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Short filmTranscript
00:00People know that when the green uniform comes along, you're going to help them.
00:06It's absolutely my superhero costume.
00:09Do we have a pulse?
00:10Oh, you are being an absolute trooper.
00:14As soon as we arrive, they just know they're in safe hands and that we're going to do everything we can to help them.
00:19Oh, the poor little one.
00:21I wouldn't have guessed you were 104.
00:23I genuinely believe laughter is the best medicine.
00:27I feel weird.
00:30You're at the dream team tonight.
00:32To know that you bring someone that's very unwell to hospital and they get better.
00:36It's one of the best feelings in the world.
00:38You're the toughest man I've ever met.
00:40Second to God, these people.
00:42That's it.
00:43No!
00:44You're doing so good.
00:46Let's get you in the ambulance, eh?
00:48I feel really proud to wear this uniform and I feel really proud to be a paramedic.
00:55On this episode of Paramedics...
00:57Can you try and keep your head as still as possible?
01:00A pedestrian hit by a car in a heartbreaking accident.
01:05That's two tonnes of metal that's crushed a frail human.
01:08Malcolm potentially won't survive this.
01:11It's just, I can't stop the bleeding.
01:14So, try and get IV access.
01:15Can Lisa deliver life-saving medication to a young mum?
01:19You're very safe and we've got your family with us.
01:22Before it's too late...
01:24What's her longest seizure been before?
01:26Hours.
01:27Hours.
01:28This young woman is in deep trouble.
01:31This is just a healthy version of a rape.
01:34Yeah.
01:35And Carlos and me go on an unforgettable ride.
01:38It feels pretty fun, Dad.
01:40You should try and hurt yourself the other one.
01:42What would it cost for you to go naked on television?
02:01Unblurred out?
02:02Unblurred.
02:04Blurred?
02:05Like, if it's blurred, then that's not...
02:06It defeats the purpose.
02:07I don't know.
02:08A thousand bucks?
02:08Paramedic partners Aaron and Laura are busy exploring an interesting hypothetical as they
02:16wait for their first job.
02:18Everyone has a price, that's the saying, isn't it?
02:20I think Aaron's pretty cheap.
02:22A thousand bucks to go nude on television.
02:24He obviously thinks he's pretty great and is going to get some opportunities from it,
02:27but I don't think that's the case.
02:28If Taylor Swift wanted you to go on TV for free naked, would you?
02:35I mean, if it means we'd be friends and, like, we'd meet each other and all that, probably.
02:41As Laura ponders how far she'd go to meet her idol,
02:46at the South Australian Emergency Operations Centre...
02:49That's the ambulance.
02:52Tell me exactly what's happened.
02:53...a bystander is calling in a horror accident.
02:56I'm on a main road.
02:58I've turned around a corner and someone's hit someone who's trying to cross the street
03:03and they've hit their head on the road.
03:05So this is a car versus pedestrian, is that right?
03:08Yeah.
03:09Are you with the patient now?
03:10Yep, he's still on the road.
03:16We're going priority two to a car versus pedestrian.
03:19Seven-year-old male still on the road.
03:21He's bleeding from his head, conscious.
03:26I guess we just don't know how fast he's been hit.
03:29Yeah, exactly.
03:30This could be anything.
03:32Head injuries, broken bones, internal bleeding.
03:35Trauma, trauma, trauma.
03:37The amount of trauma that someone sustains when they get hit by a car...
03:41One minute.
03:42...this patient's injuries could be so life-threatening,
03:44he could pass away before we get there.
03:46So, Nhi, we've just got a priority two come in.
03:59Yep.
04:00For a 12-year-old.
04:02OK.
04:03Come off his dirt bike.
04:06Paramedic buddies, Nhi and Carlos,
04:08have started their afternoon shift racing to a bike park.
04:12Her ribs, difficulty breathing.
04:14Yep.
04:14Was he actually wearing a helmet?
04:17Just wearing protective gear.
04:19It's the difference between having minor cuts and bruises
04:22to potentially saving your life.
04:25Have you ever come off a push bike before?
04:28No, I don't ride bikes.
04:30I can't balance to save my life.
04:31Oh, really?
04:32No.
04:32I can tell by your drive.
04:33Still learning how to drive.
04:34Yeah.
04:38Pulling up to this park, it's massive.
04:40We just don't know where we're going to actually find this patient.
04:46Hey, mate.
04:47He's over there.
04:49He's over there.
04:49We might follow your lead.
04:51We'll get you to lead us away.
04:53This kid just takes off.
04:55We can't catch him,
04:56especially with all the equipment we're carrying.
04:58Don't go too fast, though.
05:00Yeah, we have little legs.
05:02Don't go too fast.
05:03He just leads us for dust.
05:05He's a swan.
05:06Do not make eye contact with the birds.
05:08They're dangerous animals.
05:09Really?
05:09Yep.
05:10Even the swan?
05:11Yep.
05:11So I have a weird, unsettling fear of birds.
05:16Ha!
05:17They're unpredictable creatures.
05:19They stare at you and they have no motion
05:21and they could literally swoop you.
05:22In Australia, you have magpies that swoop you.
05:26Hey, guys.
05:27Hi, nice to meet you.
05:28My name's Cass.
05:29I've got an E as well.
05:30Is this Jim?
05:31Yeah, hey, mate.
05:32Jim's dad, Craig, rushed to be with his injured son
05:35after the 12-year-old's mates raced the alarm.
05:39What are you sore at the moment?
05:40My hips, a little bit of my chest.
05:42Sure.
05:43It's hard to breathe.
05:44It is okay.
05:44I've got a headache and I get dizzy when I stand up.
05:47Okay, no worries.
05:48What actually happened?
05:49So I was going over the jump.
05:51Yep.
05:51And my front wheel did just make it
05:53and I missed and I landed straight on my chest.
05:57He's got pain in multiple areas.
06:01There could potentially be injury to the spleen,
06:03to the liver, punch and lung as well,
06:06broken bones like ribs.
06:08Jim could have done some internal damage as well
06:10to his head, to his skull, to his brains.
06:12Just try to slow down your breathing, mate.
06:14Nice, big, deep breaths for me, all right?
06:16Across town, intensive care paramedic Lisa
06:25is battling peak-hour traffic
06:27to reach a young patient in trouble.
06:29I'm told that she's having a seizure.
06:32There is a paramedic crew already on scene
06:34saying that she's having trouble breathing
06:36and that her airway is compromised.
06:39This young woman is in deep trouble.
06:41If she has epilepsy and continues to seize for a long time,
06:53that can be dangerous for her brain.
06:57As Lisa makes her way down the city alleyway,
07:01she sees her patient lying on the concrete.
07:04Another paramedic crew arrived a few minutes ago
07:07and are trying to stop the young woman's seizure.
07:10My name's Lisa.
07:12I'm an intensive care paramedic.
07:13They've called me for support.
07:15Hello.
07:16And who have we got here?
07:18Amy.
07:19Amy.
07:21Amy had just finished watching her sister's graduation ceremony
07:24when she collapsed outside the function centre.
07:28I saw all the strobe lights, all different colours,
07:32and I thought, oh, no, a trigger for Amy
07:35has been flashing lights before.
07:37She had multiple seizures.
07:39My heart just kind of, like, started racing.
07:43I worry that, you know, the more seizures she has,
07:46the worse, you know, it is for her brain.
07:49So we've given eight of a dazzle rating.
07:52She's maintaining airway.
07:53Paramedics Sarah and Caitlin have given Amy
07:56the strong sedative midazolam,
07:59but it's not working.
08:00It's been over ten minutes since the first dose.
08:04The longer the seizure goes on,
08:06the longer her poor brain is struggling
08:08and she can lose brain function
08:10and she can end up in a vegetative state.
08:14I want to make sure that this seizure
08:16is not the one she doesn't come back from.
08:18Can I borrow this arm?
08:27Is that OK?
08:28I'm just going to take your blood pressure.
08:29I'm going to have a listen to your lungs as well, all right?
08:31Twelve-year-old mountain biker Jim
08:33is struggling to breathe after a failed jump
08:36sent him hurtling over his handlebars,
08:39landing on his chest.
08:41Were you wearing your helmet?
08:42Yeah.
08:42Did you black out?
08:43I couldn't breathe for, like, 10 to 15 seconds.
08:46OK, I'm just going to do a couple of checks, all right?
08:48If it's sore anywhere, you let me know, all right?
08:50A little bit.
08:52Both sides or is it left or the right?
08:54Maybe on the right.
08:54The right side.
08:55Around here.
08:56All right.
08:56I'm just going to check a little bit further down, mate.
08:58The hips.
08:59The hips as well.
09:01All righty.
09:01So you haven't used this one before?
09:03No, I'll explain it to you.
09:04So you use it like a whistle.
09:05You pop your lips around the end,
09:06breathe it in through your mouth
09:07and out through your nose.
09:08It's going to taste a little bit funny, though.
09:10It might make you feel a little bit lightheaded and dizzy,
09:12but it's part of the medication, all right?
09:13It's going to help with your pain.
09:16Have any of you guys had the green whistle before?
09:18No?
09:18Oh, my God.
09:21It tastes like shit.
09:24I agree with him.
09:25It doesn't taste that great,
09:26but I think he's going to have a pretty good time on it.
09:29Just keep using that whistle.
09:30It's going to be a little bit bumpy, mate.
09:33The team are now making the long trip back to the ambulance
09:36and Nia is about to face her morbid fear again.
09:41Ew.
09:41Do not run over the birds.
09:44Liz.
09:44Ah!
09:45Ah!
09:46You would think Carlis would help me
09:49and at least shoo the birds' wave.
09:51Ah!
09:52It's all right, Carlis.
09:53I got it.
09:54But he's just walking through looking pretty,
09:57so he's pretty useless to me at the moment.
10:02Jim's dad, Craig, will also ride in the ambulance.
10:05You all right, mate?
10:05You got that green whistle going?
10:07It's that green whistle, yeah.
10:08You all right?
10:09I'm busy.
10:10I'm busy in here.
10:11That's what he does to you, mate.
10:12This is not the first time he's been called to his accident-prone son.
10:17Where's that scar from?
10:18Is that an old one?
10:19Oh, yeah?
10:19I saw one that I did before.
10:21Yeah.
10:21That I didn't call an ambulance for.
10:22Oh, you didn't?
10:23Bloody hell, it's impressive.
10:24You probably should have.
10:25Yeah.
10:25He empowered himself on a tree.
10:27He empowered himself on a tree.
10:28Landed on it, had to pull himself off it.
10:30Jesus.
10:31It's impressive.
10:32Like, that's insane.
10:33And he's still here, still telling the story.
10:35So he's either a very bad bike rider or he's very lucky.
10:42I'm on the news now.
10:44It's not the news, mate.
10:46Who cares?
10:47I'm still on a channel.
10:50I'm famous.
10:52So when kids get their hands on the green whistle, there's just no filter.
10:56They just blurt out whatever they think.
10:58This is going to be a quite interesting trip to hospital.
11:01This is just a healthy version of a vape.
11:05Have you had a vape before?
11:08No.
11:10Good answer, Jimmy.
11:11Good answer.
11:18Hello.
11:20Malcolm, is it?
11:22Yeah, hi, my name's Laura.
11:23Do you remember what's happened?
11:25Yeah, it was a white crossway and obviously I must have walked into a car.
11:30Paramedics Laura and Aaron have arrived at a disturbing accident scene.
11:35Pensioner Malcolm has been hit by a car and blood is pouring from his head.
11:41Do you think you lost consciousness or anything like that?
11:43Do you remember everything?
11:44Yeah.
11:45Oh, keep your head nice and still.
11:47Intensive care paramedic Dave is briefing Aaron about the ordeal.
11:53The distraught driver of the car just didn't see the pedestrian.
11:57It sounds like this gentleman just knocked him over.
12:00He stopped to the ground whilst on the ground, like the back end of the car's went over his
12:03leg, we think.
12:04Okay.
12:04That's two tons of metal that's crushed a frail human.
12:08It's truly hard to believe that Malcolm survived, let alone talking to us.
12:12I want you to try and keep your head nice and still for us.
12:15Try not to move it just because we don't know what kind of injuries you've got so far while
12:19we have a good look at you.
12:19The leg feels strange to me.
12:21The left leg or the right leg?
12:23This leg is.
12:24Your left leg feels a bit funny?
12:26Yeah.
12:26Oh, okay.
12:27There's no pain.
12:28You don't have any pain anywhere?
12:30No.
12:30No, all right.
12:31I've never been to a patient before that has trauma like this and isn't feeling any pain.
12:36So just confirming, do you feel any pain anywhere?
12:39No, no, no, no.
12:41It's extremely strange and it's ringing some alarm bells to me because I'm thinking,
12:44does he have a spinal injury that's stopping the messages being sent up to his brain?
12:53Do you know why you're on the ground?
12:55Was he by car or something like that?
12:56Yeah, yeah, that's correct.
12:57Yeah.
12:58The stutter is your walk again.
13:00Okay.
13:00Off-duty ambulance volunteer Jordan was one of the first to offer assistance before the
13:06paramedics arrived.
13:08I was sort of just jumping into the scene with my medical knowledge, protect the spine.
13:12I saw them trying to move this man off the road.
13:15In a strange twist of fate, Jordan was looking at an old friend who she met working at a
13:22local pub several years ago.
13:24He's been there to start at noon and just on his way home.
13:27Malcolm is just the loveliest guy.
13:29He's so kind.
13:30I know that he does live at home alone and the pub is really his family.
13:34I'm just going to cut your pants off until about here, okay?
13:37Okay.
13:37All right.
13:37So I think we'll just, given his age, we'll probably just keep him into his private portions.
13:42With Malcolm's spine immobilised.
13:46Can you try and keep your head as still as possible?
13:48And I'm going to have a look at you bleeding from your head.
13:50Laura's next concern is how critical the damage is to the 70-year-old skull.
13:57Um, Aaron, can I just get you to have a quick feel of this?
14:02Head?
14:02Yeah.
14:03Urgently?
14:04Yeah.
14:05I asked Aaron to have a feel of his head wound because it does feel quite soft and squishy.
14:10It could indicate that he does have a fractured skull, which means that it's more likely that
14:15he has got internal bleeding.
14:18Can you just have a feel of this contusion on the back of his head just here where my hand
14:22is?
14:25Yep.
14:27Gotcha.
14:28Yeah, it feels a bit.
14:30I don't want to use the B word, but...
14:32No, but it does.
14:33Yeah.
14:33I hate the word boggy, but that's kind of the terminology that we do use.
14:37In the worst case scenario ever, a boggy mask could be brain matter.
14:41Can I get pads and saline and a roller bandage just for his head?
14:45Imagine yourself feeling your kid's Play-Doh on someone's head.
14:51It's basically a depressed skull fracture with lots of blood.
14:54And these injuries are the worst of the worst.
14:57Malcolm potentially won't survive this.
14:59What's the weirdest sports injury you've ever had?
15:10I think it's still probably the time I ran into the tennis pole.
15:15It's the start of shift for paramedic best mates, Chris and Sam.
15:19Today, the boys are reminiscing about their not-so-glorious sporting days.
15:25I've definitely copped a knee to the testicles before football.
15:28We've all been there.
15:30Yeah. Ruined my AFL career.
15:33Sam is dreaming.
15:35He is way more likely to cop another knee to the testicles
15:38than he is ever going to be a star footballer.
15:41I'm glad it happened.
15:42Otherwise, I wouldn't be working with you.
15:44I know. I'd be an average footballer.
15:46But he's still an average footballer.
15:54But Sam's failed footy career is forgotten
15:57as the boys are sent to a cricketer in trouble.
16:01So, Chris, we're going to a 45-year-old female
16:04who has been playing cricket.
16:07She has swung at the ball
16:08and now has a potential broken ankle.
16:11Ooh.
16:12If this woman has twisted and snapped her ankle,
16:15if her ankle is facing the wrong direction,
16:18there's a pretty high chance
16:19that that's compromising blood flow to her foot.
16:21I'm extremely intrigued as to what's happened.
16:26I think she was just trying to block her, maybe.
16:28I'm just trying to think how you would have your foot in front
16:30or maybe she was doing a hook shot.
16:33Yeah, that's what I think.
16:34I think she's gone on to the back foot,
16:35tried to twist around and play the hook.
16:38Hooked herself.
16:39As much as Chris and I are having a bit of a chuckle
16:41about how she's managed to break her ankle
16:43playing the, you know, the pretty gentle game of cricket,
16:46we still need to get there quickly
16:47and make sure she hasn't done too much damage
16:49to nerves or blood vessels and things like that.
16:53G'day, g'day.
16:54Hello, I'm Sam.
16:56The distressed cricketer lying on the ground
16:59is 45-year-old Tammy,
17:01while Chris gives her some penthrane
17:03to ease the agonising pain in her ankle.
17:06Just take a little breath in, get used to the taste.
17:10That's it.
17:11That was a big one, I said a little one.
17:12Sam is piecing together
17:14Tammy's disastrous day at the crease.
17:17When you were taking a shot,
17:19you've gone the pull shot
17:20and you've turned around
17:21and this foot's got stuck, has it?
17:22And that's what's done the injury?
17:24Yes, I believe so.
17:25Yeah, all right.
17:25Did you hear a snap or a crack or a pop?
17:27I did, but somebody else did.
17:29OK, sure.
17:30It always amazes me
17:31how willing the public are to help in these circumstances.
17:34There's been a registered nurse on scene.
17:36Tammy's hit the deck
17:37and she's jumped in to help straight away.
17:38She's put this pad around her ankle,
17:40made a really good splint out of it.
17:42I've taken a look and gone,
17:43yep, perfect.
17:44Exactly what I would have done.
17:45Let's keep that there.
17:47A former netball champion,
17:49today Tammy was playing
17:50just her third game of social cricket.
17:53The new recruit was the team's top scorer
17:56with 16 runs.
17:58A member of the cricket club
17:59captured the painful moment
18:01when her luck ran out.
18:02When Tammy tells me
18:08that she was screaming on the ground
18:10when she first injured herself,
18:11and you can see that Tammy's a pretty tough cookie,
18:13the fact that she's screaming on the ground
18:15probably tells me
18:16that she has done a bit of a significant injury here.
18:18If this is a fracture or a dislocation,
18:20she might be out of action for a few weeks.
18:22It might have brought a really short end
18:24to her cricket career.
18:25It's feeling afoot, Tammy.
18:26It just tastes like arsehole.
18:39Is it him?
18:4112-year-old Jim
18:43isn't holding back
18:45as paramedics Carlos and Nhi
18:47take him to hospital.
18:48The young bike rider crashed
18:50and will need x-rays
18:52to determine how much damage he's done.
18:55Are we on a boat right now?
18:57Because everything's, like, moving.
18:58On a boat?
18:59Yeah, I'm moving.
19:01Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah.
19:03The pain in Jim's injured ribs and hip
19:06seems to be evaporating
19:08with the help of the green whistle.
19:10Even this is pretty fun, Dad.
19:12You should try and hurt yourself
19:14to get in one.
19:16You can see this every day.
19:18Is this why you give kids whistles?
19:19That's it.
19:20It's for our own amusement, actually.
19:21Yeah.
19:22Is there drugs in it?
19:23It is, yeah.
19:24It's got a medication in there
19:26so when you breathe in it...
19:27Whoa, you feed us drugs?
19:29Yeah, it's like a healthy vape, remember?
19:31A healthy vape.
19:32Can I buy a green whistle?
19:33You want to buy one?
19:35Whoa.
19:36That would get us fired.
19:40While Jim continues to entertain...
19:43Do you mind if I check your sugar levels?
19:45...Carlos is carefully monitoring
19:46his no-filter patient.
19:49All right, it's just a little pinch
19:50just to get a drop of blood.
19:51Will it hurt?
19:52Nah.
19:53Are you sure?
19:54Promise.
19:56It's blood.
19:56You remember the bleed?
19:59It's going to take your sugar levels.
19:59I'm suing you.
20:02Jim's loving this trip to hospital.
20:04He's having a great time.
20:05He's just blurting out whatever.
20:07Who's driving?
20:08Is Mum driving?
20:09No, mate.
20:10The ambulance officer's driving, mate.
20:13Mum's an ambulance officer?
20:14Actually, Mum Angela
20:20is waiting anxiously at the hospital
20:23for her thrill-seeker son
20:24who's feeling no pain.
20:26Wow.
20:27Stop in the middle of the road.
20:29We're at the hospital.
20:30Yay!
20:31I love the nurses.
20:34All righty, let's get you out, hey?
20:35Hello, Mum!
20:36As much as I had fun with Jim
20:38in the back of the ambulance,
20:38I hope I don't have to carry him away
20:40to hospital again.
20:41What have you done now, mate?
20:42I almost killed myself again.
20:45Something tells me that
20:46this isn't going to be the last time
20:48he's having a ride to hospital.
20:50He thought you were driving the ambulance.
20:51This one, then!
20:52All right, let's get you in, mate.
20:54You're trying to kidnap me.
20:56This is not the hospital.
20:57His name's Carlos.
20:58You can sue him.
20:59It's fine.
21:00I'm suing you, Carlos!
21:07All right.
21:08So the plan is
21:09we're trying to get IV access
21:10then we can give a second line seizure
21:12medication.
21:1328-year-old Amy
21:15was at her sister's graduation
21:17when she had a seizure
21:18and collapsed.
21:20Intensive care paramedic Lisa
21:22urgently needs to get a cannula
21:24into Amy's arm
21:25to deliver life-saving medication.
21:28But there's a problem.
21:30No access as yet,
21:31but we'll go one more.
21:32She's cold.
21:33Her veins are tiny
21:34and we're really struggling.
21:37No luck on that one.
21:38Perhaps get the spinal board in
21:41and then we'll get ready to move her.
21:43I am told that when Amy fell,
21:46no-one was able to catch her.
21:47There is a chance
21:48she's struck her head
21:50and she's also bleeding
21:51on the inside of her brain,
21:53which is causing a prolonged seizure.
21:55We need to get her to hospital quickly.
21:57I think if we can't get this one in,
22:00we'll just get her up on the board
22:01and then we'll rug her up,
22:02put the heater on.
22:03Amy has now been actively seizing
22:05for more than 25 minutes.
22:08Her terrified family
22:09watched her stop breathing
22:11several times.
22:13What's her longest seizure been before?
22:15Hours.
22:16Hours.
22:16OK, so she's been in ICU,
22:18so she's got a pretty significant seizure history.
22:21I see so many family members and friends,
22:24the sense of helplessness,
22:25but also not knowing
22:26what the outcome's going to be for Amy.
22:29On the count of three.
22:30One, two, three.
22:31Perfect.
22:32And down.
22:33One, two, three.
22:34Yeah.
22:35We'll rug her up with a blanket.
22:38Suddenly, Amy's eyes flicker
22:40as she regains consciousness.
22:42Hello, my dear.
22:44Hi.
22:45It's a good sign,
22:46but without the IV anti-seizure medication,
22:49she could relapse at any minute.
22:51Can you look to your left
22:52and follow the voice?
22:54Amy has suffered frightening seizures
22:57for several years now,
22:58but it's the impact
23:00on her six-year-old son, Tyler,
23:02that is her greatest worry.
23:04She is a loving mum.
23:07She is honestly a wonderful mum.
23:09Tyler gets really worried
23:10when he sees Amy have a seizure.
23:13She is so brave
23:14if I was in her position.
23:16I don't know how I would be doing it,
23:18and she's just a superstar.
23:20You're very safe.
23:22You're just on an ambulance stretcher
23:23at the moment.
23:25I'm watching the paramedics
23:27take Amy away,
23:28and I just feel my heart sinking.
23:31I can't put into words
23:34how much I love Amy,
23:35and I don't even want to imagine
23:38a life without her.
23:40We've got you in the ambulance,
23:42and we'll monitor your breathing.
23:43All right,
23:44and we've got your family with us.
23:45When I'm pinching your toes, Tammy,
23:54do they both feel the same
23:55when I'm pinching them,
23:56or does one feel less?
23:58It feels the same,
23:59but I can feel
24:00my foot further down.
24:03Okay, sure.
24:04Rookie cricketer Tammy
24:05has just had a freak accident
24:07during a match
24:08and badly injured
24:09her right ankle.
24:10Paramedics Sam and Chris
24:15are worried
24:16it could be a serious fracture.
24:18These sporting injuries,
24:19as much as you're just out there
24:21having fun
24:21and playing some social cricket,
24:23all of a sudden
24:23you've broken your leg
24:24and it affects
24:25the rest of your life.
24:26Now pop that whistle
24:27back in the mouth
24:27and then nice deep breaths
24:28through the whistle again.
24:30The green whistle
24:31is taking the edge
24:32off Tammy's pain,
24:34but Sam and Chris
24:35need to get her
24:35off the ground
24:36and onto their stretcher.
24:38Everyone ready?
24:39On three,
24:40one, two,
24:40three.
24:41Well done.
24:42Stay there.
24:43Really well.
24:44Almost there.
24:46Quite tall.
24:47I am.
24:48Tall enough, I think.
24:50At this point,
24:50I've only seen
24:51Tammy lying on the ground.
24:53As Sam and I
24:54are helping her up,
24:55I see her towel over us.
24:57She must be at least
24:586'2", 6'3".
24:59She's a very tall woman.
25:01Thanks for your help, everyone.
25:03Tammy's now ready
25:04to head to hospital,
25:06but there's a problem.
25:08The patient is not leaving
25:09without her 15-year-old son,
25:11Will,
25:12and he's gone missing.
25:13He's coming.
25:14He's coming.
25:15He's getting his hot chips.
25:16Oh, do you know
25:17she said,
25:18oh, he's probably getting food.
25:19Yeah, he's right.
25:20I set off to find William.
25:22In his hand,
25:23he's got chips and gravy,
25:24and in the other hand,
25:25he's got fruitcake and biscuits.
25:27But what's more impressive is
25:28he's even taller than Tammy.
25:30This guy is towering over me.
25:33You're going to...
25:33Oh, jeez,
25:33you're going to drop him.
25:34Oh.
25:36Hey, here, mate.
25:37I don't want you to drop it.
25:38There we go.
25:39You can put your things
25:40on the back of the stretcher.
25:42When Mum was getting lifted
25:43into the ambulance,
25:44I was at the canteen,
25:45I was getting hot chips.
25:46You weren't wrong.
25:48Yeah.
25:49They were some of the best
25:50hot chips I've ever had.
25:52They were just so crispy
25:53and perfectly salty.
25:54It was really, really good.
25:55Will, those chips smell amazing, mate.
25:58Bye, Kenny.
26:00Good luck.
26:04Did you see all this, Will,
26:06or you were at the canteen?
26:09I felt a bit guilty
26:10because I kind of convinced
26:12her to play cricket,
26:13and she just always is able
26:15to read the bowls
26:15that's coming down the wicket
26:16except for the incident.
26:20Now, you don't have
26:21any numbness, tingling,
26:23nothing like that in the foot.
26:24The foot feels OK.
26:25You can still wiggle your toes OK.
26:26Nothing's changing on that front.
26:27Mm-mm.
26:28Sure.
26:29Well, they called the game off
26:30when you went down, didn't they?
26:31I think I have, yes.
26:32Yeah, you're literally
26:33six and out and game over.
26:34Yeah.
26:35I didn't get a six, though.
26:36I didn't even hit that ball.
26:37Oh, we're going to say
26:37that you did.
26:38OK.
26:38If you don't remember it...
26:39Yeah, I don't remember it.
26:41So we're saying to Tammy,
26:42you've got this story,
26:43but you've got to put
26:44a little bit of sauce on it.
26:45Surely you've got a drop
26:46that you hit a massive six
26:47as you were playing this pull shot.
26:49When's your next game meant to be?
26:52Next Monday.
26:53Next Monday.
26:54Well, fingers crossed.
26:55You never know.
26:57Hard to tell without x-ray vision.
27:00The team has now arrived
27:02at the emergency department
27:03where the unlucky Tammy
27:05will find out
27:06the full extent of her injuries.
27:09All right, just watch your head
27:10on the way out, mate.
27:11If this is a fracture
27:12or a dislocation,
27:13she might be out of action
27:14for a few weeks.
27:16My advice to Tammy,
27:17when your ankle's all healed,
27:18get back on the pitch.
27:20Are you pushing it?
27:21Yeah, I'm pushing.
27:22Are you pulling?
27:23Yeah, I'm wrenching my shoulder out.
27:25You need to go to the gym more.
27:26I guess the concerning thing is
27:33he has no pain.
27:34You don't think there's a fracture down there,
27:35just a laceration?
27:36I would say there's a fracture.
27:3970-year-old Malcolm
27:40is in a critical state
27:42with a serious head injury
27:43and fractured legs
27:45after being hit by a car.
27:47All right, on my count.
27:48So when everyone's ready?
27:49Ready to go.
27:50Paramedics Laura and Aaron
27:52now need to carefully move
27:54the pensioner
27:54from the road
27:55onto a stretcher.
27:57Can you feel
27:58someone touching your back?
28:00Malcolm was walking home
28:01after a few beers
28:02at the pub
28:02with his mates
28:03when the horror accident happened.
28:06Is that sore, mate?
28:07No.
28:08No.
28:09He's going to have
28:10a fractured leg,
28:11maybe two fractured legs,
28:13severe head injury.
28:14I've got his head still.
28:16I can hold it
28:16until we get up.
28:18That's heartbreaking.
28:19His life's changed
28:20in an instant
28:20just from going to the pub.
28:25Of course you can.
28:27Mal, it's Jordan.
28:28I'm just heading off, all right?
28:29Your brother's going to be here.
28:30All right, take care.
28:33Malcolm's friend Jordan
28:34gave emergency first aid
28:36when she saw the accident.
28:38There was a part of me
28:40that was wondering
28:41if that would be
28:41the last time
28:42I would see him again.
28:44I was worried
28:44for Malcolm's life
28:45with all of the blood.
28:47I guess it's such
28:48a sliding door moment.
28:49It literally could have been anyone.
28:51Unfortunately,
28:52it just happened to be him.
28:54Just sing out
28:55when you're ready, Laura.
28:56Yeah, let's just go.
29:04Are you allergic to anything?
29:05No.
29:06No.
29:06And definitely
29:07no pain anywhere.
29:09No.
29:09You tell me
29:10if you get some pain.
29:11No.
29:11How he still has no pain.
29:18The worst case scenario
29:19is that his vertebrae
29:21and his neck
29:21are fractured
29:22and he's got a spinal injury
29:23and that's why
29:24the pain's not getting through.
29:26Can you look at me
29:26and my forehead again?
29:29You're doing a great job, Malcolm.
29:30OK, we're going to look after you.
29:31We're going pretty quickly
29:34to hospital, OK?
29:36It's just such a freak accident.
29:38Even in the middle
29:39of such a disastrous situation
29:40for Malcolm,
29:41I can tell that he's
29:42such a gentle,
29:43kind human being
29:44and my heart's
29:45really going out to him.
29:45This, I don't like this head, though.
29:50Is it getting bigger?
29:51Yeah, like it's bleeding
29:52quite a bit.
29:53When I look back
29:54in the rear view mirror,
29:55I can sense the tension.
29:57Something's changed.
29:58All right,
29:58I'm going to sit here
29:59for a little bit.
30:04And put some pressure
30:05on your head.
30:07Suddenly I notice
30:08that the bandage
30:09that I put on Malcolm's head
30:10is soaking through
30:11with blood
30:12and it's soaking
30:13onto the towers
30:13and to our stretcher sheet.
30:15There's a potential
30:16that maybe the bleeding
30:18clotted and then
30:19the clot broke down.
30:20I'm really concerned
30:21about the bleeding
30:21that's coming from the head
30:22so I'm just going
30:23to apply some pressure.
30:24I'm doing everything
30:25I possibly can
30:26to get Malcolm to hospital
30:27safe and alive.
30:28It's just,
30:29I can't stop the bleeding, really.
30:40Wait a minute,
30:41I'm struggling to understand.
30:42My nose needs to...
30:44Young mum Amy's brain
30:48is in chaos
30:49after multiple epileptic seizures.
30:51You've had another seizure, okay?
30:54You do have something
30:54in your nose
30:55because we were a bit concerned
30:56about your breathing.
30:58We might try one more time
30:59on the IV access.
31:00Intensive care paramedic Lisa
31:02and her colleague Sarah
31:04are still searching
31:05for a vein
31:06to deliver anti-seizure medication
31:08if Amy relapses.
31:10You're a bit tricky
31:11to calculate.
31:13There's going to be
31:14a sharp prick
31:15on your finger.
31:16Lisa is also concerned
31:17that Amy's blood sugar level
31:19is plummeting
31:20dangerously low.
31:22That could cause
31:23another seizure.
31:24I don't want her
31:25having another seizure
31:26considering we've just
31:26got her back.
31:28Do you think you'd be able
31:29to swallow some glucose
31:30for us?
31:31If we can't raise
31:32Amy's sugar levels
31:34we could lose her.
31:36You must be hungry
31:37if you're enjoying that.
31:38Yeah.
31:39When was the last time
31:41you ate something?
31:41You say?
31:43Three days.
31:44Fourth plate.
31:46Eight days.
31:48Really?
31:49Three days?
31:49That's a lot of time
31:50without eating.
31:51No wonder she's not
31:52feeling too good.
31:54It's no wonder
31:55her blood sugars
31:56are so low
31:57and this has thrown her
31:58into a life-threatening
31:59situation.
32:01Did you want some more
32:01of the glucose?
32:04Yeah, you're still able
32:05to swallow and everything.
32:06Just keep putting it
32:07on your lips
32:08so that you can
32:08lick it off, alright?
32:10Really like it, hey?
32:12We've got more
32:13of that came from.
32:15Fortunately,
32:16with the glucose
32:17stabilising Amy's system
32:19the team can now
32:20start heading to hospital.
32:22Lisa's got one.
32:23Maybe.
32:24Let's try and push it off.
32:27While moving, guys.
32:29Oh, wow.
32:30Awesome.
32:31And at last,
32:32Lisa has been able
32:33to find a vein,
32:35ensuring IV access
32:36for Amy
32:36if she has another seizure.
32:38Amazing.
32:39Happy days now.
32:43Amy,
32:44do you remember
32:44what happened
32:45to what we were
32:45up to today?
32:48Anywhere.
32:49Anything.
32:51We are just
32:52at the hospital now
32:53and you're in good hands,
32:55OK?
32:55I am worried
32:57about Amy's future.
32:59It's all the things
33:00that we can't see.
33:01Has she got a brain bleed?
33:03Has she done
33:03some internal damage
33:04that we don't know about?
33:06Unfortunately,
33:07epilepsy is a life sentence.
33:09She will have more seizures
33:10and she could have
33:12brain damage from them.
33:14Alright.
33:14We're going in now.
33:15It's just,
33:23I can't stop
33:23this head bleeding.
33:25Paramedics Laura
33:26and Aaron
33:26are racing
33:27much-loved pensioner
33:29Malcolm to hospital.
33:30How much is it bleeding?
33:32I can't tell
33:33because it's going
33:34underneath him
33:35into the towers
33:35of the sandbag.
33:37Blood is still
33:38pouring out
33:39of the 70-year-old's
33:40head wound
33:41after he was
33:42accidentally
33:42knocked down
33:43by a car.
33:44Are the towers
33:45getting fuller?
33:46Oh, the back half
33:47of them are full.
33:48Have a guess.
33:50It's not,
33:51it wouldn't be like
33:51over a couple hundred
33:53mil.
33:54200 maybe?
33:56300?
33:58Just a quick update.
34:00My partner's
34:00just describing
34:01the head wound
34:02has some
34:03significant bleeding
34:04that she's having
34:05to apply
34:05direct pressure
34:06now to,
34:07slowly saturating
34:08the top head
34:09end of our bed.
34:10So we thought
34:10we'd give you
34:11an update on that
34:11and we'll be there
34:13in about five minutes.
34:15Are you right
34:16just to stay there?
34:17Yeah, I mean
34:17there's nothing
34:17you can do.
34:18Yep.
34:19When things like
34:20this suddenly change
34:22you need to make
34:22that decision
34:23whether or not
34:24you pull over
34:24the ambulance
34:25and assist
34:26or we keep driving.
34:29And at the end
34:30of the day
34:30Malcolm's only
34:31going to get
34:32better in the hospital.
34:35Did this hurt me
34:36pushing on your head?
34:37No?
34:39You're probably
34:40the toughest man
34:41I've ever met.
34:43We're almost
34:44at the hospital,
34:45okay?
34:46They're going
34:46to look after you.
34:49There's nothing
34:50worse than a
34:51patient going downhill
34:52when we're this
34:52close to the hospital.
34:54You remember
34:54every patient
34:55that you lose
34:56in the ambulance
34:56and it's heartbreaking.
34:59So we've just
35:01arrived, okay?
35:02So we'll take you
35:03inside.
35:04We get to hospital.
35:06I have to get
35:06Aaron in the back
35:07to help me out
35:07and do other things
35:08that I can't do.
35:09Right then?
35:10Yeah.
35:10I'm just going to
35:11keep pressure on it.
35:12I cannot take my
35:12hands away from
35:13Malcolm's head.
35:15It's going to get
35:16a bit cold,
35:17alright?
35:17Just while we go
35:17inside.
35:18Malcolm has
35:19suffered major
35:20trauma and I
35:21truly don't know
35:21how he's going
35:22to come out
35:22on the other end
35:23of this.
35:24Alright,
35:25you're in the
35:25right place
35:26for them to
35:26take care of
35:26you, okay?
35:28I think the
35:28worst case scenario
35:29for Malcolm is
35:30that he doesn't
35:31make it out
35:31of the hospital.
35:33You've done
35:34a great job.
35:42When I'm
35:43pinching your toes,
35:44Tammy,
35:45do they both
35:45feel the same?
35:46Tammy was
35:47playing only
35:48her third game
35:49of social cricket
35:50when this
35:51happened.
35:51one bad shot
35:55and a shattered
35:55ankle later
35:56and Tammy was
35:57heading off to
35:58hospital with
35:59paramedics Sam
36:00and Chris.
36:01Thanks for your
36:01help, everyone.
36:05You ready, Will?
36:07Got to be a good
36:08one.
36:10Yay!
36:12Swing and a miss.
36:13Six weeks later,
36:15Tammy is still
36:16hobbling in a
36:17moon boot but
36:17managing to play
36:19some park cricket
36:19with hubby Nigel,
36:21daughter Jess and
36:22Will.
36:23Yeah.
36:25Nice fielding.
36:30The 45-year-old
36:32mum needed
36:33surgery to repair
36:34two serious
36:35fractures in her
36:36ankle and it's
36:37been a slow
36:38recovery.
36:39Will and Jess
36:40have been
36:40absolutely amazing
36:41since I've been
36:42injured.
36:43They have stepped
36:44up around the
36:45house.
36:46There has been
36:47stacks of
36:48complaints about
36:48the extra
36:49housework.
36:49Why do we have
36:50to do the
36:51washing?
36:51My reaction is,
36:52well, we just
36:53have to do it.
36:53I can't do it
36:54for you.
36:54Just have to
36:55suck it up and
36:56get it done.
36:56Gotta be fast.
36:57Ready?
36:58As for her
36:59future as a star
37:00cricketer...
37:01Go Matilda!
37:03Go Matilda!
37:04Well, Tammy is
37:05still not convinced.
37:07When it first
37:08happened, I was
37:09definitely not going
37:09to come back and
37:10play.
37:11You ready, mate?
37:11As time goes on,
37:12I sort of think
37:13maybe I could
37:14come out.
37:16My heart says
37:18yes.
37:18My head goes
37:19no.
37:20So I think
37:21we'll have to
37:21wait and see.
37:22Let's go.
37:23Let's see how
37:23we go.
37:25Oh!
37:27That was a
37:27wicket!
37:29Where are you
37:29sore at the
37:30moment?
37:30My hips.
37:31A little bit of
37:31mud shit.
37:32Carlos and
37:33Nhi discovered
37:3412-year-old Jim
37:35struggling to
37:36breathe after
37:37hurtling over his
37:38handlebars on a
37:39third jump.
37:40Breathe it in
37:41through your mouth
37:41and out through
37:42your nose.
37:43The magic powers
37:44of the green
37:44whistle turned
37:45young Jim's pain
37:46from horror
37:47into hilarity.
37:50Implants is
37:50pretty fun,
37:51Dad.
37:52You should try
37:52and hurt yourself
37:53to get in one.
37:56At hospital,
37:57doctors confirmed
37:58severely bruised
37:59ribs but no
38:00breaks.
38:03It took
38:03several weeks
38:04for a badly
38:05shaken Jim to
38:06fully recover,
38:07but his confidence
38:08is now back
38:09and he's once
38:10again strutting
38:11his stuff.
38:14Keep your head
38:14nice and still.
38:1670-year-old
38:17Malcolm was
38:18walking home
38:19from the pub
38:19when he was
38:20hit by a car.
38:22With blood
38:23pouring from
38:23his head,
38:24Laura and
38:25Aaron were
38:25worried he'd
38:26suffered a
38:26life-threatening
38:27injury.
38:28I can't
38:29stop the
38:29bleeding.
38:36Miraculously,
38:37three weeks
38:37later,
38:38Malcolm is
38:39back home.
38:40He survived
38:40a massive
38:41bleed on
38:42his brain
38:42and suffered
38:43fractures to
38:44both his
38:44legs.
38:46Well, I don't
38:46remember much.
38:47All I remember
38:48is the feeling
38:49of the impact
38:50of the car.
38:51I remember him
38:52saying,
38:53mate, I'm so
38:53sorry.
38:54I'm so sorry.
38:55I was
38:56lucky in a sense
38:58where the
38:58young people
38:59are like,
38:59I might be.
39:00Malcolm's
39:06memories are
39:07still raw,
39:08especially the
39:09paramedic's
39:10urgent warnings.
39:12Mel, don't
39:13move.
39:14Don't move.
39:18I suppose you
39:19don't realise
39:20how much I
39:22appreciate life
39:23until you get
39:23a chance
39:25where you say,
39:25jeez,
39:26I could have
39:28lost it.
39:30So you've
39:31got to reach
39:31for it now.
39:32You take
39:33each day as a
39:34bonus.
39:34You learn.
39:36Yeah.
39:39All right,
39:39Kevin,
39:40a bit of a
39:40sec.
39:42Malcolm has
39:43lived alone
39:43for the last
39:4444 years.
39:47Oh, Kevin.
39:48How are you,
39:48mate?
39:48Good, mate.
39:49Come in.
39:49Best mate
39:50Kevin is
39:50keen to see
39:51him back
39:52at his
39:52local pub
39:53where Malcolm's
39:54friends are
39:55his family.
39:56Everyone loves
39:57him in the
39:58hotel and a
39:59lot of people
39:59will be very
40:00happy to see
40:01him back
40:01there.
40:02He's a good
40:02friend.
40:03They might
40:03even put a
40:04balloon or two
40:05up for him.
40:06Oh, beautiful.
40:07Well, they say
40:08nectar of the
40:08gods.
40:09Yeah, definitely.
40:10We go there on
40:11a happy hour when
40:12it's cheaper.
40:14We're pensioners,
40:14mate.
40:15We've got to
40:15stretch the
40:15dollar.
40:16Cheers.
40:17Cheers, mate.
40:18All the best.
40:18Cheers, mate.
40:18All the best.
40:20What's her
40:21longest seizure
40:22been before?
40:23Hours.
40:24So she's got a
40:25pretty significant
40:26seizure history.
40:27Young mum Amy
40:28collapsed at her
40:29sister's graduation
40:30ceremony,
40:31suffering multiple
40:32life-threatening
40:33seizures.
40:34So the plan is
40:35we'll try and get
40:35IV access.
40:36No luck on that
40:37one.
40:38Intensive care
40:39paramedic Lisa
40:40fought to deliver
40:41life-saving medication
40:42to stop Amy
40:44slipping into a
40:45coma.
40:45Hello, Tyler.
40:54Hello.
40:55What did you do
40:56today at school?
40:57Lots of cool
40:58homework stuff.
41:01Luckily for Amy,
41:03doctors gave her the
41:04all-clear to go home
41:05later that night to
41:06her precious six-year-old
41:08son, Tyler.
41:09What does it say?
41:11I guess the
41:12fez hat.
41:13Good job.
41:15He's the most
41:16funniest, smartest,
41:18caring little boy.
41:20I'm so lucky to be
41:21able to have him in
41:22my life.
41:23Without him, I
41:24couldn't, I would
41:26literally not be
41:28here.
41:29Hello, buddy.
41:31But Amy is still
41:32worried about the
41:33future and how it
41:34might impact her
41:35little boy.
41:36I feel like the
41:38more often I have
41:39seizures, the more
41:40things that are
41:41developing, like
41:42sometimes I get
41:43really confused and
41:45I worry that it's
41:46going to impact me
41:47so much that I
41:48can't do the
41:49things that I want
41:50to do with Tyler,
41:51which I feel like
41:52it's already
41:53starting, like it's
41:54taking quite a big
41:55toll on me.
41:58For now, Amy has
41:59taught Tyler what to
42:01do in an emergency.
42:02Sometimes when
42:03mummy has a seizure,
42:05I call triple
42:07zero and then
42:09mummy gets picked
42:10up and then goes
42:11back to the
42:12hospital and then
42:14get better and
42:15then goes back
42:17home and then I
42:18check on her.
42:21Hey you.
42:23To the paramedics
42:24who were there that
42:25day, I want to
42:26thank them because
42:27it's hard and it's
42:31scary and it's
42:32tough but it's
42:34just so good
42:35knowing that
42:35there's people
42:36there that are
42:37going to take
42:38care of me.
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