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CortometrajesTranscripción
00:00People know that when the green uniform comes along you're going to help them, it's absolutely
00:07my superhero costume. Do we have a pulse? You are being an absolute trooper. As soon
00:14as we arrive they just know they're in safe hands and that we're going to do everything
00:17we can to help them. Oh the poor little one. I wouldn't have guessed you were 104. I genuinely
00:24believe laughter is the best medicine. I feel weird. You're the dream team tonight to know
00:32that you bring someone that's very unwell to hospital and they get better. It's one of
00:36the best feelings in the world. You're the toughest man I've ever met. Second to God these
00:41people. That's it. No. You're doing so good. Let's get you in the ambulance hey. I feel
00:49really proud to wear this uniform and I feel really proud to be a paramedic.
00:54I caught really hard and I bleed straight away. On this episode of paramedics, a devoted
01:02mum collapses in front of her young family. She's got to be terrified. I'm hoping she's
01:08going to be all right. She's going to be alive the next day. Intensive care paramedic Bill
01:14helps a war veteran fighting for every breath. Chronic respiratory distress is like doing a
01:20marathon every single day. Thank you for your service. Oh my service has got nothing on yours.
01:26And a lover of hot chili can't take the heat. I'm pretty sure the chilies won this one.
01:32Let's do it again. Are you serious? You're in excruciating pain and yet you do it again.
01:38Coffee orders. I already know your coffee order. Paramedics Aaron and Laura's afternoon shift
01:54is just getting started. If you know my coffee order, what is it? I'm pretty sure from memory
02:01it's an almond flat white or an almond latte. No. No? It must have changed since last year.
02:15You're definitely an almond latte half shot with a dash of caramel, a little bit of char
02:20spice on the side. That sounds delicious. And not as full as normal. Double cupped as well.
02:26Wow, it's hot. But the light-hearted mood quickly shifts when a disturbing job comes through.
02:38Aaron, we are going to a 36-year-old female diagnosed with, say, three cervical cancer,
02:46bleeding on the floor in a big puddle of blood.
02:49She's so young. 36. Yeah, that is young. Really young.
02:57I'm extremely worried for this 36-year-old, not just because she could potentially be bleeding out,
03:01but also she's been diagnosed with such an awful cancer and at such a young age.
03:05The big part, like, how much blood has she lost? Like, it's a non-compressible bleed, so it's really
03:13hard to put pressure on and stop it. I'm really worried about how much she's bleeding and why
03:20is her diagnosis getting worse? Because at the end of the day, blood loss kills people,
03:25and if it doesn't stop, your heart doesn't pump, your brain doesn't get the blood,
03:29so she's got to be terrified.
03:41As the ambulance, tell me exactly what's happened.
03:43Um, yeah, my partner ate, like, an extremely hot chilli.
03:48He had, like, a crazy reaction to it. He's, like, crying and living in pain.
03:53Across town, a daredevil's fiancé is on the line at the South Australian Emergency
03:58Operations Centre. Is he responding normally? No.
04:03Well, we're coming lights and sirens. We're going to be there as quickly as we come.
04:10Intensive care paramedic Lisa is immediately dispatched.
04:14So, we're going to a young gentleman who's had a chilli incident by the sounds of it.
04:20Can't say I've ever been to something like this before.
04:22He's named it a scorpion, so it sounds pretty deadly.
04:25He's experiencing burning, significant pain to his abdomen, pretty dire consequences.
04:33A really hot chilli, it can cause ulcerations as it goes down, and that's excruciating.
04:39So, a bit of an update. The scorpion-type chilli is the, one of the hottest chillies in the world.
04:46Our communication centre told me that scorpion chilli is 400 times the heat of a jalapeno,
04:54which is, it sounds deadly.
05:02I'm Lisa. Mackenzie, you obviously haven't had any.
05:06No. I'm a sweet chilli kind of girl. Mackenzie's fiancee, James, consumed the homegrown chilli at a friend's house.
05:14James? Yeah. Yeah, hey mate, I'm Lisa. I'm greeted with someone that's naked.
05:19Oh. He's just groaning and writhing. What happened?
05:23I ate a chilli. You ate a chilli, yeah. And then I ate his tummy.
05:27OK. Oh, nothing in your tummy.
05:29The fact that he's in excruciating pain suggests that he's, he's actually done some serious damage.
05:34And how much of it did you consume? A whole thing.
05:37You ate a whole chilli? Yeah. Oh my gosh, did you know what might happen?
05:42Yeah, I didn't think this. I mean like... Yeah, all right.
05:44Do you, do you have any allergies? Not that I'm aware of.
05:48No, that's all right. OK. When you see someone in excruciating pain like that,
05:52you start to worry what's actually happening on the inside.
05:55It's like stabbing or like you just... A stabbing pain, yeah.
05:59Just burn all through the bottom. Yeah, yeah.
06:01It's perfect. No.
06:03Ah. Ah.
06:14Aaron and Laura are on their way to a mum of two who is fighting cervical cancer.
06:19I reckon that one just there.
06:22The 35-year-old's partner, David, called triple zero when she started bleeding heavily.
06:29Who are we here for?
06:30I'm my partner, Tummin.
06:33Tummin. Yeah, Tummin.
06:34The house is lit up like a Christmas tree. There's toy cars out the front. There's funny signs.
06:39There's everything going on at once.
06:41You've got the two young lads playing their iPads just trying to keep them out of the kitchen.
06:45Fair enough.
06:48Sit down. Yeah, come in, man.
06:49Hi. Hey, hi. Hello.
06:53Hi, Tummin. My name's Laura. I've got my partner, Aaron. What's going on?
06:57Um, I have just A3 service cancer.
07:00OK.
07:00And I cough really hard.
07:02OK.
07:03And I bleed out straight away. I've been bleeding since. And I said to my partner, please bring in
07:07able it because I felt well fainted.
07:09You've just felt it continually bleeding?
07:11Yeah, yeah.
07:11OK.
07:11There's blood from the kitchen floor to the bench to the chair. It's more confronting than I expected.
07:19I made myself lay on the ground. I knew that was safer for me to...
07:23Because you felt quite faint. And are you undergoing like any treatment or anything for it?
07:27My treatment plan is just about to begin.
07:29Yeah. So you've just been diagnosed recently?
07:31Um, it was New Year's Eve. We realised that I had stage 3 service cancer.
07:35OK.
07:35It was just spreading out to my lymph nodes.
07:37OK.
07:39How did you get diagnosed?
07:40I thought I had a miscarriage. And the doctors tested me and went, no, there was no pregnancy there.
07:45Right. And then they wanted to figure out. They started all the scans. Yep.
07:49Cervical cancer is such an awful disease and such an aggressive form of cancer.
07:55Tammy's in her 30s. She's got two young kids. It's hard for anyone to hear that diagnosis,
08:00especially with someone who's got so much of their life yet to live.
08:03You've never had to have like a blood transfusion or...?
08:06I've had one blood transfusion already because of this, yes.
08:08OK. All righty. What we'll do, we're just shaking your blood pressure. If it's good,
08:12I'll get you to sit on the chair.
08:13It's quite difficult when someone's bleeding internally to be able to compress that bleed.
08:17It's not like if someone had a bleed from their arm and you can kind of put pressure on that.
08:21So it is really just about getting there somewhere where they can give them red blood cells or operate
08:25if need be.
08:26Core, your blood pressure's good. So we'll just slowly work towards sitting up.
08:33And there is a bit of blood on the floor, so I don't sleep.
08:35Yes, we're on the ground.
08:36Yeah, great, mate. Thank you.
08:37Despite Tammy's radial pulse being there, it doesn't mean she's stable.
08:43Mm-hm.
08:45You're doing well.
08:46Mm-hm.
08:47Jesus.
08:49Tammy's numbers can change in the blink of an eye.
08:52Nice, slow breaths. Nice and slow.
08:55Good work?
08:56Yeah.
08:57Are you dizzy or...?
08:59Yeah.
08:59OK.
08:59No, I need to let you on.
09:01That's it. Well done.
09:02You're all right. We'll look after you.
09:04You can suddenly go from being good to crashing and she can drop at any stage.
09:09I don't know how he's going to get me out of here.
09:11I ate a chilli.
09:20And how much of it did you consume?
09:21The whole thing.
09:2329-year-old thrill-seeker James decided earlier today to eat a scorpion chilli,
09:29one of the world's hottest, and is now paying the price.
09:33You ate the whole thing. Did you cut it up in pieces?
09:36I took one bite and then a second bite. All right.
09:39Intensive care paramedic Lisa is worried her patient is burning up inside.
09:44Then what happened after that? You swallowed it, like, obviously?
09:47Yeah, like, you consumed it, it was, like, hot.
09:50Were you salivating and stuff like that?
09:51Yeah, yeah.
09:52Like, yeah, yeah.
09:52Um, so that's passed, that bit? Yeah.
09:54Yeah, that was, like, hours ago.
09:56And then I went to my nap.
09:58Then I woke up to, like, insane pain in the lower abdomen.
10:02Yeah. All right, buddy.
10:03This chilli is insane in its hotness.
10:08400 times the heat of a jalapeno.
10:11We're going to get you sorted, OK?
10:13I just need to take some quick observations,
10:15but I think you need some pain relief, OK?
10:16The lining of the tummy is quite sensitive,
10:19and you can cause a kind of a chemical burn or an ulcer.
10:25So it was called a scorpion peach chilli.
10:29A red one?
10:29It was, like, yellow.
10:31Like, it looked like a peach, actually.
10:33You just took it on another sleeve.
10:35Oh, God, mate.
10:35Yeah.
10:36You just, like, popped it and you went home.
10:40Your heart rate's on the lower side,
10:42and your blood pressure's borderline as well.
10:44So no wonder you're feeling absolute shit.
10:46So any intense tummy pain can kind of drop your blood pressure
10:49and heart rate.
10:50James is in absolute agony.
10:52He's quite sweaty, quite pale.
10:54He's just trying to find that comfortable position,
10:57which is not happening for him.
10:58So my immediate thoughts are I need to get some pain relief
11:01into him as soon as possible.
11:03Now, I've got this pen throw.
11:04So you put your lips around it, suck it in, out through your nose.
11:09Because you're in so much pain, we have to take you up to hospital, OK?
11:12Yeah.
11:13The ambulance is here, so we do want to kind of get you onto a bed.
11:16A backup crew has just arrived to help get James to hospital.
11:21The bed is by your front door.
11:23Are you feeling strong enough to get onto the bed?
11:25Yeah, let's just do a sprint.
11:26Yeah. Awesome.
11:27Let me just...
11:28Yeah, and...
11:29Would you recommend eating one of these, mate?
11:31I would on a...on a...on a...on like stuff.
11:34I think I'm going to pass.
11:37James will eat any single chilli that he can get his hands on.
11:40He thrives, taking risks, you know, being on death's door set.
11:44That's him.
11:45He loves it.
11:45When death's do it again.
11:47What?
11:48Oh, my gosh.
11:49Are you serious?
11:51You've like...
11:52Yeah, you've called an ambulance.
11:53You're naked.
11:54You're in excruciating pain.
11:57And yet, you do it again.
11:59So, no regrets?
12:00No regrets.
12:00Zero. Zero regrets.
12:03We'll take you up to a hospital, OK?
12:11Pale lips, don't you?
12:12And shows feel a bit more clammy now.
12:15Paramedics Aaron and Laura are treating 35-year-old Tammy,
12:19who tragically has stage 3 cervical cancer.
12:23Roll her onto her back.
12:25Do a slide sheet.
12:26OK, yeah.
12:27Only three months since the mum of two's heartbreaking diagnosis,
12:32she's already suffering debilitating cervical bleeding.
12:36A patient's appearance can tell us a million words.
12:39And Tammy is as white as a ghost.
12:41Good job.
12:42That's a result of her blood loss.
12:44Great work.
12:45So, we'll give you a little bit of fluid, OK?
12:47Your blood pressure's still good.
12:48But I know you feel awful and you are losing some volume.
12:51My worst concern is that she continues to bleed
12:54and then she loses her blood pressure,
12:56her heart rate goes up,
12:57and she could potentially go unconscious.
12:58And I don't want to see nothing like this.
13:02Just...
13:03You'll live the rest of your life laying on the floor.
13:05Just bury me here, that's fine.
13:06I'm not digging the whole lot.
13:07Mm-hm.
13:08You go to a job and you picture a patient,
13:11but you don't always picture the husband and the two young kids.
13:14It's...
13:15It's hard to imagine what they're going through.
13:17I'm going to, like, slide you out on this.
13:19Mm-hm.
13:20Thank you, I'm sorry.
13:21Bye.
13:21No, you're not a pain at all.
13:22No, no, no, no, don't be sorry.
13:23While Aaron and Laura work on getting Tammy out of the house,
13:27back-up paramedic Craig distracts six-year-old Dante
13:31and five-year-old Ryder with a tour of the ambulance.
13:35See the ambulance?
13:36What?
13:37Ooh.
13:37Do you want to have a look?
13:38What number of ambulance is yours?
13:40It's up there.
13:40Can you read it?
13:41It's 300...
13:42It's 300.
13:43Yes, good boy.
13:44It must be so scary for young kids to see their mum like this.
13:47Good to go?
13:48Yeah.
13:48So to distract them,
13:49we'll try and make the situation a little bit more positive
13:52by showing them around the ambulance.
13:53I think that's really important
13:55and definitely a big part of our job.
13:57Whoa.
13:57OK.
13:58It's cool.
13:59Yeah.
14:01Pretty cool, hey?
14:02What's that?
14:03That's the bed.
14:04That's the hospital.
14:05That's where mum's going to go.
14:06Yeah, mum's going to go on that.
14:07Why?
14:08Because she needs to lay down and just have a bit of a chillax for a while.
14:11Mum's everything to them.
14:13Oh, they love her to the max.
14:14They don't listen to me.
14:15They listen to mum.
14:16All right.
14:18All right.
14:19Nailed it.
14:20All right.
14:21I'll give you mum a kiss.
14:26Bye, mum.
14:30I'm feeling pressure to get Tammy on the way to hospital.
14:35She's lost a lot of blood.
14:37She's feeling quite weak and unable to move.
14:40It's really hard.
14:41We've got worried family watching over us.
14:44Can I have your arm again?
14:45But we're racing against the clock.
14:57I'm pretty sure the chillies won this one.
14:59Intensive care paramedic Lisa is taking 29-year-old James to hospital after the thrill seeker
15:06ate one of the world's most lethal chillies on an empty stomach.
15:11Well, he's going through the low intestine.
15:13Oh, my God.
15:14The chilli lover was out with his fiancee Mackenzie and a group of friends.
15:19I don't think James quite comprehends exactly what's going to happen on the other end.
15:24So, yeah, I am a bit worried that it's going to cause some burning on the way out.
15:29With pain medication kicking in...
15:31All right.
15:31I'll meet you there.
15:32Thanks, Mackenzie.
15:34..James is feeling a lot brighter.
15:36What were you hoping to kind of achieve by consuming the chilli?
15:40Was it just like, I can do this?
15:42No, yeah.
15:42I ate it not to tame this beast.
15:44Yeah.
15:45I ate it because I was like, oh, I want to see what the flavours of this chilli were.
15:49Yeah.
15:49And what flavours did you get?
15:51It was like nice hint of citrusy, almost like peach.
15:56My mate offered me the chilli.
15:57Oh, really?
15:58Wow.
15:59He owes you.
16:00Yeah, because he ate the chilli.
16:02Yeah.
16:02Now look at me, I'm going to hospital.
16:05James is definitely one of the most unique people I've met.
16:08I don't think this is his first time doing something silly.
16:12Where did you meet Mackenzie?
16:14Work.
16:14We used to work together.
16:15Oh.
16:16I had no interest in her at all.
16:19Don't say that in the mouth.
16:20Don't say that.
16:21With the penthrane now in James' system, it's having the truth serum effect.
16:26But she pursued me.
16:27Oh.
16:28She harassed me.
16:30Yeah, so we're hanging out a bit.
16:31Yeah.
16:31And then she was ticking boxes that I wanted someone, you know, wife.
16:35And then going beyond that, like the boxes that I didn't know need ticked.
16:38Yeah.
16:38And apparently it was the same thing for her.
16:40Yeah.
16:40It was very quickly that we knew that, you know, we were able to be together.
16:43So we went into a relationship and then bada bing, bada boom.
16:45Yeah.
16:46James is such a character.
16:47You need someone that's pretty easy going and tolerant of certain decisions and behaviours.
16:52And that's Mackenzie.
16:56I do hope that James hasn't done some lasting damage.
16:59But I don't think this is the last time I'll see him.
17:02Are you worried about it coming out?
17:03It's going to burn your ring, brother.
17:05Oh, no.
17:06He's probably not had his last battle with a hot chilli.
17:09Is this the first time you've ended up in hospital?
17:12It was true.
17:13Yeah.
17:19Paramedics Laura and Aaron are getting ready to take Tammy to hospital.
17:24The 35-year-old has stage 3 cervical cancer and has just started losing large volumes of blood
17:31in front of her terrified partner David and two young sons.
17:35Tammy, she's my life.
17:41She changed my life around.
17:44She's took me from being a run-em-up to being a loving father.
17:50I'm grabbing our equipment.
17:51Are they twins?
17:55Oh, I was going to say they look like they must be close together.
17:57Love you, bud.
17:58Love you, Dad.
17:59See you soon.
18:00All right.
18:04I'm sorry, what did you just call him?
18:05Dad.
18:06Dad.
18:06We called each other Mum and Dad.
18:07I was so confused inside when he was calling you Mum and I was like...
18:10Do you know why?
18:10The kids run around going,
18:11She's not adding up.
18:12Tammy, Tammy, Tammy.
18:13And I go, oh my gosh, shut up.
18:14So we call each other Mum and Dad.
18:16Yeah.
18:17That's a bit taken aback.
18:18I was like, what's going on here?
18:23Tammy means the world to me.
18:25I'm hoping she's going to be alive the next day.
18:30On the way to hospital, we can't take our eyes off Tammy.
18:35We have to watch her heart rate, her blood pressure and the blood loss in case she crashes.
18:39Do you feel lightheaded at the moment?
18:41Yeah.
18:42Tammy has been bleeding for two hours now, which is quite concerning.
18:46How many times since you've been diagnosed have you been to hospital for her?
18:50Twice.
18:51Twice?
18:52Yeah.
18:53With a non-compressible bleed or a bleed that we can't put pressure on,
18:56she could potentially bleed out in front of me.
18:58Are they wanting you to have surgery at any point?
19:01You can't, I can't handle it.
19:02You don't have to live with it.
19:04Is that what they've said to you?
19:05Yeah.
19:10All right, take this one off.
19:13Take this.
19:14No, it's all right.
19:16Who are you taking them for?
19:16You didn't do anything?
19:17Laura did this all.
19:18You drove me.
19:21In hospital, they'll do a blood test to figure out what her haemoglobin levels are,
19:25and they'll also figure out if they can stop the bleeding
19:28and what to potentially do for next time.
19:30Yeah, well, hopefully we'll just be in here.
19:32They'll get you sorted.
19:33They'll send you home and you can start your treatment.
19:35Tammy's going to need some pretty aggressive treatment
19:38if she's going to fight against this cancer and raise her two boys
19:42and be with her husband.
19:43But it's going to be a long road ahead.
19:46If you ever need anything, you can always call us.
19:57SA Ambulance, tell me exactly what's happened.
19:59My husband, Tom, he has emphysema, struggling to breathe.
20:05His pulse has gotten up to 108 and he's shaking all over it.
20:09Back at the Emergency Operations Centre, a distressed wife is on the line
20:15as her husband's condition rapidly deteriorates.
20:18Is he changing colour?
20:20His face is red as a beetroot.
20:23All right, let's get some help out there for him.
20:28Solo responder Bill is on the road and dispatched
20:31as the closest intensive care paramedic.
20:34So we're on our way to a 75-year-old male.
20:39He's got a medical history of COPD or angiocema,
20:43which is basically a destruction of your lung tissue.
20:46So driving to this job, I'm thinking a couple of big things.
20:50Being 75 and having trouble breathing is not a good sign.
20:54The fact that he's got a history of COPD makes that even more concerning.
20:59The COPD or angiocema, if you can imagine sticking a straw in your mouth
21:04and only breathing from that straw and not being able to suck any more air into your lungs,
21:09you feel panicked, you feel anxious, you feel like you're drowning.
21:13So I can only imagine how awful that will feel.
21:16If you can't breathe, you die.
21:18So the fact that this guy is struggling to breathe,
21:20we need to get to him as quick as we can.
21:21As Bill pulls up, another crew has arrived only minutes earlier.
21:30Hello.
21:30Hello.
21:31How are you going?
21:32The paramedics have already given the patient a life-saving oxygen mask called a nebuliser.
21:38How can I help?
21:39But his condition is still not stable.
21:42Suffocation is a really good word to describe how a patient might potentially feel with emphysema.
21:47You can't actually get oxygen across from your airways into your bloodstream.
21:52So your respiratory rate's going to go up.
21:54Your ability to oxygenate your body is going to go down
21:57and it's just going to get worse and worse and worse.
22:01We're founded with a rest rate of 40.
22:02OK.
22:03We count someone's respiration rate for how many breaths that they take in a minute.
22:07So someone sitting on the couch watching telly would be sitting
22:10with a respiratory rate of anywhere between 12 to potentially 16.
22:14So the 40 is extremely fast.
22:16Respirate is very high.
22:17The chronic respiratory distress, it'd be like doing a marathon every single day.
22:23OK, you're working very hard, aren't you?
22:25Yeah.
22:26OK.
22:26It's horrible and it's scary.
22:29And it can make these people feel like today's going to be their last.
22:32And then you're quite shaky.
22:33OK, yeah.
22:41Good mates Carlos and Ni have just started their night shift.
22:45I remember going to a job just at that curry joint just there.
22:49Yeah.
22:50We needed another hand just to help us move this guy because it was in like the corner
22:54of this curry shop.
22:55And I was like, can someone help me?
22:56And they all literally just stared at me like I was speaking Chinese or something.
23:00And they were just eating them buttered chicken.
23:02I was like, can someone please help me?
23:03Just ate slower.
23:05Just ate slower, yeah.
23:06But with dinner still hours away, their first job comes in.
23:13So Carlos, we are going to a 53-year-old male complaining of chest pain.
23:19There's nausea, acid reflux, can't swallow anything and is feeling faint.
23:24Classic symptoms or having a heart attack.
23:26Absolutely.
23:27Chest pain is something that we don't muck around with.
23:30Whatever the cause, we just need to get to this guy urgently.
23:33Oh, he's got a history of diabetes, I think it says.
23:35Yeah, so high risk factors already.
23:37High risk factors.
23:38He's already ticking some of the boxes.
23:39He is, yeah.
23:40Yeah, and feeling nauseous and faint as well.
23:44Even though right now it sounds like heart attack,
23:46the first thing that they teach us in paramedicine is to never assume.
23:50There are 101 things that can cause chest pain, but obviously the biggest one is a heart attack.
23:59If it is a heart attack, things can change within a split second.
24:03So, jobs like these really do get my heart pumping.
24:10Hello, it's the ambulance.
24:17Have we had to listen to his shit?
24:20Because you are struggling very hard with your breathing.
24:22Intensive care paramedic Bill is trying to help 75-year-old Tom get desperately needed oxygen into
24:29his system.
24:30You are very shaky, aren't you?
24:32He is flushed, agitated, oxygen saturation's low, he was already on a nebuliser.
24:38He is just really, really trying and fighting to stay alive and to stay breathing.
24:43I am going to have a listen to your breath, mate.
24:44No talking, just breathing.
24:48The chronic emphysema sufferer was at home with his wife, Christine,
24:52when he started gasping for breath.
24:54You sound very quiet on that left side.
24:57Sorry mate, just sit me forward.
24:58So, have a listen to Tom's chest, which is vitally important for someone who is not breathing properly.
25:04Okay, so yeah, just very quiet in that bottom left, but not wheezy, which is odd.
25:08Usually you'd expect to hear wheezes or crackles or some sort of fluid or infection build up.
25:15But in Tom's, we can't hear anything at all.
25:17I think I've got 33%, that's all I've got left of mine.
25:21Okay, right, so your lung capacity is shocking, yeah.
25:25Someone who's got emphysema is very similar to a patient having asthma.
25:29He hasn't got much lung functional capacity left,
25:31which means that he might not be getting any airflow to those lower areas of his lungs.
25:36So he's going to be starved of oxygen.
25:37I think we'll get him started on CPAP so he can take away that work of breathing.
25:41I really want to try Tom on something called CPAP,
25:43because I'm really concerned about his oxygen.
25:45This is a big mask, makes a lot of noise.
25:48It basically forces air in,
25:50so it might be a little bit difficult to breathe against initially.
25:55So it sounds very loud, so you might feel quite claustrophobic.
25:58You might feel quite anxious.
25:59But try to work through it, and it will get easier, I swear.
26:03If it doesn't get easier, you just let me know, all right?
26:07All right, you're okay.
26:09I'm going to pop this over here.
26:10You're okay.
26:11It can be quite claustrophobic.
26:12Doing well there, Tom.
26:14Doing very, very well.
26:15Doing well.
26:17It feels very strange.
26:18But eventually, it does help, and he will feel better.
26:21But I just hope that it works, because Tom is not looking good.
26:25Good man.
26:26I don't think I can do it.
26:29No? That's okay.
26:30No, you're all right.
26:30You want me to take that one off?
26:32Too much?
26:32Yeah.
26:33Too claustrophobic?
26:34I think so, yeah.
26:34Okay, that's all right.
26:35We'll chuck on your nasal specs again.
26:37That's all right.
26:37We gave it a crack.
26:38It didn't work.
26:39Tom's getting really tired.
26:40He's got a heart rate through the roof.
26:42His blood pressure is working hard.
26:44I'm out of my treatment options.
26:45All I want to do now is get Tom to hospital.
26:48We're going to try to get you onto this green chair.
26:50Tom met his wife of 47 years after he returned from the Vietnam War.
26:55Do you want some help?
26:56Christine has watched him struggle with emphysema for over five years.
27:01But tonight was unlike any other.
27:03He's struggling to breathe and not really able to talk.
27:08Just nice, slow breaths.
27:10He is my rock and my soul mate.
27:13He tells me he was put on this earth to look after me and we were meant to be together forever.
27:23I just couldn't imagine life without Tom.
27:27I'm worried that he's going to die.
27:35You just focus on your breathing.
27:37All right.
27:37And you just try to stay nice and relaxed.
27:45Hello.
27:48Paramedics me and Carlos have been called to 54-year-old Sean,
27:52who sounds like he could be having a heart attack.
27:55Hello, it's the ambulance.
27:59It was his fiancee who panicked and called for an ambulance when he started suffering chest pains.
28:06Hey, Sean.
28:07Hey, how are you doing, mate?
28:09My name's Nia, I've got calls.
28:11What's happened today, mate?
28:14I see Sean wrapped up in his blankets.
28:17He's looking quite pale, sweaty, clammy as well.
28:20So we're thinking worst case scenario, it is a heart attack.
28:22I've just realized my chest has worked really tight.
28:26Okay.
28:26Carlos is now setting up the ECG to take a picture of Sean's heart.
28:31Before you have a chat to us, I'm just going to check you over, touch a couple of things onto you.
28:35And when did the pain in your chest start?
28:36Probably about one o'clock today.
28:39One o'clock today.
28:40I just stayed in bed all day today.
28:42I haven't done absolutely nothing.
28:43Yeah, right.
28:43I can get you to pop your arms by your side.
28:45We'll get a tracing of your heart rhythm.
28:46What does pain feel like, Sean?
28:48I feel like a good nine.
28:49Good nine out of ten.
28:50Yeah.
28:51Yeah.
28:51This does sound like classic heart attack symptoms.
28:55He's got the pain in his chest.
28:57He's feeling short of breath.
28:58He's in the high risk categories.
29:00And nothing that you've done relieves the pain in your chest?
29:03No.
29:09The results of the ECG are coming through.
29:11And fortunately, there's some good news for Sean.
29:15All these vital signs are looking pretty good at the moment.
29:17So we can rule out a heart attack.
29:20Is that painful?
29:21Yeah.
29:21Yeah.
29:22The little pain is just there.
29:23It's right there.
29:25Went for experience last night.
29:27Had a bit of chicken.
29:27Yep.
29:28Straight away.
29:29Got caught in my throat.
29:30Yep.
29:31And then it just did not want to go.
29:33Right.
29:33It's been like that ever since last night.
29:35Right.
29:36Feel stuck there right about here.
29:38Yeah, okay.
29:39Like a blocking pain?
29:40Yeah, it does.
29:40I've been like this.
29:41Been like this the whole day.
29:42Ever since all last night.
29:44So yesterday, had some chicken.
29:45And that got stuck in your throat.
29:47Had a beer to try and wash it down.
29:49Yeah.
29:49Can you swallow at the moment?
29:51No.
29:51So I'll take a drink.
29:52Yeah.
29:53Get away.
29:54It just comes back up again.
29:55Right.
29:56It can be quite dangerous to have something stuck down your throat.
30:02Because if that restricts your airway, essentially you can't breathe.
30:05Can't get it down.
30:14Easy.
30:16Easy.
30:16I'll come sit in the back with you, Tom.
30:17Yeah, mate.
30:18Beautiful.
30:19Intensive care paramedic Bell is treating 75-year-old Tom, whose lung disease has taken
30:26a nasty turn tonight.
30:27How are you going now?
30:29I look better.
30:29Cool, love.
30:30I think.
30:31From the first time I looked at you, you actually do look better.
30:33After a get-together with mates, Tom started struggling to breathe, prompting his worried
30:40wife of 47 years to call an ambulance.
30:43Yeah, I'm ready to go whenever you are.
30:45Yeah, cool.
30:47I saw some interesting photographs while I was in your house.
30:49Yes.
30:50Did you serve?
30:51Yes.
30:52You did.
30:52Where'd you serve?
30:53I'm in a bed.
30:54Shit.
30:55Sorry.
30:55Excuse my language.
30:56That's almost here.
30:57Far out.
30:58How old were you?
30:59Uh, 21.
31:0021.
31:01Far out.
31:01That would have been life-changing, I'm sure.
31:03Yes.
31:03Knickle.
31:04National Service.
31:05They pulled your date of birth out of a burrow.
31:07That was it while you went.
31:08So you had no choice.
31:10It was just-
31:10Oh, you could nick off and-
31:12You could run away or you could hide.
31:13Yeah.
31:14But you went and served.
31:16Two years.
31:17Far out.
31:18While Tom was going to war in his early 20s, I was going to university and having pub nights,
31:23so the contrast is unbelievable.
31:25It was like 53 years ago.
31:27Does it still haunt you?
31:29Ah, yeah.
31:30Oh, man.
31:30Every now, not all the time.
31:32Yeah.
31:32Although some nights have bad nights and I can't be out of a room with the door shut.
31:38Yeah, fair enough.
31:40PTSD and psychological trauma is something that's not spoken about much.
31:45It's definitely getting better, but for all of the emergency services people out there,
31:50we are all prone to this potential in the future and I just hope that we've all got the family
31:54and the friends and the networks and the support to be able to get us all through.
31:57I can only imagine what you've seen and what you've experienced and what you've been through.
32:01Yeah, there's been some times.
32:03That's heavy stuff.
32:05I thank you for your service.
32:06No.
32:08My service has got nothing on yours, so there's nothing you need to thank me for.
32:14You've seen it.
32:15You've seen it.
32:17That's all right.
32:18If you're struggling to breathe, mate, you just breathe.
32:21Tom's still breathing extremely fast and really shallow, so at any moment I know that Tom could
32:27go back downhill. So we've just rocked up at the hospital.
32:33Chronic obstructive airways disease is one of those awful diseases that will riddle you
32:38since your diagnosis and the fact that Tom can't even hold a conversation without getting breathless
32:44is awful to watch and it must be so frustrating to have to deal with.
32:48It might be a little bit jittery because it's cold, but otherwise you're all good.
32:53Both fight for your country when you're young and to fight for every breath that you take
32:57is extremely brave.
33:09Can't get it down.
33:11Nothing.
33:12Paramedics Nee and Carlos are about to take 54-year-old Sean to hospital.
33:17Stick out your tongue for me, mate.
33:18With food dangerously lodged in his throat.
33:22You can get a little drip in your arm and give you something for the nausea.
33:25He and partner Blessie were out to dinner when a piece of chicken got stuck
33:30and he hasn't been able to clear it.
33:31You hate needles. You've got a full arm with a tattoo. You've got a sleeve.
33:36I guess it's a difference. It's a different pain, isn't it?
33:40I've lost count how many tattoos I have and I hate needles as well, so I'm on Sean's side.
33:45This is a bit of a sharp scratch, okay, mate?
33:46You're out to walk?
33:50Yeah.
33:51Righty.
33:51Give us that.
33:54I am worried about Sean's condition, but then I look to the top of his bed frame and there's
33:59this massive portrait of him and his dog. It's got the dog's nipples and everything.
34:04Very detailed.
34:06Which is a very nice portrait, but just very bizarre.
34:11We're just admiring your self-portrait of yourself and your dog.
34:15You've even got the tattoos all done up in there as well.
34:18Yeah.
34:18What's the dog's name?
34:19Clash.
34:20Clash.
34:21Oh, I love it.
34:22Got a lot of puppy two weeks ago.
34:23Ah, what's his name?
34:25Tank.
34:26Clash and Tank are like gladiators.
34:29Yeah, jump on there.
34:30Yeah.
34:31So as we get Sean out to the stretcher, his partner, Blessy, brings out the little pup.
34:35Oh!
34:36Oh!
34:37Hello, baby.
34:39Hello, Tank.
34:40It shows that he just loves his dogs.
34:42Looks like you've been eating some chicken as well from the size of you.
34:46You should switch the names. He's definitely a Tank.
34:48Yeah, he's definitely a Tank.
34:51Yep, you're good.
34:53It's been over 24 hours since Sean has gotten this chicken stuck down his throat,
34:58so we need to get him to hospital quickly so that they can take this obstruction out.
35:04Good to go?
35:04Yeah.
35:05No worries.
35:10How are you feeling at the moment?
35:12Tired.
35:12A bit tired.
35:14So this is just some Panadol.
35:15Should kick in, help with the pain a bit?
35:18Yep.
35:18So when did you guys meet then?
35:20Seven years ago.
35:22Seven years ago.
35:22And married for how long?
35:24Oh, not married.
35:24Not married?
35:25Nah, just fiancé like, you know.
35:27Fiancé?
35:28Yeah, seven years.
35:29Seven?
35:30For seven years?
35:32How do you feel about that?
35:33This one's sharp, aren't you?
35:35Bit of a sore spot.
35:38Seven years.
35:39Sean, I think it's time to put a ring on it.
35:45Hopefully the hospital can clear Sean's throat tonight,
35:47so he can go back home to Blessie, Tank and Clash.
35:50And maybe one day I'll join him for some beer and chicken.
35:56So we'll take him straight in so the doctor will see him pretty much now.
36:0575-year-old war veteran Tom was struggling to breathe.
36:09It feels very strange.
36:10Christine has watched her husband suffer from emphysema for many years.
36:14Just nice, slow breaths.
36:16But this time, she knew he was in serious trouble.
36:19We'll work the rest out, alright?
36:26Eight weeks since that scary night, Tom is fully aware of just how lucky he is.
36:33Want some cake?
36:34Yes, please.
36:35Okay.
36:37I had found extremely difficult to catch my breath.
36:41Even just standing and bending over was a struggle.
36:45So I knew there was something not right and it rocked me around a little bit.
36:49Cheers.
36:50Cheers, yeah.
36:51Nice to be back home in your safe hands.
36:54After two nights in hospital, Tom was very happy to head home to his soulmate Christine.
37:00But Bonnie missed you.
37:03And I missed you.
37:04But I got that.
37:0847 years of being married and I'm still in love with her every day.
37:14I would not be here without her right now.
37:16And that's the fact.
37:17I'm glad when the paramedics came and they sought everything out.
37:20They were amazing what they did.
37:24I'd like to say a big thank you to Bill and the other paramedics as well.
37:29It was scary.
37:30I've never been through anything like that before.
37:32No.
37:33I want you to be nice and healthy.
37:35Yeah.
37:36And happy.
37:37I'm always happy, love.
37:39No, not.
37:41I just hope that we can stay as healthy as possible, enjoy life and just being together, loving each other.
37:50Love you.
37:51Me too.
37:53What happened today, mate?
37:56Sean displayed all the signs of a suspected heart attack.
38:00My chest is working really tight.
38:02But instead had a piece of chicken from last night's dinner stuck in his throat.
38:06Can't get it down.
38:08Nian Carlos worried the obstruction could block his oxygen supply.
38:12After an uncomfortable night in hospital, Sean finally cleared the offending chicken without
38:20medical intervention and was happy to head home to Blessie and their pooches.
38:2435-year-old Tammy called an ambulance as she lay heavily bleeding on her kitchen floor.
38:33I don't know how he's going to get me out of here.
38:34The shocking blood loss was a symptom of her stage 3 cervical cancer, which the young mum was due to start treatment for.
38:43Paramedics, Aaron and Laura knew she needed to get to hospital while her partner, David and young sons, helplessly watched on.
38:52Today, David and the kids can't wait to visit mum.
39:01Tammy's been in hospital for the last eight weeks dealing with pain from her brutal disease.
39:07Tammy's been in hospital for the last eight weeks.
39:08I love you too.
39:10Hi.
39:11Hi.
39:12Hi.
39:13Hi.
39:14I'm the bed.
39:15Hi, mum.
39:16Give me kisses.
39:17Oh my god, I love you, bubba.
39:18Get on the bed.
39:19You've got books and pencils.
39:20Yeah.
39:21What are you going to draw me?
39:22No, daddy.
39:23The flowers are beautiful.
39:24Thank you, my darling.
39:27How are you going?
39:29How are you coping?
39:30Oh, I'm doing okay.
39:31The pain's still getting on top of me.
39:32We're trying to get on top of it.
39:34Chemotherapy now complete, Tammy's thankful to be in remission and hoping to head home
39:39to her boys soon.
39:40Oh.
39:41Oh.
39:42They don't really know much.
39:43They know mummy's sick, and that's all, and mummy's just trying to get better.
39:46They're asking me daily when will mum come home.
39:48Mummy come home today, and I have to keep telling them not yet.
39:51Mummy's not better yet.
39:53I love you.
39:54They're so brave.
39:56I can't thank them enough.
39:58I love you.
39:59I love you more.
40:02Oh.
40:03Daredevil taste tester James didn't know what hit him when he tried the second hottest
40:09chilli in the world.
40:10It's like stabbing.
40:12Hours after eating it, the 29-year-old was writhing in pain, leaving fiancee Mackenzie
40:18no choice but to call an ambulance.
40:24Seven weeks on, James still has no regrets.
40:28We're going to start from the mild all the way to the hottest and see how far he can go.
40:32Even roping Mackenzie into his extreme hobby.
40:37I love chillies so much.
40:39I could eat them every day.
40:41The only problem is I can never find hot enough chillies for me to eat.
40:46I play it safe.
40:47I am not a risk taker.
40:48James, on the other hand, he is my complete opposite.
40:51This one?
40:52He loves to live life on the edge.
40:54He will take any risk.
40:55What's this?
40:56Yes.
40:57He's learnt nothing.
40:58It's already burning my lips.
41:00That's hot.
41:02Any?
41:03Yeah.
41:04How bad.
41:05What does it mean?
41:06My mouth's on fire.
41:07Right.
41:08As James's quest for the ultimate thrill continues, he has only one message to share.
41:16It's a call out to any other chilli lovers out there.
41:21I need more friends that love chilli just as much as me.
41:24You can find me on LinkedIn.
41:26My stomach's not feeling nice.
41:28Don't say that.
41:29Don't say that.
41:31Don't say that.
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