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“Without you, I wouldn’t be here!” - Crash survivor Richard Jones has issued a heartfelt plea for others to donate blood.
After a near-fatal car crash in Carmarthen, in 2020, Richard - who lived and worked in Tenby at the time - lost a significant amount of blood and needed 100 units in total to survive.
This National Blood Donor Week (which runs from June 8 to 14), he’s saying thank you to the donors who saved his life and calling on others to give blood with the Welsh Blood Service.
In 2020, Richard was driving when his truck hit a barrier on the way into Carmarthen, causing it to flip, leaving him in need of urgent medical attention.
Thanks to the quick actions of a passer-by, a former Army medic, helped Richard by applying two makeshift tourniquets, reducing the bleeding. Other members of the public helped to keep him conscious until Wales Air Ambulance arrived.
Medics immediately administered six units of blood at the roadside, stabilising him enough to be transferred to Morriston Hospital, Swansea.
Richard spent ten days in a coma and sustained extensive injuries, including a shattered hip, multiple fractures, a torn posterior cruciate ligament, and severe trauma to both legs.
His right leg was later amputated above the knee due to a severed artery. Over the following weeks, he underwent nine major surgeries and required a further 94 units of blood.
Richard says the kindness of strangers, both at the scene and from blood donors across Wales, is the reason he’s alive today.
To find out more and book a blood donation, visit: www.wbs.wales/NBDW26

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Transcript
00:08From what I was told, I'd taken the turn in, hit the barrier and was flung 15 foot up in
00:13the air.
00:17There was a lady by the name of Jane. Jane had come over to, you know, sort of grab my
00:22hand,
00:22talk to me, try and keep me awake. And she said as the sirens were getting closer and closer,
00:27all of a sudden then she could hear the helicopter.
00:31I was worked on them for 45, 50 minutes. They administered 60 minutes of blood on the roadside.
00:37The air ambulance carry blood now, so that assisted them to give me blood to be stable enough to be
00:43transported to hospital.
00:44But unfortunately with the right leg, because I'd severed the artery,
00:47they realised that the leg was basically killing me to save my life. The leg was to be amputated.
00:55I just realised that if I'm going to recover, if I'm going to, if I'm going to get to where
01:01I want to be,
01:02or need to be, it's down to me now. No one can do it for me.
01:09That was a challenge and it was a journey. I spent a lot more time on the floor than I
01:13did standing up,
01:14falling over all the time and through my time in hospital, all the surgeries I went through,
01:18all in all, I had a hundred units. It's a hundred people who have donated blood, who have helped, just
01:25myself.
01:28After finding out we were going to have a baby, how am I going to be a dad?
01:35I got given a chance to have this MBK leg. It come at the perfect time, really, that I had
01:42the leg a couple of weeks before he was due.
01:46Once he arrived, it was, I think I pushed myself a lot harder, because I was trying to be the
01:54best person I could, really,
01:56since recovering from my accident. The biggest part of it was getting my life back on track.
02:02I eventually found a job, applied and got it with David Powers Police.
02:08Since starting that, we've bought a house. I never thought I'd be where I am today to him, what I'm
02:15doing.
02:21I'd just like to say a huge thank you to anybody donating, or are thinking about donating. Without them, I
02:30wouldn't be here.
02:31You're the end.
02:44ching
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