Well done to 'Head in the Clouds' for some facts on this issue. Single line winching is the Australian standard, and believe it or not Kaz3g, the rescue strop is the industry standard. If we look at this terrible incident, it appears the problem may have occurred when the patient was transferred from the door into the cabin. Unlike smaller aircraft such as the BK117, the 412 doesn't have a winch boom. This means that the distance of the winch cable from the door must be sufficient for the winch load to miss the skids. In the 412, it can seem a long way between the cable and the door when your hanging by your harness with a patient in distress in the rescue strop.
When the patient is winched to the door, careful coordination is required between the rescue crewman and winch operator to get the patient on board. A common technique is for the rescue crewman is to ascend with the patient in the strop, secured between the legs. This enables the legs of the crewman to grip the waist of the patient, and this helps the crewman maintain close contact. The crewman can then use one or both arms on the way up to keep the patients elbows down, ensuring they stay within the strop.
Once at the door, the crewman will grab a hand hold in the doorway and thrust with the hips, pushing the patient into the doorway. The winch operator will grab a handle on the back of the rescue strop, and together they will drag the patient on board and secure by seatbelt or wander lead prior to unhooking the winch cable.
It appears that in this tragic incident, a major fault has occurred in this procedure. There has been a lot of speculation in the professional fields, and my guess is that the size and injury to the patient have made the transition in the doorway more difficult.
The aim of the rescue crewman is to get the tailbone of the patient over the edge of the floor when the patient is thrust in with the hips. If the tailbone is on the floor, then the winch operator can slide the patient along the floor relatively easily. If the tailbone of the patient is below the edge of the helicopter floor, the lower half to the patient hangs outside and a great deal of effort is needed to correct this. This is due the curvature of the spine above the buttocks. If the patient has a broken ankle, then the patient is obviously in pain or on medication, and the crew cannot rely on the patient's assistance in the rescue.
I am waiting to see what the official investigation produces, and my thoughts are with the crews who have undoubtedly replayed this tragedy over and over again. My backseat second-guessing will be no help to anyone involved in the incident, but I am sure that the lessons learned will help the entire industry improve a practice that in inherently dangerous by necessity.
And to 'Gnarly Gnu', stay under you rock, you cretin. Hopefully Darwinian theory is at work and your pathological ignorance has prevented you from breeding.