency Care

We are fully equipped to provide care for all patients, in all situations, all the time. St. Luke's Emergency Department is open 24/7. If you or a loved one experience symptoms of heart attack or stroke, do not hesitate to call 911 or visit the emergency department. Any delay could result in long-term health effects or even death.

Not every illness or injury requires a trip to the Emergency Room, and because health matters don't always occur during convenient times, our Urgent Care and Express Care Clinics offer locations throughout the Cedar Rapids metro area to treat your family's minor illnesses or injuries when your primary physician is not available. For your convenience, we update our Urgent Care wait times online.

When You Should Go to the ER

Don't hesitate to come to the ER if you or a loved one experiences any of the following:
  • Symptoms of a heart attack, including severe chest pain, sweating and shortness of breath.
  • Profuse bleeding or blood loss that continues even after direct pressure has been placed on the wound.
  • Severe abdominal pain.
  • Sudden dizziness, weakness, loss of coordination, balance or vision problems, which are signs of stroke.
  • High fever and vomiting that continues nonstop for several hours.
  • Signs of meningitis: severe headaches, neck/joint pain and stiffness, vomiting, high temperature, sensitivity to light (adults); high-pitched whimpering/crying, lethargy, fussiness, restlessness, high fever, vomiting, cold extremities, refusing food, pale or blotchy skin (babies, small children).
  • Seizures lasting longer than five minutes.
  • Injuries occurring from an accident or fall - intense back or neck pain, obvious compound fractures and/or dislocations of bones, deep cuts and severe burns.

Helpful resources:

Reserve Your Emergency Room Spot Online

Life's surprises don't make appointments, but you can. The next time a minor illness or injury has you thinking about a trip to the Emergency Room, reserve your spot in line, online. You can avoid potentially long wait times and crowded waiting rooms by selecting a time that's convenient for you and wait from the comfort of your home.

St. Luke's Emergency Services

When you have a medical emergency, every minute counts. Call 911 and tell first responders to take you to St. Luke's.  Our Emergency Room is open 24/7. Our ER team is specially trained to respond rapidly, appropriately and efficiently to any health care emergency.

Medication Matters Card

About the Card

Time is of the essence during a medical emergency. During a trip to the ER you may be unable to speak, or be too confused, sick or injured to accurately share your medical history with healthcare providers.

This information is critical in order to treat your emergency properly — it can mean life or death. We want you to be prepared for the unexpected and that's why we created the Medication Matters card. It's a way you can take control before an emergency strikes and provide accurate and up-to-date medical information to first responders and our ER team.

We encourage you to fill out the Medication Matters card. Then place it in your purse, wallet or on your refrigerator and let your family know where you keep it — that way it's easy to find in an emergency.

For additional copies, you may also call (319) 369-7388.

Tips on How to Best Use the Card
  • List everything you take; prescriptions, over-the-counter products, dietary supplements, herbal remedies, eye drops, inhalers and oxygen.
  • Describe the purpose of each product.
  • Carry the card with you at all times in your wallet or purse or attach it to your refrigerator where family or first responders can find it in an emergency. Then tell family where it is located in the event you are unable to speak.
  • At your doctor's office, present the card for updating.
  • At the pharmacy, ask your pharmacist to review the card when a new prescription is added.
  • At the hospital, ask your nurse to review the card when you are admitted and again when you are sent home.
  • Ask your doctor or pharmacist about your medicines and the best way you should take them or if there are any special concerns you need to be aware of regarding drug interactions.

Did you know...

  • St. Luke's beats the national average when it comes to fast heart attack care? It's a nationwide goal for ERs to open blocked heart arteries in 90 minutes or less. Last year St. Luke's average was 57 minutes and its fastest time was 15 minutes.
  • St. Luke's has earned the Chest Pain Center Accreditation with primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and Resuscitation from the American College of Cardiology based on rigorous onsite evaluation of the staff's ability to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients who may be experiencing a heart attack. St. Luke's is the first hospital in Iowa to achieve this accreditation.
  • For patients in rural areas, critical condition or who need transportation to distant facilities, our LifeGuard Air Ambulance is available around-the-clock to help transport patients in Iowa and surrounding areas to St. Luke's.

LifeGuard Air Ambulance

About Our Aviation Partner – Med-Trans

In 2013 St. Luke's entered into an agreement with the Med-Trans Corporation to become the new aviation partner for LifeGuard Air Ambulance.

Med-Trans provides training, maintenance, pilot coverage and back-up aircraft as needed for the LifeGuard program. Med-Trans Corporation is a leading provider of air ambulance programs throughout the United States. Med-Trans offers an array of customized air medical program designs including hybrid models, community-based models or traditional hospital-based models. The company's extensive fleet rapidly delivers teams of highly trained professionals to patients, striving to provide the patient with the best possible outcome.

Going the Distance to Save Lives

LifeGuard Air Ambulance has been serving the Cedar Rapids community and Eastern Iowa with around-the-clock emergency and critical care transportation for patients in Iowa and surrounding areas. Our highly experienced crews have flown thousands of flights for over 40 years. LifeGuard responds to a variety of emergency situations, including:

  • Patients in rural areas
  • Accident victims
  • High-risk infants in need of specialized care
  • Patients needing transport to distant facilities

Fast Response

Speed, advanced on-board medical equipment and the expertise of the crew all add up to a better chance of survival and recovery. LifeGuard Air Ambulance is staffed 24 hours a day for transport to the hospital of the patient or family's choice, or to the nearest appropriate facility.

To reach LifeGuard's dispatch, call (800) 223-6627.

LifeGuard Air Ambulance is Accredited by CAMTS

St. Luke's Hospital LifeGuard Air Ambulance recently received a three-year accreditation from the Commission on the Accreditation of Medical Transport Systems (CAMTS).

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St. Luke's LifeGuard Air Ambulance

UnityPoint Health – St. Luke's Hospital LifeGuard Air Ambulance is flying the distance to save lives. Dr. Joshua Pruitt, LifeGuard Air Ambulance Medical Director talks about LifeGuard and where it flies in Eastern Iowa.
When to Call

Patients Who Meet Trauma Alert Criteria:

  • Ejection from a vehicle
  • Death in same passenger compartment
  • Prolonged extrication time
  • Rollover of vehicle
  • High-speed impact
  • Significant intrusion into passenger compartment
  • Vehicle/pedestrian impact
  • Motorcycle crash greater than 20 mph or with separation from bike
  • Falls over 20 feet
  • Blunt trauma
  • Penetrating injuries
  • Amputations or limb-threatening injuries
  • Ground transport time poses a threat to the patient's survival and/or recovery
  • Patients in acute respiratory distress/compromised airway and/or need for rapid sequence intubation
  • Patients requiring ventilator management
  • MIs with ST Segment changes
  • Patients requiring thrombolytics or cath lab intervention
  • Post arrest patients
  • Overdoses
  • Patients that require minimal out of hospital time
  • Systolic blood pressure less than 90 mm Hg
  • Stroke symptoms or other change in mental status
  • Patients with two or more long-bone fractures
  • Unconscious or decreasing lack of consciousness
  • Patients who are in areas difficult to access by ambulance or motor vehicle
  • Burn injuries
  • Neurologic disorders or trauma requiring neurosurgical consult

Please fill out form below and return, either by email to: LIFEGUARD@unitypoint.org or fax to: (319) 369-8335.

Resources

Helicopter – N911LG – Bell 407

General Information

  • Overall length: 42 ft
  • Overall height: 13 ft
  • Main rotor diameter: 35 ft
  • Main rotor width: 10 inches
  • Main rotor blade height: 7-12 ft
  • Tail rotor diameter: 5.4 ft
  • Tail rotor above ground: 4.5 ft
  • Maximum gross weight: 5250 lbs
  • Maximum speed: 162 mph
  • Jet fuel quantity: 130 gallons
  • Auto Pilot
  • GPS Navigation
  • On Board Weather

On Board Medical Equipment includes:

  • Cardiac Monitor with defibrillation, pacing, 12 Lead EKG, capnography waveform, and invasive hemodynamic monitoring
  • Advanced Ventilator
  • Chest Decompression
  • Intraosseous Access
  • Blood Products and TXA (Tranexamic Acid)
  • Advanced & Surgical Airway Management including Rapid Sequential Intubation
  • Night Vision Goggles
Crew

On board each LifeGuard flight are a pilot, flight nurse and flight paramedic. Special flight teams, such as the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) transport team, are also available if needed.

All medical crew members are certified in:

  • Basic Life Support
  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support
  • Pediatric Advanced Life Support
  • Neonatal Resuscitation

Additional certifications Include:

  • Critical Care Paramedic (CCP)
  • Critical Care Registered Nurse (CCRN)
  • Certified Emergency Nurse (CEN)
  • Certified Flight Nurse (CFRN)
  • Flight Paramedic - Certified (FP-C)

Ongoing competency standards are achieved through:

  • Skills Lab Training
  • Simulated Patient Care Experiences
  • Helicopter Safety and Landing Zone Instruction
  • Quarterly and Annual Competency Training

Advanced critical care skills include:

  • Drug Assisted Intubation
  • Traumatic Brain Injury Management
  • Cardiac Emergency Management
  • Hemodynamic Monitoring
  • Flight Physiology
  • Ventilator Management
  • Advanced Airway Management including Surgical Cricothyrotomy
  • 12-lead EKG Interpretation

Safety training includes:

  • Night Vision Training Scenarios
  • Landing Zone and Helicopter Safety Class
  • Air Medical Resource Management
  • Educational programs in which Continuing Education Units (CEUs) and Contact Hours are awarded
Safety

Landing Area

Personnel at the scene of the emergency will select an appropriate area for LifeGuard based on the following criteria:

  • Size: 100 ft x 100 ft day or night clear of fences, signs, trees, overhead wires, poles and other obstacles
  • Level ground
  • Clear of items that could be blown: (sheets, bags, back boards, boxes, plywood, etc.)
  • As close to the scene as possible without endangering personnel
  • Advise of dust, gravel or snow. Can spray down dry gravel roads to decrease dust.
  • Night: Do not shine lights at the helicopter (this may temporarily blind the pilot)
  • If landing area becomes unsafe, advise pilot to "Go around, landing area unsafe"
  • The pilot will make final landing decision
  • The following are EXTREME DANGERS when landing:
    • Road signs
    • Power lines
    • Telephone wires
    • Towers
    • Blowing debris in landing area
    • Drones

Scene Safety

  • ALWAYS approach the helicopter from the front or sides where the pilot can see you. Stay clear of the left rear tail of the helicopter. Tail rotors are turning so fast that they are nearly invisible.
  • WAIT for Pilot to signal prior to approaching the aircraft.
  • When helping load a patient, never approach aircraft without a LifeGuard Crew Member with you.
  • Position an Emergency Responder near the aircraft to watch for people approaching and to prevent anyone from walking into the tail rotor.
  • NEVER approach or leave the helicopter on the uphill side. Check the land around the helicopter because you want to avoid the main rotor!
  • ALWAYS approach or leave the helicopter from the front or downhill side!

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When working in or around the helicopter landing zone, be aware of the rotors and rotor down wash. Follow these safety steps AT ALL TIMES:

  • Hold loose articles firmly: pillows, blankets etc. can be easily blown into the rotor.
  • Never chase items that have blown away. The tail rotor is almost invisible when running and is extremely dangerous.
  • Never raise IV poles around the helicopter or hold IVs over your head, even if the helicopter is not running. If the rotor dips, it may strike the IV pole.
  • No running on the Landing Zone (LZ).
  • Keep observers 100 feet away from the Landing Zone and out of the landing and take-off path.
  • Do NOT smoke near the helicopter.
  • Stay away from the rear one-third of the helicopter.
  • Watch for drones and notify crew if any spotted.
  • Please make sure seat belts are inside the aircraft before and after closing any doors.
  • Please remove hats when near the helicopter.
Request for Event or Safety Training Class

Please submit the form below with as many details as possible and a member of our team will connect with you. Thank you!