- 13 hours ago
999: On the Front Line - Season 14 - Episode 03
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00:01Ambulance service is patient breathing.
00:04This old gentleman, he can't walk no farther.
00:08There's a person on the floor, and that if he's talking about, he doesn't respond.
00:13The gentleman's fallen over, we'll need a mountain rescue as well.
00:17Righty ho, let's get them bad boys on.
00:20West Midlands Ambulance Service looks after almost six million people.
00:25I love the fact that not just every shift's different, every job's different.
00:29Do you remember everything's happened?
00:32It looks like you're having a heart attack.
00:35Saving lives and making a difference every call out.
00:39Is she breathing normally?
00:42Water availability of Helimuth.
00:45Embedded with eight emergency crews.
00:48Could be anything, couldn't it? Okay, okay.
00:51Filming simultaneously across the region.
00:55Time is everything in our job.
00:57Just relax, relax for me.
00:58Can you open your mouth as wide as you can?
01:02Capturing life.
01:03How's your vision?
01:04Got it?
01:05On the front line.
01:07I go to work every day, and I make a difference.
01:16Stand well clear.
01:18Vehicle reverting.
01:20Hey, how comes I always end up getting on a truck before you?
01:23Age before beauty.
01:25It's gonna be a long shift, this is Mick.
01:33If you could master any talent, what would it be?
01:37Probably to learn every language.
01:41I'm jealous of that answer.
01:42Mine would be to be able to play the piano.
01:44I wanna be able to just see a piano and just play it.
01:48In public.
01:48In a train station.
01:50Do a little courtesy.
01:51Yeah.
01:52Thank you, everybody.
01:53Good night.
01:53That's a good talent.
01:54It is, isn't it?
01:55Yeah.
01:56Good morning.
01:57It's Scott and Law on 7-7 today, over.
02:00I'll get you back on time.
02:01I'm good, guys.
02:03Brill, thank you.
02:03Have a good day.
02:07What's the best compliment you've ever received at work from a patient?
02:12There was a guy that was a patient that was a bit high, a pet man, but told me I
02:18was the most beautiful person I'd ever seen.
02:21Oh, he was lying.
02:24A lady told me I'm gonna marry Johnny Depp and I was pretty complimented by that.
02:29Yeah.
02:30I like getting called a handsome young man off all the women in the 90s.
02:35That's my favourite.
02:37Oh, the ones that wear glasses and struggle with their eyesight?
02:39Yeah, those ones.
02:40Yeah.
02:53Oh, God, that was a good...
02:54That was a good crack.
02:57Click your neck.
02:59All right.
02:59That's not funny.
03:00Now, show monkey.
03:01Actually, don't, because it makes me...
03:03I will be asleep.
03:05Yeah.
03:07Oh, stop it.
03:08I don't like your neck.
03:11Yeah.
03:11I think there's two types of people in this world.
03:13People who are obsessively clicking themselves and some people who are not, and that's the difference between me and you.
03:18Yeah, I crack too much all the time.
03:22Honestly, I'm not surprised you didn't come and be like, oh, I can crack my nose.
03:26You know what?
03:26Some people can.
03:27Can you crack your ear?
03:30Oh.
03:32I don't know how you do it.
03:33I don't know how you do it.
03:33It makes you feel like I'm going to break my head.
03:35Mm.
03:35Yeah, it does your own.
03:44I'm good at service.
03:45Is the patient breathing?
03:47Just about this old gentleman.
03:50He can't walk no farther.
03:52Can I speak to him directly?
03:54Hello?
03:55So tell me what's the main problem.
03:58I'm sure he wants to walk.
03:59Right.
04:00What's going on with your speech, sir?
04:02You sound a little bit slurred to me.
04:04Have you ever had a stroke before?
04:13We are going to a 71-year-old male exposed to the elements,
04:19apparently struggling to walk short of breath.
04:22He's previously had a stroke.
04:25His speech appears to have become slurred and he is sweating.
04:29This could actually be a stroke.
04:32On the way to the job, it came through as slurred speech, didn't it?
04:36So, obviously, that's a stroke symptom.
04:38We've only got a very short window of opportunity
04:41that we can help treat that stroke.
04:44So, time really is not on our side.
04:47Oh, look, there he is.
04:49What are you doing there?
04:51In the middle of the field.
04:59Hello.
05:00Hello.
05:01What's your name?
05:02Bill. Nice to meet you, Bill. I'm Brooke and that's Kira.
05:04Hello.
05:05So, what's happened?
05:06His legs have gone completely.
05:08He was going to one side and his legs were giving way.
05:12He just couldn't walk.
05:14When 71-year-old Bill found himself staggering
05:18while crossing this grassland,
05:21neighbours Sheela and Karen came out to help and called 999.
05:26We live in their houses, which is sorry.
05:29Oh, they rescued you, did they?
05:30Yeah.
05:30That's nice of them.
05:32So, what do you remember happening?
05:34Well, I couldn't walk and she was helping me walk out.
05:39And what were you doing? Were you just on a walk or...?
05:41Yeah.
05:42Yeah.
05:42Just coming back from the shops.
05:44I think people that come out and help people like those ladies did,
05:47it's really thoughtful.
05:48It restores your faith that people actually do care about everybody,
05:52so it's nice to see that sense of community.
05:56Can I just have your hands for a second?
05:59Just give them a nice big squeeze for me.
06:01Nice and hard.
06:03Fabulous.
06:04Now, lift your arms up in the air for me.
06:06Close your eyes.
06:07Keep them there.
06:08Don't let them drop.
06:10Okey-dokey.
06:12Try that again.
06:13Keep them there for me.
06:15Okey-dokey.
06:17You can relax them down.
06:18Now, can you try and kick your foot out towards me, against my hand?
06:23Brooke carries out what's called the fast test
06:26to try and identify the telltale signs of a stroke.
06:33And then in towards my hand.
06:36Okey-dokey.
06:37Fabulous.
06:38You know, when you closed your eyes then,
06:40did you feel like you were leaning to one side at all?
06:43Yeah.
06:44I did a fast test on Bill to make sure that he didn't have any weakness
06:48to one specific side to rule out the fact that he was having a stroke.
06:51He didn't, however, he was still leaning to his side significantly.
06:55We didn't know what was happening, so we needed to figure out quickly.
06:58Do you feel like you just feel a bit weak, or is it like that you're...
07:02I don't know.
07:03He says he's not eating.
07:17If I had my way, I would eat chicken every single day.
07:21It's just absolutely lovely.
07:22Would you have it still warm on your salad?
07:23Oh, yeah, yeah.
07:24I can eat a cold drumstick.
07:26But if I sort of cut half a chicken up, I can't eat it cold.
07:30The law is you have to have a cold drumstick, but the breast has to be warm.
07:36Especially if it's just come off the spit roast, and it's juicy,
07:39and you just...
07:40Oh, yeah, they've all run on your chops.
07:41I'm hungry now.
07:51Ambulance, sir, this is a patient breathing.
07:54He is, yeah.
07:56He has a lot of bronchitis.
07:57He's been coughing, coughing, coughing.
07:59And last night, he's been in pain with his chest.
08:06Going to a 77-year-old male with chest pain.
08:11The excruciating pain at onset.
08:14Right here.
08:16Could be absolutely anything with chest pain.
08:19Cardiac.
08:20Is it muscular?
08:21Musculoskeletal.
08:22Have they got a cough?
08:22Cough.
08:23Inspiratory.
08:24Until we get there, it's that proverbial guessing game.
08:28Get your foot down and get there.
08:37Hello?
08:38Where is he?
08:39Where's he hiding?
08:41My name is Dave, and this is Mick.
08:42Hi, you're right.
08:43What's going on with yourself?
08:45I'll be 25, you're 25.
08:49I just wrote a cough now, I'm having a hold.
08:52Yeah, I think I might have pulled so we get...
08:54We're coughing, you've hurt yourself, OK.
08:5777-year-old Bob has been struggling with a cough,
08:59and since yesterday, he's had a severe pain in his chest.
09:05So whereabouts is the pain in your chest, then?
09:07Just there, yeah.
09:08Just there, OK.
09:09Had you been coughing quite heavily prior to the change?
09:13Yeah, yeah, yeah.
09:13Was the pain around about here?
09:14Yeah, that's right.
09:15Well, I'm touching.
09:16I'm taking a deep breath for me.
09:18Does it hurt when you're taking a deep breath?
09:19No, no, no.
09:20No? OK.
09:21When I first heard Bob coughing, quite a hacking, barking cough.
09:27As he pulled the chest muscle, popped the rib from all the coughing.
09:31That was my initial...
09:32That was the initial thought.
09:33The initial thought, yes.
09:35Just have a quick listen to your chest.
09:39When I've listened to Bob's chest, it was quite noisy, isn't it?
09:42The best way to describe it, it sounded like an organ.
09:45It was wheezes, it was crackers, there was all sorts of going on.
09:48However, when I'm listening, there's a little part of me going,
09:51could this be something else?
09:54So you are quite wheezy on your chest.
09:56I'll give you something for that, just to sort that out, OK?
09:58Right, they'll pop some dots on, we'll do an ECG, OK?
10:01Yeah.
10:01We never come out for one thing, we always come out and we find something else as well.
10:05The ECG provides a snapshot of how Bob's heart is functioning.
10:10So what do you do for a job?
10:12Out of the pit.
10:14Oh, that'll do it.
10:15So you've always been around dust.
10:17When Bob told us he worked on the mines,
10:19you start to think, ah, right, OK, this is what his problem is with his chest.
10:23He's got dust, he's got coal dust on there.
10:25And this is what's potentially causing him all his issues and his problems.
10:29This is a salbutamol inhaler, OK?
10:32Just clear some of that wheeze off your chest.
10:34While Mick secures the inhaler to help Bob with his breathing...
10:39Right.
10:41..Dave prepares to run the ECG on his heart.
10:45I feel a bit of pain now.
10:47Where about is it?
10:49Just right in the middle there?
10:51Yeah.
10:51OK.
10:52It's definitely not going anywhere else.
10:53It's not going...
10:54Does it feel like it's going through to your back?
10:56No.
10:57Right.
10:58Nice and steady for me, OK, for 30 seconds while I do this ECG reading.
11:01Are you ready?
11:06You haven't had any pins and needles in your hands at all?
11:09When this pain come, I've got pins and needles here.
11:12In there?
11:13OK.
11:22I'm going to Bob that through to cardiology and get him to have a look at it.
11:26Oh.
11:28It was a bit of a woe moment.
11:30After listening to his chest and listening to his story,
11:33I was expecting it to be a respiratory, not a cardiac event.
11:38I mean, you could see the changes on that heart tracing
11:40straight off where I was sitting.
11:42Absolutely.
11:43And to me, it looked like he was having a heart attack.
11:46Change there now.
11:59Right, so I'm going to give you an aspirin.
12:02Right.
12:03Just pop that in, OK?
12:05Just chew it.
12:06Don't swallow it, because it's an aspirin, OK?
12:09In Stoke, paramedics Mick and Dave are with Bob,
12:12who they suspect is having a heart attack.
12:17Hi, good morning.
12:17It's Mick, one of the paramedics.
12:18OK?
12:19I'm just with a 77-year-old gentleman at the moment.
12:22Tongue up, top of your mouth.
12:23While Mick calls the cardiology department at the nearest hospital...
12:27Right, I'm just going to give you a squirt of this under your tongue as well.
12:30It'll help with that pain.
12:32Dave gives Bob GTN spray.
12:34This will help widen his blood vessels,
12:37reducing the strain on his heart.
12:40Right, it's a trip to the hospital anyway.
12:43We're just going to find out where we're taking you.
12:44There's some changes on your ECG.
12:46I'm just getting somebody to have another look at it.
12:48They know a little bit more about it than riding.
12:51I've had it confirmed by the cardiologist team
12:54that he is having a heart attack.
12:55I have now got to tell Bob.
12:57I have to be careful how I explain it to him.
12:59I don't want to frighten him,
13:01because that can put stress on the heart,
13:03and if we put any more stress on the heart that he's already under,
13:05it could be potentially fatal.
13:08It will be about 15, 20 minutes.
13:13OK, that's great.
13:14Thanks, Em.
13:15Bye-bye.
13:16So it looks like you're having a heart attack.
13:18OK?
13:20That's what it's looking like.
13:21Don't worry, OK?
13:22You're in the right place.
13:23We're going to get you sorted out, OK?
13:25That's what it looks like on the ECG,
13:26and that's where we just phone the cardiology department
13:28so they can just confirm.
13:29So we're taking you directly there, all right?
13:33So don't get upset, OK?
13:35Because if you start crying, you'll get me going,
13:36you'll get me mascara running, you'll be a right mess.
13:39We're going to look after you, OK?
13:41What we don't want to do is put any more strain on your heart, all right?
13:45When I've told Bob he's having a heart attack,
13:48he was quite taken aback.
13:49He was quite shocked,
13:50to the point where I think he was getting a little bit upset,
13:53because if somebody hears heart attack,
13:56they automatically think the worst.
13:58However, I have explained to him
14:00we're going to take him to the hospital
14:02to get the right treatment.
14:04On one day, he's in my driving shoes.
14:06Your driving shoes, eh?
14:07How did he grip the steering wheel?
14:11Right.
14:12Big stand.
14:13Nice and steady.
14:14And have a sit down.
14:15OK.
14:16That's it.
14:17There you go.
14:18OK.
14:22Get on there.
14:23You can put your feet up.
14:30So, obviously, we don't want to hang around,
14:32so we're going to pop the lights on,
14:33just to get through the traffic and get you in.
14:36I've never...
14:37Even an ambulance without the lights.
14:39Have you not?
14:40Have you not?
14:40If you want to go fast, I just scream.
14:50Right, I'm just going to do another ECG tracing, OK?
14:54Bob's heart is already struggling,
14:55so Dave needs to keep an eye on his condition
14:58in case it worsens.
15:02So I've had a heart attack?
15:03Well, you're having one at the moment.
15:05Yeah.
15:05That's what your ECG points to.
15:08Heart attacks affect different people different ways.
15:11With Bob, I don't think he actually believed me
15:14when I told him he was having a heart attack
15:16because he was sat up, talking, and felt fine,
15:19apart from this slight discomfort.
15:26So we're chairing up, isn't it?
15:28Where are we at now?
15:28So we're at the back of the hospital
15:30because we're going straight up to cardiology,
15:31so you're not going to be waiting outside the A&E.
15:35Having been alerted by Dave,
15:37the cardiology team at Royal Stoke University Hospital
15:40is standing by.
15:42OK.
15:44Yeah.
15:52Well, I tell you what,
15:53I was not expecting that to be a cardiac issue.
15:57I wasn't on it.
15:58At all.
15:58I've had a cough.
15:59I think I pulled something.
16:00It's hurting.
16:01Yeah.
16:01I mean, I listened to his chest.
16:02It sounded awful.
16:04And then you pop the leads on and, whoa, there we go.
16:08It just goes to show no two heart attacks present the same way.
16:12Yeah.
16:19I'm just going to roll this sleeve up.
16:21I'm going to do a blood pressure.
16:22And then what I want to do really
16:24is see if we can get you into the ambulance
16:26because I don't particularly want you to be sat out here for too long.
16:29In Cannock, paramedics Kira and Brooke are with Bill.
16:33When he collapsed coming back from the shops,
16:36a couple of residents came out to help him.
16:40He says he's not eating.
16:42He's only having a cough in the morning.
16:43You say you haven't been eating well?
16:45Normal for me.
16:46Normal for you?
16:47OK, OK.
16:48It's all he keeps.
16:51Not a big eater.
16:52Have you got a headache at the minute?
16:54You haven't?
16:55OK, OK.
16:56Your blood pressure's rather high.
16:59It's 199 over 73.
17:04So...
17:06That's really high, isn't it?
17:07It's very high, yeah.
17:09Just pop your finger in here for me, Bill.
17:10Oh, you just pinch that.
17:12Let's take that off, yeah?
17:14Blood pressure this high could lead to a heart attack or stroke.
17:18It's a medical emergency.
17:21What I want to see, Bill,
17:23is just to see if you can stand up off that chair
17:28Right.
17:30How's that feel?
17:31I think if I let go, you'll probably fall, wouldn't you?
17:34Right, sit yourself down, then.
17:37There's no arms on the chair,
17:38so you've just got to go straight back.
17:40That's it.
17:42When we stood Bill up, he was really unsteady on his feet,
17:46couldn't really stand up for himself without some support,
17:49so we had to use the carry chair to get him to the ambulance,
17:53which was quite difficult because he was in the middle of a field.
17:56Right, then, so this is probably going to be a bit of a bumpy ride.
18:00It might make you feel a bit travel-sick.
18:03If not, like bumpy, isn't it, this?
18:07If you didn't feel sick before, you definitely do now.
18:11Right, then.
18:13What were you picking up from the shops?
18:15I was going for a bet on.
18:18Put a bet on.
18:20Well, let's hope it checks out, eh?
18:22It might make this journey worth it.
18:29You know, when we were outside and we got you to stand up,
18:31how did you feel you were then?
18:34A bit dizzy.
18:35A bit dizzy.
18:36Should I try and get you to just stand up where you are
18:38and I'll do your blood pressure when you stand up
18:40to see if that changes anything?
18:43Brooke checks to see if Bill's blood pressure
18:45is still dangerously high.
18:48Fabulous.
18:49Right, just close your eyes for me.
18:55Is that when you go...?
19:00That's when you're leaning, isn't it?
19:01When your eyes are closed.
19:03Yeah, I think if you close your eyes for long enough,
19:07you'd hit the deck, to be honest.
19:09I think it might be worth a trip up to hospital today
19:13because your blood pressure's a little bit high
19:15and if your balance is off,
19:17a certain part of your brain might not be functioning properly.
19:21We obviously know his blood pressure was quite high,
19:23but we didn't really know what was going on,
19:25whether that was...his balance was off
19:27because his blood pressure was high
19:28or whether it was, like, a neurological problem.
19:30But we were very much...
19:31It was a job where we were in the dark, I think,
19:33with what was going on.
19:34And it was taken to hospital for that conclusion, really.
19:39You know, at least you're still getting about and looking and...
19:42Loses or loses.
19:44Well, exactly.
19:45Exactly.
19:46My nan told me that motto as well.
19:50Ready to go?
19:51Yeah.
19:55You're from Canuck?
19:56Scotland.
19:57Scotland?
19:58Oh, yeah.
19:59I don't pick up on the accent.
20:01You live on your own.
20:02Yeah.
20:04Do you feel like you need any support or not?
20:06No.
20:06You're OK.
20:09At New Cross Hospital in Wolverhampton,
20:12doctors will try to find out
20:14why Bill's blood pressure is so high and treated.
20:29What is my most defining quality as a housemate?
20:33Your ability to cook.
20:35That's it.
20:35That's all I bring to the table.
20:37Yeah.
20:38If you got a personal chef, that'd be it.
20:40I'd just be done.
20:41Out on your meal.
20:43You want an excellent cook, though.
20:45You have to get a dishwasher.
20:46Yeah.
20:47Because you created so much mess.
20:50You don't get an artist to clean up his pain, do you?
20:53You can eat one dish and then you'd need six bowls.
20:57I think living together definitely has its advantages,
21:00but also a few challenges.
21:02Definitely a few challenges.
21:04We squabble.
21:06Yeah, like siblings.
21:07Yeah.
21:08I'm right.
21:09You're wrong.
21:10We meet in the middle.
21:11And then figure out that I'm right all along.
21:13No.
21:13Yeah.
21:14Never.
21:15See?
21:15Never, ever.
21:17If it was up to you, you'd have had a microwave curry without a microwave.
21:21No, it is.
21:29Have you looked, sir?
21:30Is the patient breathing?
21:32Yes.
21:34Okay, what's he read?
21:35See what's happened.
21:36The gentleman's fallen over and he's either broken an ankle or damaged soft tissue
21:42and he can't bear weight on it.
21:44We'll need a mountain rescue as well.
21:50Voice accept.
21:52Zero nine.
21:53Patient's fallen.
21:55They've got an ankle injury.
21:57Mountain rescue are on scene as well.
21:59So we're going to a 54-year-old male.
22:03He's fallen over.
22:04Injury to ankle.
22:07It's difficult terrain for a retrieving patient calling mountain rescue.
22:13Oh, nice.
22:15When we got a call saying mountain rescue were on scene, I think our first thought is,
22:19where on earth are we going?
22:20Yeah.
22:21And how are we getting there?
22:24I did anticipate that he was going to be halfway up the mountain and we were going to have to
22:28figure out some way to get him down because with the injury, there was no way he was going to
22:32walk.
22:33Yeah.
22:36We've made it.
22:37We've made it.
22:38I have.
22:38I saw the mountain rescue have made it.
22:40Me too.
22:42There's mountain rescue.
22:52Across the West Midlands, there are around 400 paramedic crews on the road every day.
22:59We're on board with eight of them to see the work that they do.
23:11So, Madge slipped on the top of Fort Cloud.
23:13Okay.
23:14At approximately three o'clock, he managed to get himself down to the path.
23:18Okay.
23:19We've got a suspected lower left ankle.
23:25Paramedic Sarny and Technician Jack have just arrived in Dovedale National Park in the Peak District.
23:33Lovely.
23:34All yours.
23:35Lovely.
23:35Thank you very much.
23:36Thank you very much.
23:3854-year-old Madge was hiking here with his 11-year-old son, Victor, when he fell and injured his
23:44left ankle.
23:47What have you been up to?
23:48I've heard you've had a bit of it before.
23:49Found a little rock.
23:50I just flipped my foot that direction.
23:52Okay.
23:53So, you sort of rolled onto your ankle.
23:55Er, yeah.
23:56I rolled on it.
23:57What I just experienced, most clouds, you know, tissues just come in loose.
24:02You didn't hear any crunches or bone breaking or feel anything like that?
24:06No, no, no, no.
24:06It was like a soft tissue, you know, ligaments, things like this.
24:10Are you pain at the minute?
24:11At the minute.
24:12It's not pain.
24:13That's amazing.
24:14I expected that we were going to give significant amounts of pain relief.
24:18And when Madge told us that he was in no pain at all, it threw me off guard a little
24:23bit.
24:23I thought, how strong is he?
24:26Can I have a quick look?
24:28I'll lift your leg up.
24:29Yep.
24:30And we'll just come out.
24:31We'll have a quick feel.
24:33Wiggle your teeth.
24:34Is that okay?
24:34Yeah, it's working.
24:35Good peel up.
24:35I got some mobility in it, but of course it's swollen, so...
24:39Is this pain more this size?
24:41Yes.
24:42Because that's where it's swollen the most.
24:43When I first had a look at Madge's leg, it looked a little bit swollen, but not significantly injured.
24:49I expected a lot worse.
24:51He was able to move his toes, and it looked okay.
24:54Normal feeling, normal sensation.
24:56Yeah, nothing like that.
24:58Perfect.
24:58But what we'll do is we'll put our vacuum splint on.
25:02Right, this one's going to be the slightly nasty strap.
25:05Jack fits a vacuum splint to Madge's ankle.
25:08This uses air pressure to help immobilise his leg.
25:13Yeah.
25:15Does that feel okay?
25:16Yeah.
25:17Can't move it, can you?
25:18No.
25:19Good.
25:19Perfect.
25:24Are we all ready to go?
25:25Yeah, good to go.
25:26Yeah.
25:28Madge and his son, Victor, are on holiday.
25:31The hospital closest to their hotel in Mecklesfield is 30 miles away.
25:37Is this your first day of the trip?
25:38Oh, no.
25:40Yeah.
25:41Should have done it on the last day.
25:42Yeah.
25:43No, it shouldn't happen at all.
25:44No, well, that would be best.
25:47Do you enjoy the hiking as well?
25:48Yeah.
25:49You picked the right day for it.
25:51I woke up the mountain two times, and I was very tiring.
25:54You've done very well, because I don't think I could have walked up it once.
26:01Still feeling okay?
26:02No pain?
26:03Oh, that's all right.
26:04Okay.
26:05You're good.
26:06You're much tougher than me.
26:12Take the next ride.
26:14I think we've arrived.
26:17A walk with his son in the countryside has ended with an hour-long trip to Mecklesfield District General Hospital.
26:26Pull up on here, or me.
26:29Easy.
26:30You are.
26:31Amazing.
26:32Stella.
26:33Here, doctors will carry out x-rays to see exactly what damage has been done to Meckles' ankle.
26:50What a trooper.
26:51I've never seen someone so relaxed.
26:54I've had no pain.
26:56None.
26:56Zero pain.
26:57But it's clearly swollen and...
26:59It is, yeah.
27:00There's got to be something in there.
27:02Something.
27:03Is it at least a sprain, possibly a fracture?
27:05They haven't given me x-ray eyes yet.
27:07That's coming in the future.
27:08In the future.
27:21You work, the foot is really hurting.
27:23Okay.
27:23Okay, so just confirm he's conscious and away.
27:26Madge's ankle injury was the 2,200th call today, and the team here have no idea what the next
27:34call will bring.
27:38Of course, there are certain calls that you don't want to get, like, majority of things to do with children.
27:43Something about them just being so little just makes it a lot more difficult.
27:46I don't know whether it's because I've got a daughter as well.
27:48Like, you can sort of put yourself in their shoes.
27:52Ambulance service.
27:53Is the patient breathing?
27:55Yes.
27:56Are they conscious and awake?
27:57Yes.
27:58And what's the reason for the ambulance, please?
28:00One of our pupils has just fallen up the steps and hit her forehead off the edge of the step,
28:06and she has a large wound that we're applying pressure to.
28:10Blatter.
28:10Okay.
28:10Is she bleeding at the moment?
28:12Yes.
28:13Okay.
28:13Has she been bleeding red blood very heavily in the last 30 minutes?
28:17Yes.
28:18It was red blood, and it's coming from the forehead.
28:20Might be a bit difficult.
28:21Can you see the bones sticking out through the skin?
28:24You can see flesh, because obviously it's on her forehead.
28:27Children are so resilient, and they're so good at bouncing back.
28:30But if something's wrong, they tend to kind of dive quite quickly, which can be incredibly scary.
28:36She's gone cold now.
28:39We've got a blanket over her.
28:41Okay.
28:41Yeah, just do the best to keep her comfortable, keep her safe.
28:45Is she limp or floppy at the moment?
28:47She's not limp or floppy.
28:48I think she's just shocked.
28:50Oh, yeah, I know, of course.
28:51Any new weakness or coordination problems in her arms or legs?
28:55Can you lift your arms up for me?
28:57Wave to me.
28:59And the other one.
29:00Give me a wave.
29:01And can you wiggle your legs?
29:02Can you kick them?
29:03Kick, kick, kick.
29:05Yeah, she's just a bit dazed, but she's lifting her arms, and she's moving her legs, but she's quite dazed
29:10for herself.
29:11Oh, okay.
29:12If a child is quiet or more subdued, then that can be a lot more concerning.
29:17I'd much rather them be making noise.
29:19If I can hear them chatting, laughing or crying, then for me, at least I know that they're okay.
29:24I do have some help arranged for her.
29:27Sounds like you are doing all of the right things, but if the blood does soak through that pad, don't
29:30take it off.
29:31Just put another pad on top of it.
29:32And we do just need to advise.
29:34That's what we've done.
29:34We've just added.
29:35That's why it's quite thick, because onto the others, we've added another section on top to apply the pressure.
29:40Was it soaking through the initial one quite quickly?
29:43It did soak quite quickly on the initial one.
29:46Right, okay.
29:47No, that's fine.
29:47And it was all going down her face.
29:50It came to light that, actually, that was the second lot of dressing that they'd put on.
29:55The first lot had bled through quite quickly.
29:56So, at that point, I knew, actually, this was significant blood loss, especially for someone so little.
30:02All right, and I'll have this down as a high-priority response, okay, just because of that.
30:07So, I will stay on the phone with you until the crew get there, and just keep her safe and
30:12comfortable where she is then.
30:16They're just coming in now.
30:18All right, then, I'll leave you guys with the crew.
30:20Take care. Bye-bye.
30:21Bye-bye.
30:26Great little girl.
30:28That's her.
30:30The patient was taken to the paediatric unit, where she was treated for her injury.
30:52The patient thought that I was a lot, lot younger than I was, and bear in mind, this was on
30:56a fourth night shift in a row.
30:58You're not doing bad for 40, are you?
30:59You're a cheeky get.
31:01You're closer to 40 than me.
31:03Got less wrinkles, though, aren't I?
31:05Shut up.
31:07I've got really bad smile lines, though, to be fair, because I'm always smiling.
31:12Not when I'm working with you.
31:15Definitely not first thing in the bloody morning.
31:17Working shifts on an ambulance definitely ages you.
31:20It does.
31:21It does.
31:23Also, the company you're with sometimes ages you.
31:25Like, working with Colleen ages me about 10 years every shift.
31:28Speak for yourself.
31:31Night shifts, though, aren't delightful.
31:33We are polar opposites.
31:34Absolutely, which is why we work.
31:36Mm.
31:43Ambulance services, the patient's breathing.
31:46Yeah, it is.
31:47Basically, there's a person on the floor.
31:50Is he able to tell you what's happened?
31:53I approach him and ask if he's OK, but he doesn't respond.
31:56Has he got his eyes open?
31:58I can't see because his head is on the floor.
32:07So, an unconscious in the street.
32:11I'm guessing we don't have much information.
32:13No.
32:14Going to these jobs in the streets can put you on edge,
32:18because is it something sinister like a drugs-related thing?
32:24Is it a homeless person who's...
32:26Collapsed?
32:27Yeah.
32:28But in fairness, it could even just be someone
32:30who is generally unwell, can't it?
32:33A call for someone unconscious in the street
32:34could be a thousand and one things.
32:37Have they been hit by a car?
32:39Have they collapsed?
32:40Are they intoxicated?
32:42Absolutely anything.
32:43The only way we know is by getting there.
32:45So, we need to get there quite quickly.
32:48One, two, three, two, three, two.
32:50There they are.
32:51Oh, yeah.
32:54Maybe block them so they don't get hit by a car.
32:56Let's leave that there.
32:57Yep.
32:59I'll go check it out.
33:05Wakey, wakey, buddy.
33:07You were asleep in the street.
33:08Squashed your bread.
33:09There you go.
33:11Have you fallen or just passed out?
33:15A passerby called 999
33:17after seeing the man lying in the road unresponsive.
33:21Have you had any gear or anything, matey?
33:24We don't care if you have, by the way.
33:25We just want to make sure that you're okay.
33:27It's not every day that we come across someone
33:29on the side of the street,
33:30literally in the road, unconscious.
33:34When I first seen this patient,
33:35my first thoughts were,
33:37how on earth has he ended up in this situation?
33:39Could it be a medical episode
33:40or could it be something more like illicit drugs or alcohol?
33:44Should we get your stuff off the road?
33:45I don't want you to lose any of it.
33:47Is that a handle?
33:47Is that yours?
33:50Some pretty serious gloves.
33:51I don't think your Milky Way is salvageable, to be honest.
33:54Have you got any medical conditions
33:56that would make you fall in the street?
33:57Yeah, that's probably not.
33:59Okay, have you taken them today?
34:01And you say you don't think you've had your diazepam today?
34:05You have.
34:06The patient is known to take diazepam,
34:09a powerful sedative drug
34:11only available on prescription.
34:14Should we get you on the bed and get you in the truck?
34:16Yeah, can we go and assess you on the truck instead,
34:18rather than on the floor?
34:20Come on, try and wake up, fella.
34:22If we help you, do you think you could stand up?
34:25When he disclosed he'd taken diazepam,
34:27that was a bit of a red flag.
34:29That would explain why potentially
34:30he was unconscious in the street,
34:33but has he taken anything else?
34:34Right, you ready?
34:36Yeah.
34:40We're going to go assess you on the truck.
34:42I'll get a bag and I'll put your stuff in it, okay?
34:44On this way.
34:54Lift your head up a second.
34:56Do you want another look in them eyes, darling?
34:58There you go.
34:59In Stoke, paramedics Adam and Colleen
35:02are with a patient they suspect has taken an overdose.
35:06They are small, but they're not pinpoint.
35:10That's diazepam, though. Look at his eyes.
35:12How much diazepam have you had today?
35:15A lot, I'm guessing.
35:17When you look at a patient's eyes,
35:19it can tell you quite a lot.
35:21So if they've taken anything like drugs or opiates,
35:23it can make their eyes really, really small.
35:26However, some other drugs
35:27can make their pupils really, really big.
35:29So it can give you a lot of information.
35:31I'm just going to get a bit of blood
35:33from the tip of your finger, darling, okay?
35:35You're just going to feel a sharp scratch,
35:37but it'll only be for a second.
35:39There you go.
35:423.8.
35:44Use hyperglycemia.
35:45As well as being sleepy
35:47due to an overdose of prescription medication,
35:50the patient has a slightly low blood sugar level.
35:55Do you think you'll be able to eat your Milky Way for me
35:57if I get it for you?
36:02It is a bit squashed.
36:04You just need your blood sugars up, okay?
36:09You don't want it?
36:10Yeah, that's what I'm going to say.
36:12Put it in your hand.
36:14It's your Milky Way.
36:16It's just a bit squashed.
36:17Jow down on that, mate.
36:18I don't think he's going to eat that.
36:20I'm going to have to put some glucogel in your mouth
36:22because you're not going to be able to eat that
36:23by the looks of it.
36:25I'm just going to tip your head back a little bit.
36:27Now, because you can't eat this,
36:29I'm going to put this gel in your mouth, okay?
36:31It's going to taste very, very sweet.
36:34Colleen tries to give him a fast-acting glucose gel
36:37designed to bring blood sugar levels up quickly,
36:40but the patient has now become too unresponsive to take it.
36:48I think we're just Narcan on it, to be honest.
36:50He isn't going to have that.
36:51Let me take that off you.
36:52See how this goes.
36:54I'm going to squirt something up your nose, okay?
36:57It's going to feel weird.
36:59As overdoses often involve a mix of drugs,
37:02Colleen gives the patient Narcan.
37:04If he's also taken any opioids,
37:07this will reverse the effects of the overdose.
37:12Tip your head back for us.
37:13Just want that airway open.
37:14Perfect.
37:16We gave the patient Narcan
37:17because it was apparent that he'd taken some form of drug
37:21and potentially others Narcan's given
37:24to be able to increase a patient's consciousness
37:26and make them more awake.
37:28Come on, fella.
37:29We're going to need you to wake up
37:30and stay awake for us if you can
37:32because you're not in a good place at the minute.
37:36Shall we go?
37:44Say when, mate?
37:45Yeah, ready when you are.
37:48As the patient isn't responding to Narcan
37:51and Adam and Colleen don't know exactly what he's taken,
37:55they decide to head for hospital.
37:59There you go.
38:00Rest your head down, sweetie.
38:01That's it.
38:02Perfect.
38:03I'm just going to keep hold of your head
38:04just so it stays in this position.
38:06OK.
38:10At Royal Stoke University Hospital,
38:13the patient will be monitored
38:14and may be given medication
38:16to reverse the effects of an overdose.
38:27I don't know how much of God knows what he's taken,
38:30but he's taken a lot of it.
38:31A lot of it.
38:34Probably too much of it, if I'm honest.
38:36Yep.
38:37It could be anything.
38:39It could have been a combination
38:40of a lot of different things, unfortunately, with him.
38:43Milky Way Man, that's what he is.
38:45Milky Way Man.
38:45Milky Way Man.
38:46Out of this world.
39:00If you would give yourself a different name,
39:03what would you name yourself?
39:05Oh.
39:06I'm seeing an Ellie.
39:08Really?
39:09Yeah.
39:10I think that's too girly for me.
39:11Or like a Sasha.
39:13Oh, no.
39:14OK.
39:14Sasha.
39:16I mean, my name is literally unisex,
39:18so mine's not girly.
39:19Yours is girly at all.
39:20No.
39:21Mine's quite girly.
39:23Yeah.
39:24I don't love it.
39:25Yours is literally a flower.
39:26Yeah.
39:27It's rather feminine, isn't it?
39:30I don't even think that's it, Daisy, to be fair.
39:32I think it's a bit innocent.
39:34No.
39:42I don't think it's a bit innocent, but it's a sign of pain, and that's what I had before.
39:53And is the pain in your stomach?
39:55Or is it anywhere else?
39:56Yeah.
39:57It's in the lungs.
40:01Oh, here we go.
40:04Vice accept.
40:05We've got a 74-year-old male abdure pain.
40:10Oh, bless him.
40:11Could be anything, couldn't it?
40:12Could be DNV.
40:14Could be.
40:15Could be UTI.
40:17DNV stands for diarrhoea and vomiting.
40:20UTI, urinary tract infection.
40:23Urinary tract infection, yeah.
40:23We don't actually know what's going on with this patient, do we?
40:26No.
40:27Not yet.
40:30Is this the back, or is this the front?
40:36Ambulance.
40:37Hello?
40:38Oh, hello.
40:40You OK?
40:41Yeah.
40:42Have you rang for us?
40:43Yeah.
40:46I just couldn't sleep one night, and I just got the pain.
40:50I'm coughing, coughing, coughing.
40:51Where have you got the pain?
40:52Yeah.
40:53In your chest?
40:54Yeah.
40:55When did the pain come on?
40:57Well, that's not really.
41:00After a night of constant coughing, 74-year-old John called 999.
41:06Have you took anything for the pain?
41:08Like paracetamol?
41:09Yeah, yeah, I've got some, yeah.
41:11Yeah.
41:12Who did you call this morning for us to get here?
41:15Did you call 111 or 999?
41:17What were you hoping for from us?
41:20Are you wanting pain relief?
41:22No, just to check me out.
41:24Just to have a check?
41:25Yeah.
41:25OK.
41:26Because I'm diabetics as well, so you know.
41:28Right.
41:29You need to speak to your doctor so that they can sort you out a nurse that can show you
41:36how
41:36how to do your checks for your diabetes.
41:39I think the story changed slightly as we were on scene.
41:43Once we were on scene, yeah.
41:45Went from chest pain to cough.
41:49To a woman's diabetes checking.
41:51Blood sugars checked, yeah.
41:52Yeah.
41:53Just to check, you're not allergic to anything.
41:56Yeah, with me.
41:57Oh.
41:58I'm allergic to men.
41:59You're outnumbered here, unfortunately.
42:02Right, nice and still.
42:04As the pain is in John's chest, Daisy checks his heart rate.
42:12Just on the lower side, I'm not overly concerned.
42:15No, because he's presenting well, isn't it?
42:17Yeah.
42:18Do you feel dizzy at all?
42:19I'm overly dizzy.
42:21OK.
42:23Right, I'll tell you your blood sugars.
42:284.3.
42:30It's a bit on the lower side.
42:32What have you got in to eat?
42:34A toast.
42:35Toast?
42:36Do you want me to make you some?
42:37John's blood sugar was on the lower side.
42:40The solution to this is to just get some sugar in him, whether that be a sugary cup of tea,
42:45some toast with a bit of jam on it.
42:47It's not really something that an ambulance needs to do.
42:51He could have probably done this by himself.
42:53Let's have a look.
42:54What covers the bread in?
42:55It's on top of the microwave, isn't it?
42:57Above the microwave.
43:02I'm not taking you to hospital because your heart rate's a bit low.
43:06I don't think they're going to do anything for you.
43:09It's not that low that we would treat it.
43:11There you go.
43:13You can sit up. Do you want to sit up?
43:15No.
43:17Do you want a cup of tea?
43:19Can you make tea?
43:20I can make tea.
43:22I can.
43:23I'm from Yorkshire.
43:24Tea is in me veins.
43:29I like your pink kettle.
43:31Did you pick that?
43:36I reckon that is a good cup of tea.
43:40Crack him.
43:43I think he looks all right, that.
43:47Yeah?
43:47Happy?
43:48I don't know, yeah.
43:50I tried to do.
43:52You're right, please.
43:54Have you had enough?
43:56I don't eat that much.
43:57Well, you should probably eat a bit more at some point because your blood sugars were on the lower side.
44:03John didn't need to go to hospital today.
44:05I think John just wanted a cup of tea and a little bit of company.
44:07Are you happy to stay at home?
44:09Yeah.
44:10Yeah.
44:11But you need to speak to your GP.
44:13You know where we are if you need us, all right?
44:16All right.
44:17Nice to meet you, John.
44:18All right.
44:19See you later.
44:23Let's go.
44:30All we really did for him was give him some tea and toast.
44:34Do you know what?
44:35I think he might have been a bit lonely.
44:36I think he wanted a bit of company.
44:37I think he wanted some company, didn't he?
44:45John called another ambulance crew later that same day.
44:50Like Morgan and Daisy, they advised he should take the painkillers he'd been prescribed and speak to his GP.
44:58Bob, who was having a heart attack, was found to have a blockage in one of his arteries.
45:03He had a stent fitted to widen it.
45:06Two days later, he was able to return home.
45:10Bill's blood pressure eventually returned to normal, but he may have problems with his kidneys that could require medication.
45:19And Madge, who had fallen while hiking, had an x-ray in the fracture clinic.
45:24This confirmed he'd broken his ankle.
45:33Next time...
45:35Ah!
45:36Got it, Spoon.
45:37A man is in agony.
45:39Put this in your mouth.
45:39Keep breathing on it.
45:40Open your mouth.
45:41Our main concern was figuring out where this pain was.
45:45And then getting this under control.
45:47We did suspect that he may have broke his hip.
45:50Oh, God, that is a big clot.
45:52That was massive.
45:53A patient has a severe nosebleed.
45:55When I saw the blood clot, it was rather grim.
45:58It was large.
45:59He's just had brain surgery.
46:01We needed to get him to hospital fast.
46:03I woke up and I got this real pain.
46:06And my heart was racing.
46:09And the woman is complaining of chest pain.
46:12Once we completed a heart tracer, it showed us that she was actively having what we call a STEMI, which
46:18is a heart attack.
46:18We are going to be taken into hospital and we are probably going to be going quite quickly.
46:23We are going to be taking place.
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