Helping a Golfer in Cardiac Arrest | S02 E05 | Hospital Documentary | All Documentary
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 พ.ย. 2024
- The East Anglian Air Ambulance team is sent out to a golf course that is located 20 minutes away to help save a man who has suffered a cardiac arrest. With time being of the essence will the crew be able to perform emergency treatment before it's too late? Plus, it's a busy day in Teeside as the team must head out to Gateshead to help a 23 year old man who has come off of his bike and has suffered a serious foot injury.
Air Ambulance ER follows British medical teams as they take to the air in emergency situations. Going behind the scenes to show ambulances carrying out their life-saving work from the minute an accident is reported to the moment they reach their patient. The fast-paced action and aerial filming capture the courage of the team members that are on-call throughout the UK.
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“A little bit of space to attach the thingy” strangely comforting that even people who deal with traumatic stressful situations regularly still forget the names of things in hyper-stressful situations.
Saves critical seconds
"Thingy" is the technical term for that, okay?
(I mean... the user manual calls it the "LifeBand Band Clip" that needs to be connected to the Driveshaft Slot to secure the LifeBand, which is the bit that moves. But really...)
Glad to see that the technical term "thingy" is the same overseas as it is in America.
Ycr
Having been a paramedic many years ago for 15 years…. Thingy about covers it in many situations.
As a previous ER nurse for 25+ years , I was astounded that the first cardiac man , survived his ordeal with his faculties intact. Well done, remarkable team work!
And that teamwork started with the first responders on site. The most professional emergency medical service of the world can't save a patient that doesn't recieve bystander CPR.
Exactly what I was going to say! The initial CPR by first crew and the air ambulance team to continue for so long, and then the hospital to continue wow. I honestly thought the man would not pull through. That automatic chest compressor needs to be all over the world, in every ambulance, ER, and each floor of the hospital!
Yes! I was amazed that he survived at all; usually they don't survive when they have to be shocked that many times.
@@shannonmcgonegal6051 yes, but not just the first crew, the actual first responders were fellow golfers and they had an AED at the club house. All that makes so much difference. Everybody please attend a first aid course that teaches resuscitation regularly.
I’m a nurse as well and when they said he had been down for 90 minutes I thought there’s absolutely no way. Even the fact they kept going shocked me. The fact he survived like that and has no visible deficits is a literal miracle!
wow....that automatic chest compressor is an impressive thing....and very handy !!
Glad it's there but even more glad if it's unused. Unfortunately not always the case. Good outcome. I was about to give up on the bloke.
I'm honestly surprised that I've never even heard of such a thing before today.
Who knows how many lives the inventor of that device has saved. Thank you to the man/woman who invented that.
@@DodderingOldMan In Germany every car with a doctor has to have one on board!
they're also unbelievably expensive. upwards of $25,000 USD or £20,500 pounds for you uk folks
The fact that the heart patient survived is a testament to the advances in technology and knowledge over time. I remember a time when no cardiac arrest ever survived outside of the hospital ER.
And now for something ironic. My first successful save on an arrest was an NFR patient. We were only told that after we arrived at hospital!
Andy Taylor I was looking in the comments to see if he made it
Kalle Cool Gamer ik he did but I wanted to know before cause I was worried about him. I was saying that after I saw him at the beginning I looked to see.
When I started as an EMT they taught us that every 1 in 10 arrests has ROSC (return of spontaneous circulation) and only 1 in 10 of those with a ROSC are released from hospital (within the following year). Times have certainly changed :)
@liz Not For Resus - the more commonly known equivalent worldwide is DNR [Do Not Resussitate], but apparently the Aussies and Kiwis mostly use NFR.
"When can I have a cup of tea?" -Most British crash victim ever
"Is Prince William driving?" - yup
"Our pilot is not as royal, but he's also not as married, dear." ;)
I know, just sums all of those British ladies in one sentence.
Seeing where my blood goes when I donate it is so great. You don’t have to be a paramedic or doctor to make a difference..blood donations save lives.
I'm sorry to say that most of your blood is sold by organisation's that offer blood donations.
Only way to get it to target is to donate directly at the hospital
@SteelRodent in the US blood is sold and survival depends on how much cash you have or if you are insureds
I’m a stem cell donor rather than a blood donor because of my low blood pressure. I wish I could donate but it would be way too dangerous for me! :( But I hope one day I can be of help to someone who needs it
@@79135clauds Oooh I didn't know us low blood pressure people could donate stem cells, going to look in to that, thanks!
OK - tell yourself that, if it makes you feel better about yourself...IDIOT!
You have all the respect I can give for the first case...
Just not stopping that CPR for over 90min, that's impressive, even with a machine.
This person was dead, not even once, but many times, and you kept in going. Impressive!
No joke; that cat used up at least 21 lives right there.
I just can't believe that Tim survived. He owes his life to these guys. They're angels in a helicopter.
I'm surprised my man Tim still had a rib cage after that. I can't believe he's alive!
The bruising must have been severe. That heals in a week or so, and I am sure he is glade that he was so badly bruised.
@@kingy002 Broken ribs take a while longer, but it's definitely worth having a few to live on.
@@Japanie2 Yep, pretty sure he'd take being alive over a few knackered ribs anyday
„Put your foot down...“
- Foot is down.
Not sure if intended in this case, but sometimes that type of dark humour is quite brilliant.
I liked the comment, "Aim at the clubhouse and miss".
And that case is a perfect demonstration of two things: The reason the particle separator was created; and why knee-high, armored boots were created. The engines would have been sand-blasted, and even though he still would have broke his foot, it wouldn't have been as bad.
Oh my... I held it together until the end when Jan (the golfer's wife) said he left her a voicemail in which he simply said "I think I'm dying, I love you."
It's a miracle he survived. Great team work with that CPR apparatus and the 90 minutes pre-hospital continuous CPR work that was done.
90 minutes is a really long time. Even with multiple crews and bystanders it's practically impossible to do high-performance CPR for that long because it's so exhausting. These type of devices are litteral life savers.
@@QemeH im still wondering why they didnt take him to the hospital sooner. someone could have realized they couldnt maintain his pulse at all. its amazing they were able to save him but looking at this they seemed not wanting to transport him until he was "fully recovered" or a long time had passed.
@@cardenfoy Patients who have CPR performed on them are not deemed stable for transport. There is a sort of "checklist" for possible causes that we do on scene almost immediately after establishing the basics (compressions, airway, AED, IV for meds) - it's called "the H's and T's" and lists every _reversable_ cause of cardiac arrest.
Once you established the most likely cause, there are some of them where transporting under CPR is the best option, even though the quality of CPR really drops off sharply while moving a patient (especially manual CPR without a mechanical device) - but for most causes the best clinical decision is: stay, perform pertinent therapy, see if you get a ROSC.
If not, the patient is dead and they would've been dead in the ambulance or helicopter or the ER anyway. If you _do_ get a ROSC, _then_ you can stabilize for transport, because they don't need CPR anymore.
@@QemeH well it becomes an issue of why is transporting the patient such a dangerous thing to do. address that.
@@cardenfoy Because CPR quality sharply drops during transport. A study in 2016 found that the rate of "correct" (as in: 2-3 inches deep, 100-120 bpm) compressions in on-scene CPR by paramedics was 41.9% while during transport the rate was 8.7% - they then gave feedback about this to all the participating agencies and told them to focus their paramedics on the importance of efficient compressions during transport and re-ran the study. The result: the proportions did not change more than the usual margin of error.
Their conclusion, and I quote this verbatim:
_Transport chest compressions are significantly worse than on-scene compressions. Implementation of visual real-time feedback did not affect performance_
The detailed reasons are probably manifold - from difficulty of position to g-forces affecting the person doing compressions to worse haptic feedback due to the movement of the vehicle, etc. etc. - but the fact remains that even with professionals who routinely practice it and do it "live", CPR during transport is much, much worse than on scene.
Thus the EMS rule:
Patients in cardiac arrest are not transport stable.
The best people on the face of earth....Nothing is more sacred, noble and commendable than saving a life..Bless them all.
I am from the Netherlands, and this is the best serie i have ever seen in my life at this moment. The guys of the air ambulances did so much amazing work and I like this serie. I hope that people in the Netherlands can make a same serie as this. Thankss for putting this series on youtube that people out of the UK also can see it.
Belgium has a similar serie 'helden van hier: in de lucht'
@@Jade-yx8uu I watch them also. But the episodes of GB are a lot longer than the Belgium ones.
kijk maar eens op youtube, Radboud spoed, komt aardig overeen met dit.
From Belgium and idem....like this serie so mutch. Everyday multiple episodes. This was the most havy episode i did seen so far. Every paramatic deserves a medal. They are amasing.
@@Jade-yx8uu is toch niet hetzelfde als dit vind ik. Enorm verschil.....
I can't believe the man in cardiac arrest survived!!!
I had that guy pegged for dead esp since they didnt talk about him til the end. so was 50 50 chance he lived whne they did that.
I am amazed that Tim survived. A huge salute to the team that worked so hard to keep him alive!
That golfers save was extraordinary!!! I’m very amazed that they managed to find the problem and correct it!!! All the best to the great staff at that team that didn’t give up and if they wouldn’t have had the automatic chest compressor he would not have lived today, no person can do effective compressions for two hours... that meaning, every team should have one of those in their ambulance or helicopter! Great Job!! ❤️
A man who is rushing via helicopter to save a life and still apologises for leaving dishes in the sink. I want this man in my life!
I'm from the U.S. and I have to say these warriors are awesome. Great team work Love you guys.
The same thing that happened to the golfer, happened to my mother. She was flown by helicopter to the best hospital in the state but died 4 times in the 10 minute flight. They were never able to get her out of the helicopter but kept trying. Over the whole ordeal the paramedics and Careflight never gave up, they were amazing ❤️
So did your mom make it? I hope so. If not I’m so sorry for your loss!!!
So very sorry
This show is very graphic but I can't stop watching the medics in action
@@sq1rlsqu4d that’s awful!!😣
Teamwork, science, engineering. Amazing effort. Amazing what humans can achieve.
Wow, I really didn't think the golfer was gonna survive! Incredible!
"Try not to blow this straw too much mate otherwise the farmer will go mental"
... That guy operates in a whole different dimension as far as consideration is concerned. How can you be so focused, yet so aware? Seems like such a small thing really compared to what their job actually consists of, but I bet it really mattered to that farmer :D Strange
Not strange, just British.
I've been binging this show for a few days now and i have to say this is one of the best documentaries out there. I have so much respect for everyone involved, they are truly and selflessly devoting their lives to saving and helping other people. Nothing but love and respect for all of them.
Lovely to hear the Golfer survived, and now looking so well, awesome effort!, I am a retired nurse, 47 years experience, so very surprised but happy to hear. These teams are awesome.
:What’re you doing tomorrow?
: we’re back here at seven o’clock tomorrow morning to do it all again!
PRICELESS!
oh man, I think that foot injury is one of the gnarliest I've seen on shows like this 😱I'm not a squeamish person but it even made me flinch
I noticed at 27:02 "Dedicated to the memory of Dr. Rupert Bennet". Did a quick search on google and here's what I found for those who are curious:
"Dr. Rupert Bennett, aged 39, of Millhouse, Hesket-new-Market, together with two of his colleagues from the Great North Air Ambulance service, were caught up in a disastrous chain of events.
Dr. Bennett was killed, chief pilot Jim Martin suffered serious multiple injuries and paramedic Jon Ker sustained a severe hand injury, for which he was treated in hospital but later discharged.
According to local police, a boulder being used by the three men as an anchor point to abseil off a cliff face on Tower Ridge, slid over the edge, hitting Mr. Ker on the hand and dragging Dr. Bennett and Mr. Martin with it into the gully 100ft below.
Although all three men are linked to the air ambulance service, the climb was purely a social activity and not linked to their work. All were experienced climbers."
Is he in this episode?? I’m watching.
@@t.j.7789 No,he is died on 2005 :(
Hélia Alexandra my heart goes to the families and friends of Dr Bennett. That is a tremendous loss. Lots of prayers to all.
These are truly remarkable heros. I'm from El Paso, Texas. I used to work in the ER. I would love to see that cardiac mechanism here for all responders. It is awesome. Going to spread the word on it. This program is awesome.👍
I have literally tears in my eyes. I would never ever suggested that man survived. All the best to all of the crew. You do an incredible job!
Peter Temesvari=♥️🇭🇺
A really great Hungarian doctor!
Awww that poor wife I would die if I saw a text from my husband saying I think I’m dying I love you awww I cried 😭❤️
A painful experience, and obviously if it really happens.
You are angels arriving from the sky! Thank you for your service
and care.
These absolutely dedicated people are wonderful
Thank goodness that we have this service and let’s continue to raise money to help towards the running costs .
I am in complete awe of these guys and how they treated every single emergency. Absolutely brilliant. I think I can speak for my fellow nurses on this. I would be so blessed to be able to work with these fine people.
“Aim at the club house and miss.” I don’t know why I find that so funny.
When boaters started to install Satnavs some would program their route using waypoint co-ordinates taken from lists. These would be buoy markers etc. Later they would wonder why they had just hit or narrowly missed the buoy, no aim off was calculated in the figures punched into the Satnav hence the boat aimed right at it.
I am from Norwich , born and bred. I live and work as an E.M.T. in southern Germany. We deal with Heli crews regularly , nothing but respect for those guys.
thank you so much for posting this series we do not get this in Australia and I look forward to seeing it every time
Yep I live in western australia and dont watch tv but love youtube. These shows, these teams of awesome guy's are absolutely amazing!!! But we do have RFDS!!!👍👍👍🙂
Please! keep on uploading. I really am addicted to your videos!! The paramedics are awesome!!
So impressed by the medical teams and their expertise, dedication and heart. Also impressed by the courage of the accident victims as they face unimaginable pain and the possibility of their lives being altered or lost. Ultimately impressed by the donors who make it all possible by their continued financial support.
to be totally vulnerable and at the complete mercy of strangers in your greatest time of need is a very scary thought. I'm totally shocked Jim survived. He was so very ashen and looked very much gone. Beautiful, caring people saved his life.
It's their job. They are there for that reason.
They do all they can to save anyone they come across..they don't give up til there is absolutely no chance of bringing them back.
You wouldn't be able to see 80% of these injuries in any US show. They'd be blurred out.
We're terribly sheltered out here.
Lisa Foster not really. I’ve seen many shows that show the gruesome injuries people have sustained.
Probably because it would be a trigger warning to a lot of people, especially with all the shootings and everything else people have experienced..
I'm guessing you've never tuned into a Mexican News show... They don't hold back when I was a kid I saw the aftermath of a drive by between rival gangs... The driver in the car was shot through his head, blood everywhere his passenger was also shot dead, blood draining out onto the street... No censorship whatsoever...
@@Jennyran99 Wow. No, I haven't.
@@lisafoster4468 yeah don't 😂😂😂
Wow! I can’t believe the guy from the golf course survived. Absolutely incredible.
“Dispatch him with extreme prejudice!” I cracked up too much over this. All that over a fly in the helicopter xD
WOW! Actualy i now see is the doctor is from Hungary.
His name is Temesvári Péter. I'm very happy and proud in the same time :D cause i live jn Hungary, and that awesome doctor just belongs from here. :D
The amount of respect and sense of humor of these medical pros is astounding. Words are not enough but thank you.
So incredible! You can SEE the compassion and empathy all these docs and paramedics have. The US is sooooo far behind! It would be a miracle if we had docs on the helicopter and driving around in the evening. Can't imagine the bill we'd get for that!!!! Unreal!
I can't help but thinking docs here in the US would have given up on the golfer at half the time they did. It's very sad to say, but I'm convinced of this. I wish things were different here, some money-hungry, business-oriented people were kinder and more compassionate. :(
Unfortunately You’re right about that. If this had happen in the US he’d be dead. There’s no way they would have worked on him for over an hour.
@@Keachybean oh, you're absolutely right!
It was so great to hear that Tim survived the cardiac arrest, wow, I honestly didn't think he was going to make it. Such excellent teamwork. It's a shame though that these wonderful services need to rely on charity to operate.
Wow! Shocking!!!!!
I was sure the massive cardiac arrest man was not going to make it!!! I'm glad they never gave up!
Very nice documentary!
Lol hey, ik had u hier niet verwacht.
Ik wou even zeggen dat ik van uw filmpjes hou, het geeft mij inspiratie en ook motivatie om ook als bestuurder voor ambulance te worden.
Maar heb persoonlijk angst voor voertuigen als ik er zelf in wil rijden en ik weet niet wat een ambulance bestuurder allemaal doet naast het besturen van de ambulance.
Het zijn deze 2 angsten die mij tegen houden.
Daarnaast heb ik nog niet echt een levensdoel gesteld qua werk, dus ik denk er sowieso erover na.
Misschien doe ik het ooit eens wel naast zorg voor paarden en eventuele andere boerderij werk.
Hoe dan ook, bedankt voor de inspiratie en motivatie.
I totally agree.
We need more of these please! I love these awesome doctors, paramedics, pilots. I wonder how many meals, cups of tea/coffee is left? Do they ever finish a meal or a cuppa??
The Life Band saved his life for sure - that thing is incredible
I’d say the first responders saved his life, but the auto-pulse is handy to have.
I've never seen that mechanical chest compression equipment before, it's incredible.
In Germany we call it "Lukas"
its quite handy but sadly doesnt fit every patient
anothere reason to watch ur weight ;)
Eric de Vos needed badly in Texas. I'm from El Paso, Texas and we don't have that that I know of. It's amazing. I used to work in the ER and doing chest compressions is very tiring. Broke a rib once felt bad about it but it happens to almost every responder. Going to suggest that mechanism for all responders.
Maaaaan 😢, these are intense. I'm glad they do updates at the end.
I love this show its so interesting what these hero’s do. It must be amazing to fly in a helicopter and save lives everyday. I wasn’t expecting the golfer to be alive at the end. It’s amazing what these hero’s do everyday.
Amazing care, intervention, and compassion!
Love this show. I am so glad the golfer lived
THANK YOU so much for posting these. With love & many thanks, NSW Australia :)
True champions. Very emotional to watch how well they take care of people. Much respect!!
You are doing an incredibly good job. I am also a nurse and work on an intensive care station in Germany. it's so great to watch you. Thank you
Every cardic arrest I run these days I always have this golfer in the back of my mind. Miracles happen.
What a wonderful service with such skilled medics - bravo, fantastic work 😃👌👌👏👏👏❤️
I fully-retired @ 38-years young, after nearly 18-years working in Emergency & Critical Care Flight Medicine as an Intensivist - I miss it every single day, and know those years, were filled with more saving of lifestyles, than I will ever be able to recall... . .I’m just privileged to have made a career in Air Medicine.
Love this show and these amazing men and women. Someone is playing a prank in editing to see how many times they can cut in the same plate of half-eaten food with the fork before they get in trouble by the producers 😂
I can not believe the first guy, Tim survived 😳!! Wow. Incredible. These guys/girls are heros!!
💯😊
I can't express how life saving that blood is already available on board the air ambulance...
Wow. Unbelievable that Tim survived that. I bet the life and had a lot to do with that as well being able to give accurate chest compressions every single time.
Well done to the whole team. Amazing
Totally amazing Tim survived to be out on the golf course again! Good CPR/ACLS with solid airway mngmt brought this case home but would've been useless without first responder contribution of immediate assessment, CPR, and defib with AED! I just didn't think he'd come thru neurologically intact, not knowing how much down time he had, AND how many times he had to be converted back to a sustainable/perfusing rhythm! To see him walking and talking though? Incredible, just incredible.
The overdose case was quite a save too. I was thinking, holy cow, from apneic and pulseless to spontaneous resps and good strong BP, and finally- responsive and semi-oriented? Wow! God only knows how much longer he could've been down before sustaining irreversible brain damage. It's amazing that they are actually first on-scene in some of these cases. On a side note, it sounded like the OD patient was just started on these meds the day before. If that's true, then 55mgs is a huge dose of Diazepam to be given to an opiate and benzo-naive patient, especially in conjunction with OPIATES! The doc was saying that these medications are all reasonable for a patient in pain, however, the patients condition is easily predictable given those particular meds. Would be totally different with an opiate/benzo tolerant patient. I'm curious if the meds were in fact just started the day before, or if the patient accidentally took more than prescribed. Either way, mom should be given some Narcan to have at home, just in case. Is Narcan available in the UK for home use over-the-counter? The last thing which surprised me was that I didn't realize they suspended services at nighttime. Why is this? Are there other civilian air rescue assets which keep to work throughout the night?
Air ambulances are suspended over night in many places because night flying requires special training as well as night vision equipment. Even with them, field landings are much more dangerous at night because obstacles cannot be seen very easily. Most commonly it is inter-hospital transfers that operate at night as well because the helipads are cleared of obstructions and well marked.
I scant believe the hear attack man made it and after 1.5 hrs of basically non stop chest compressions he is so lucky to even be able to think for himself. Absolutely amazing!!!!!! He is sure a fighter!!!!
Cardiac arrest, not heart attack.
I cried when i saw tim made it and was well. Its amazing that he was able to survive that without a substantial brain injury
Excellent work crew!! I can’t believe the gentleman that had the heart attack on the golf course survived. He had to be shocked so many times and then he had to compression machine on him. I thought that was just amazing. My husband passed away on our front lawn and we worked on him for about 10 minutes before the ambulance got there and they worked on him for 25 minutes, giving him four shots of adrenaline but the defibrillator would not work on him. If it can’t pick up, I don’t know how to describe it, but say life in your body, like your brain is still attached to your body and it’s trying to get you going but if it’s shut down or not connected anymore, the defibrillator will not work. I never knew that. I thought you just put it on the person you timed it and then you zapped the person, but it doesn’t work that way. The coroner said that it was as if somebody walked up to my husband and turned off his switch, and before he hit the ground, he was gone. The only thing that gives me peace of mind is that my husband never felt any pain and he had the most peaceful look on his face that I had ever seen one frown, crease or anything. I hold that to my heart.
The motocross bike rider, his ankle injury is the same thing my mom had in a car accident where we rolled four times in the car on a highway and we ended up on the other side. We were going west and we ended up with the car pointing east on the East highway. Her foot was caught underneath the brake pedal and when we were turning, it was being twisted. Seeing this injury made me realize what hers look like. She worked hard all her life, and even though she would be in a lot of pain she would only say that it was painful that night. I used to massage it all the time for her. That’s the least I can do for all the work that she did as our mom.🥰🥰🥰🩷🩷🩷
His mate took a picture of his foot..... that'll be one for Stagnight
Thats just horrible. I couldn't believe they were taking pictures. Disgusting.
Wow that first case... In the US I'd be lucky if I got 10 _maybe_ 20 minutes of CPR before being declared. How amazing.
As someone who's been in nursing for almost 40 years I am very surprised that the man who arrested, Tim, made it. I was sure that he would pass away. These guys are incredible.
How can anyone give this video a thumbs down? Worrying. What an amazing job these professionals do day in and day out. Thank you.
Probably Americans who are jealous that they don't get healthcare like this.
Tim is very fortunate to be alive. That kind of extreme cardiac arrest only leaves minutes to act before they’re gone. Kudos to all the doctors and paramedics for not quitting on him! 😌
I am so proud to my compatriot, I am also hungarian.
A very BIG THANK YOU for bringing us this wonderful series. Extraordinary volunteers doing brilliant things. Cheers Team 💙💙💙💙💙
They are heroes.Their job is to save people lifes,so often they are last little hope for someone.Every decision and every action can be crutial.Great videos indeed.
these people are heroes
!!!! many thanks for saving lives!!!!!!!
I don't know if the golfer survived but he sure had his all in the help he received. Helps me to understand more the efforts put into my brothers resussitation. They did their best.
Incredible people that have to care. You can't be lazy in this job. Heros
You lot are incredible well done,for all the hard work and devotion.
I thought for sure the cardiac arrest man wasn't going to make it. So glad I was wrong! And he seems to be totally ok as well, wow!!
These crews are what angels look like.
Wow!!!! Earth Angels DO fly ! Bless each and everyone of you 🙏
This is crazy!!!!! I never knew they worked on people for one hour.....You are all Amazing!!!!!
It’s absolutely incredible that both the cardiac patient and the biker survived. I honestly didn’t think either would pull through.
"I don't know why I'm holding your hand" lol.
These are very bad injuries and..
I appreciate you and your job.
Peter Temesvari.. Hungarian surgery doctor! The best!
Bognár Bálint a Migrant ??? Never mind
I have a feeling you only said that cuz you might be Hungarian too. Lol!
Lain Glenn’s voice is smooth as silk, he makes a great narrator
Aside from the absolutely brilliant and competent job these admirable men and women are doing, am I the only one noticing the same picture of almost finished lasagna or something like that? In every episode of both seasons?? Love it
Respect Dr.Temesvári!!!
Wow! Tim is a walking miracle! So thankful they never gave up. Margaret's a sweet lady. Thinking of the kiddies. Here in Canada, they would've censored the kid's ankle injury. Quite graphic. Glad he didn't lose his foot.
This guys are heroes, simply heroes!
love these guys/girls..they spring into action without having a cup of Tea first! :)
It would be absolutely fantastic if every emergency medical person would be able to have access to their CPR machine; it has the definite potential to save so many more people around the world!!
Tim's luck combined with the first responder's skills is nothing short of remarkable. He cheated death like a ninja! Dr. Mike would be proud if he saw this, CHEST COMPRESSIONS, CHEST COMPRESSIONS, CHEST COMPRESSIONS!
Wonderful story line. Glad they survived.