I'm always impressed by people like this, so organized even under pressure. Intelligent, analytical, organized. I always look up to them, so dependable.
I just wonder what happens to the husband - does he go in the helicopter with the wife or does he get left to travel by road, not knowing whether his wife is alive or dead when he arrivves at the other end? In cases with kids, a parent would normally go with them, but what happens in this sort of instance?
@@cloroxbleach2581 I’m sure but there’s many docs out there who’s egos get in the way (in ERs too) where they won’t listen to their nursing staff’s ideas or admit they’re wrong, even though the nurses that have been there 10+ years know a LOT and have really good ideas.
One of the beauties of fentanyl and ketamine for Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) is short term amnesia. She won’t remember anything except getting someone to call 911, and even then. That might be too soon for her to remember. Some of the things we do in the field is honestly black magic.
@@looksirdroids9134 damn, just trying to give some insight. No where in my post was inflammatory to British people nor saying America was better. Guessing I must have triggered you somehow 😂😂😂
"...when you get a chance in life,". For me that was to contact a hospital when I was 18 years old (minimum age in Sweden), and to donate blood on a regular basis. You get a free checkup, do something good, and a free cup of coffee...! :-) Many years ago in Sweden it also included a shot of whiskey...! Now I'm to old to donate according to the hospitals, but to all out there if You are healthy - why hesitate...? Just do it...! :-D
As someone with serious chronic illnesses that has required a lot of blood transfusions including several that saved my life when bleeding out during a major 8 hour surgery, I thank all donors from the bottom of my heart. I wouldn’t be here without amazing people like you. You save people’s lives like mine so then I’m able to do the same for others because I’m a volunteer crisis counselor 💕
I do not think that this a big deal for the most of us to donate blood. When we are healthy we have a lot of it, so 0.5 litres (sorry all americans... guess You wanted it in another scale...?) is no big deal! I have a blood group that perhaps is rare (O Resus negative) and that is a blood group that can be given to everyone. So when I was at the University they asked me if it was Okey to take 1.0 litre, because they didn't have enough of blood. "We have to put you in hospital at least for the night, but please we have nothing!..." The next day was a BIG exam for me, so I had to say no... - But please, all You who are in a medically speaking somewhat okey state, please become a blood donar...! It is SOO easy todo it, and one day perhaps You youself need blood...? ;-)
Paramedics are honestly bloody awesome. Last year they saved my brothers life after he started suffering from sepsis and then saved me when I fell down some stairs outside and snapped my ankle completely in half. Thank god for the NHS, thank god for paramedics, doctors, nurses etc. Honestly a different breed of people ❤️
Ahh paramedics, the unsung hero's. I had a very nasty placental abruption at 27 weeks with my little girl. I had two paramedics work on me while the ambulance was speeding...these paramedics were flying around the ambulance while controlling my bleeding and doing my vitals...they did not miss a thing. I'll never forget them, ever.
What's scary is I understood almost everything they were saying - I'm an EMT and going to be going to nursing school soon. It's scarier to know how bad she really was - her broken ribs saw up and down with every breath and can cut her tissues, aggravate her blood loss and puncture her lungs as she breathes - that's her "flail chest".
Dear god i had no idea thats what they meant by flail... thats honestly made me shudder. Also when he says do you want a finger in, does that mean exactly what it sounds like? opening the hole?
@@ExoVyper I think you're right. That's in the scope of what doctors and paramedics do, and I think they must be saying the hole has to be large enough for a finger to poke in there to fit a chest tube to drain blood and fluid from the pleural space (The inner lining and outer lining of your chest cavity).
@@ExoVyper A ‘Flail segment’ is an area of rib cage broken at each end so it’s sucks in and out with each breath and moves independently and paradoxically to the rest of the ribs/intercostal muscles. It’s a very serious issue.
@@ExoVyper I think, from the response, they stuck a finger in the hole next to the chest tube to check the placement, and that they could feel the lung expand. Perhaps also to check that there werent any bone fragments putting pressure on the tube or something along those lines. I would be fascinated to hear from a professional whether that's right!
7% of the population have O-. I have A- which is just 6% of the population I can only get blood from O- and A- And I had to have a blood transfusion when I had emergency surgery to save my life. I was in ICU and I do remember waking up for a short amount of time. And my surgeon said my blood was doing odd things so that's why I was still in ICU so they could keep a close eye on me.
I wish that these videos included a follow-up about the patient’s status once they arrived at the hospital, what their diagnosis were, healing and recovery, etc.
That's fantastic, I wish you all the best! As a brittle asthmatic, my life has frequently been saved by paramedics, doctors and nurses. Thank you for the difference you'll make to people's lives ❤
I always hear the saying ‘we did everything we could to save them’ in films or tv or wherever, but this is the closest I’ve actually seen the reality of it - if it was a scenario where they had run out of options and they didn’t have the necessary facilities close enough, that poor lady would’ve died. I don’t know how I’d feel if I was watching myself from above and understood the situation and passed away - I’d hope I’d feel content and at peace, rather then dejected and defeated.
This is why, even as a trainee, if you have an idea say it! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 Could’ve well and truly saved her life or given her a better outcome. That was actually beautiful to watch :)
As far as I can tell Sylvia Dalton did not immediately die of her injuries on the 29th November 2019 on the A166, as she is not listed in the England & Wales Deaths 2007-2020. Although undoubltly her injuries were life changing and shortening.
This has got to be horrific to have nobody like a family member or friend to make sure you’re okay when you can’t speak for yourself. I would be horrified in her position. Poor thing
How is she doing now? Is she at least alive? This is the worst cliffhanger ever, especially when I'm over here crying for her and worrying for her husband as well!
This is absolutely shocking to see. Lord bless this people with the courage to save lives everyday. To perform a procedure like that outside of a hospital is insane! I watch these shows quite often and never have seen something like that. Wow.
You'll find the flight paramedics are well and truly seasoned staff members. I've been a road paramedic for 23 years. In 99% of cases, jobs like these are a weekly event that you take in your stride. You know exactly what to do in a methodical fashion and have no real trouble keeping calm due to familiarity. But to an outsider it must look like organised chaos! You're that focused on the task at hand that you kind of become oblivious to "the big picture" that surrounds you, especially when multiple patients are involved.
@Echo 9970 Judging by the different uniform, yes. I have no idea if UK paramedics are trained in performing RSI (placing a seriously injured patient in a coma), like Australian ones are. I'd imagine they are. Doctors love to "play" on scene just as much as anybody. That's what this field is all about.
Modern medicine is mad, I used to be terrified of getting seriously ill but then you watch what these people can achieve everyday and it makes you realise that you can survive some really terrible things
Yer the US only uses the Anglo-American system (scoop and run the patient to the hospital and doctors). The UK uses a hybrid of the Anglo-American system and the Franco-German systems (bring the hospital and doctors to the patient on the scene). As shown in this video, when needed, UK EMS doctors will do complex anaesthesia, and life support on-scene, and sometimes, even emergency surgical operations on scene. Procedures which in the US can and are only done in hospital, never at the scene.
I really want to know if and how well she recovered... I tell myself she recovered well, otherwise they wouldn't show it on tv. Hope I'm right. Any further info on this? Season and episode of the tv-show maybe? Thanks.
I was thinking perhaps it was internal bleeding but she wasn’t pale or sweating though, but the low bp and tachycardia are definitely signs of that especially in the femoral artery where it can’t be seen till it’s too late
I heard "70 years old," "hit by a car going 40 miles an hour" and "one pupil's larger than the other" and was like omg there's no way this woman is going to live 😶
What an awesome team... I was in a very similar incident and was wide awake when the cut into my ribs it insert a chest tube let's just say I wish these people were my medical team
@@popcorn32145 I’m willing to bet more, all those drugs, a blood infusion, an ambulance, an air ambulance, hospital treatment, hospital stay, multiple surgeries, rehabilitation, etc etc that would run you soooo much money in America
I was put into a medically induced coma by 4 paramedics just last week. It's interesting to see what happens when you have no memory of the night at all.
Intubation is still a paramedic skill but it is not a paramedic procedure in some trusts due to the risks and the relatively rare amount of times paramedics perform them, so LOMs and HEMS tend to be the ones to perform these as they do them much more frequently.
@@jeremybarretta5282 It's a strange thing today but honestly if they don't have some sort of light heartedness it makes the job a lot harder. From experience :)
well it's because there is actually an emergency doctor coming to the scene. Due to your inhuman health system that you have in the US, if you don't have 100k in cash on you on the scene off the accident, you are left to die until you reach the hospital..
ive seen it said by someone else who had seen the source episode that in the end part she appeared to be well though i dont recall if they mentioned any sort of long term after effects. Season 5 Ep. 21 i believe
well this is 3 times as painful as my bike accident which i nearly was diasbled nearly couldnt even remember my parents and i was in a coma for about 1 hour and the pain was unimaginable now i recovered had this accident in 2017 when i was 7 next to me was a girl who broke her leg i think oof
@@lisasallery7860 y’all can’t do math she’s 13 and she can watch anything she likes after 12 in my opinion. At least she’s not watching other bad things right and maybe we got a budding paramedic
First responders don’t get all the credit they deserve. If most people make it, it is because of them to begin with. They make a big difference weather the patient lives or dies. Cuddos to all of them.
I'm always impressed by people like this, so organized even under pressure.
Intelligent, analytical, organized.
I always look up to them, so dependable.
Everyone looks for super hero’s, real hero’s here.
It’s called not giving a fuck
It's normal for them every days they got someone to save I some point u juste use to it
@@feels6233im pretty sure when someone is seconds from death they would be giving the biggest fuck of their lives
@@devilos250 did you have a stroke writing that msg? want me to send the paramedics?
The face of the husband just made me feel so sad, imagine what’s going through his head at that moment
I just wonder what happens to the husband - does he go in the helicopter with the wife or does he get left to travel by road, not knowing whether his wife is alive or dead when he arrivves at the other end? In cases with kids, a parent would normally go with them, but what happens in this sort of instance?
@@bluechang08 usually there is not enough room so he is kinda just left with the police and ground paramedics then goes to the hospital by road
I absolutely love that the doc asked everyone around if there were any other theories. Beautiful teamwork 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
They are trained to actually ask that if they are stuck. There is no place for egos when a life is on the line.
@@cloroxbleach2581 I’m sure but there’s many docs out there who’s egos get in the way (in ERs too) where they won’t listen to their nursing staff’s ideas or admit they’re wrong, even though the nurses that have been there 10+ years know a LOT and have really good ideas.
@@emz33 There are always a few bad eggs in every profession. But the good ones take their training seriously and follow common sense.
2 minds work better than one I guess lol
wish there were veterinarians like her around, vet nurse speaking
The calmness in that doctors voice. She really knows what she is doing. What a great woman!
I would feel bad anyway but the fact that shes in her 70s and this happened to her makes me extra sympathetic :((( it must've hurt so much.
I know right 🥺
Poor lady :(
She shouldn’t have been walking in the road… wouldn’t have happened otherwise
@@zachall101 what was she supposed to do? FLY across the street??
@@zachall101 ignorant comment. Stop being edgy minded. Doesn't get you far
"We are going to pop her off to sleep." Imagine hearing that laying there hopeless. I would think that's it, im dead.
She won't remember it at all; generally, if you hear that as a patient you won't remember hearing it due to the severity of the injury to the brain.
One of the beauties of fentanyl and ketamine for Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) is short term amnesia. She won’t remember anything except getting someone to call 911, and even then. That might be too soon for her to remember. Some of the things we do in the field is honestly black magic.
@@FlamerTurtles This is Britain, you don't call 911 there. You Americans can't ever think outside your own damn country, can you?
@@looksirdroids9134 damn, just trying to give some insight. No where in my post was inflammatory to British people nor saying America was better. Guessing I must have triggered you somehow 😂😂😂
@@looksirdroids9134 murica
now thats where donor blood goes. make sure to donor when you get a chance in life, you could be saving a life like sylvias
"...when you get a chance in life,". For me that was to contact a hospital when I was 18 years old (minimum age in Sweden), and to donate blood on a regular basis. You get a free checkup, do something good, and a free cup of coffee...! :-) Many years ago in Sweden it also included a shot of whiskey...! Now I'm to old to donate according to the hospitals, but to all out there if You are healthy - why hesitate...? Just do it...! :-D
As someone with serious chronic illnesses that has required a lot of blood transfusions including several that saved my life when bleeding out during a major 8 hour surgery, I thank all donors from the bottom of my heart. I wouldn’t be here without amazing people like you. You save people’s lives like mine so then I’m able to do the same for others because I’m a volunteer crisis counselor 💕
@@MrJacques013 thank you for saving life’s like my own, I’m eternally grateful for wonderful people like you 💖
@@thekawaiicripple i donate every chance i get, im happy that you can get the help you need!
I do not think that this a big deal for the most of us to donate blood. When we are healthy we have a lot of it, so 0.5 litres (sorry all americans... guess You wanted it in another scale...?) is no big deal! I have a blood group that perhaps is rare (O Resus negative) and that is a blood group that can be given to everyone. So when I was at the University they asked me if it was Okey to take 1.0 litre, because they didn't have enough of blood. "We have to put you in hospital at least for the night, but please we have nothing!..." The next day was a BIG exam for me, so I had to say no... - But please, all You who are in a medically speaking somewhat okey state, please become a blood donar...! It is SOO easy todo it, and one day perhaps You youself need blood...? ;-)
"She seems to be improving....then there's a problem" my anxiety raises for this women. Truly hope she is doing well
Paramedics are honestly bloody awesome. Last year they saved my brothers life after he started suffering from sepsis and then saved me when I fell down some stairs outside and snapped my ankle completely in half. Thank god for the NHS, thank god for paramedics, doctors, nurses etc. Honestly a different breed of people ❤️
Sepsis is awful and snapping your ankle in half doesn't sound pleasant either, hope you are both doing well!!
My brother was a paramedic for 5-years, he went vegan and decided not to help dirty meat eaters ha ha ha. What a good bro i have.
@@chungusfootfungus Thank you! He’s doing well and I’m slowly recovering 😊 xx
@@obviouslytwo4u haha
@@obviouslytwo4u what-
Ahh paramedics, the unsung hero's.
I had a very nasty placental abruption at 27 weeks with my little girl. I had two paramedics work on me while the ambulance was speeding...these paramedics were flying around the ambulance while controlling my bleeding and doing my vitals...they did not miss a thing. I'll never forget them, ever.
How are you doing now? Xoxo
Could you explain what that is for those that do not know what you had at 27 weeks, please.
These paramedics are amazing, so calm and methodical even in dark and freezing conditions. Does anyone know what happened to Sylvia?
Yes, she knocked to a car that was crossing
There doctors that are in the Orange flying suits. The paramedics and the other ambulance are all in green.
@@echo9970 One doctor and two paramedics in the flight suits.
@@xxhannahricexx1 wrong person
@@trans_portation my bad 😬
What's scary is I understood almost everything they were saying - I'm an EMT and going to be going to nursing school soon. It's scarier to know how bad she really was - her broken ribs saw up and down with every breath and can cut her tissues, aggravate her blood loss and puncture her lungs as she breathes - that's her "flail chest".
Dear god i had no idea thats what they meant by flail... thats honestly made me shudder.
Also when he says do you want a finger in, does that mean exactly what it sounds like? opening the hole?
@@ExoVyper I think you're right. That's in the scope of what doctors and paramedics do, and I think they must be saying the hole has to be large enough for a finger to poke in there to fit a chest tube to drain blood and fluid from the pleural space (The inner lining and outer lining of your chest cavity).
@@ExoVyper A ‘Flail segment’ is an area of rib cage broken at each end so it’s sucks in and out with each breath and moves independently and paradoxically to the rest of the ribs/intercostal muscles. It’s a very serious issue.
@@ExoVyper I think, from the response, they stuck a finger in the hole next to the chest tube to check the placement, and that they could feel the lung expand. Perhaps also to check that there werent any bone fragments putting pressure on the tube or something along those lines. I would be fascinated to hear from a professional whether that's right!
Not going to lie...it’d be scarier if you didn’t 😐
As a world we are so lucky to have people willing to dedicate their lives to learn to help people in legit every way possible THEYRE heros
@@obviouslytwo4u I don’t disagree but this world is also full of people who do deserve it and have a good heart
Does anyone know how this turned out? I really hope Sylvia survived this. God bless her, and those who helped her. Absolute guardian angels.
So impressed with the emergency services and how dedicated they are to saving life under any circumstances. Amazing
I will never complain about my O- blood type again. Now I know why they always call me to donate.
But on the other hand - You can only get blood from another 0- - doner, and we are rare... :-D
@@MrJacques013 I wanted to write something like that xD
Let's help others and ourself xD
@@Sarahbear-20 that’s amazing that you would do that
Im O- and donated for decades.
7% of the population have O-. I have A- which is just 6% of the population I can only get blood from O- and A- And I had to have a blood transfusion when I had emergency surgery to save my life. I was in ICU and I do remember waking up for a short amount of time. And my surgeon said my blood was doing odd things so that's why I was still in ICU so they could keep a close eye on me.
I wish that these videos included a follow-up about the patient’s status once they arrived at the hospital, what their diagnosis were, healing and recovery, etc.
The leadership and teamwork between these guys is absolutely phenomenal.
I'm really excited to work as a paramedic. Hoping to be one soon. ❤️
Good luck!
@@barneyneal9026 Thank you so much! 😁
Good luck on the journey!! 😊
Best of luck in your quest. Been doing it for nearly 23 years and still couldn't think of a better career.
That's fantastic, I wish you all the best! As a brittle asthmatic, my life has frequently been saved by paramedics, doctors and nurses. Thank you for the difference you'll make to people's lives ❤
“How are you?”
*looks at woman hit by car*
“Better than her by the looks of it”
I-😂😳
I always feel so bad for elders because they are old and most times very nice
These paramedics are the definition of heroes, these are the sort of people who deserve huge pay rises.
These guys are sick at what they do man!
You men and women try so hard to help and save life’s god bless you all. The lives you’ve saved and people you’ve helped
Absolutely incredible. Enormous respect for these people
I always hear the saying ‘we did everything we could to save them’ in films or tv or wherever, but this is the closest I’ve actually seen the reality of it - if it was a scenario where they had run out of options and they didn’t have the necessary facilities close enough, that poor lady would’ve died. I don’t know how I’d feel if I was watching myself from above and understood the situation and passed away - I’d hope I’d feel content and at peace, rather then dejected and defeated.
I love their bedside manners 🥺 they treat their patients with so much love.
These guys are all Heroes. Hats off to you
This is why, even as a trainee, if you have an idea say it!
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Could’ve well and truly saved her life or given her a better outcome. That was actually beautiful to watch :)
you can see he is a trainee as well. it says on his lanyard. "Flying trainee program" or something along those lines. Well done Kit.
These people are heroes. Thanks for your hard work before this night, so you will be so well prepared. You are all amazing!!
Amazing teamwork. Obviously very difficult conditions to be working in. We are seriously fortunate to have this calibre of medics.
that is a hell of a group of doctors and nurses, god bless them, and guide there hands and hearts to heal many more people.
I admire these people. Staying calm during such a stressful situation. I definitely wouldn’t be able to do the job they do.
These people do an incredible job and I’ll be forever in their debt. Amazing.
Wow hats off to those brilliant paramedics I was in the edge of my seat, I wonder if she survived or not
@Echo 9970 true 100% the staff was amazing n spot on
As far as I can tell Sylvia Dalton did not immediately die of her injuries on the 29th November 2019 on the A166, as she is not listed in the England & Wales Deaths 2007-2020. Although undoubltly her injuries were life changing and shortening.
Nice detective work!
This has got to be horrific to have nobody like a family member or friend to make sure you’re okay when you can’t speak for yourself. I would be horrified in her position. Poor thing
How is she doing now? Is she at least alive? This is the worst cliffhanger ever, especially when I'm over here crying for her and worrying for her husband as well!
I hate how they leave us hanging and don't tell us of the outcome. I how you was alright in the end.
Anyone have a update on her? She is the same age as my Dad, and this is very relatable. Any update would be greatly appreciated!
I wouldn't keep my hopes up. I work in accident litigation and accidents like these rarely lead to full recoveries. Especially at this age.
Much love for the paramedics and team.
This is absolutely shocking to see. Lord bless this people with the courage to save lives everyday. To perform a procedure like that outside of a hospital is insane! I watch these shows quite often and never have seen something like that. Wow.
This was a masterpiece in teamwork and leadership.
Wow, sublime. Very organized crew, professionals at it's best
The teamwork here is amazing. The lead was enough of a team player that she asked everyone for ideas. Bravo!
Good group finally figures it out. Great
Studying as an Anaesthetic Practitioner (ODP), this is great work by the team. Deffo learning from this
Our medical staff are just brilliant.
I am proud to be from the British pilgrims way back in the day...
Bless her soul, bless those paramedics, bless the donor
the people with severe head injuries all moan and groan in the exact same fashion i had no idea of that
Once again it shows blood pressure is everything. Such a simple thing to check but such a clear indicator of wellness. Amazing.
This is a great example of treat or transport in trauma
Very impressive work to all involved must be so hard to remain calm in those circumstances ,hope the lady went on to make a full recovery .
You'll find the flight paramedics are well and truly seasoned staff members. I've been a road paramedic for 23 years. In 99% of cases, jobs like these are a weekly event that you take in your stride. You know exactly what to do in a methodical fashion and have no real trouble keeping calm due to familiarity. But to an outsider it must look like organised chaos! You're that focused on the task at hand that you kind of become oblivious to "the big picture" that surrounds you, especially when multiple patients are involved.
@Echo 9970 Judging by the different uniform, yes. I have no idea if UK paramedics are trained in performing RSI (placing a seriously injured patient in a coma), like Australian ones are. I'd imagine they are. Doctors love to "play" on scene just as much as anybody. That's what this field is all about.
That’s not an ambulance that’s a freaking hospital room, it literally has everything 😅
My god, these people are amazing.
Modern medicine is mad, I used to be terrified of getting seriously ill but then you watch what these people can achieve everyday and it makes you realise that you can survive some really terrible things
Amazing people attending her
That’s incredible team work!
I'm from the US and they don't do these procedures on the street but I think its great ...
Do what you gotta do!!
Yer the US only uses the Anglo-American system (scoop and run the patient to the hospital and doctors). The UK uses a hybrid of the Anglo-American system and the Franco-German systems (bring the hospital and doctors to the patient on the scene). As shown in this video, when needed, UK EMS doctors will do complex anaesthesia, and life support on-scene, and sometimes, even emergency surgical operations on scene. Procedures which in the US can and are only done in hospital, never at the scene.
wow the crew are amazing
That hurts man
Holy crap 75 years old and survived a 45mph hit by a car?
What a fantastic team kudos to everyone involved
I really want to know if and how well she recovered... I tell myself she recovered well, otherwise they wouldn't show it on tv. Hope I'm right. Any further info on this? Season and episode of the tv-show maybe? Thanks.
I checked the episode S5E21 and she looks to be ok, (I've scrubbed to the bit where she's talking to the camera I presume outside their home)
@@neovo903 All right! Thanks for letting me know all this! Such a relief tho, I'll go check it out :)
@@MrsJolene- np, I wanted to find out too :P
Ooooo
Fantastic work by all of these pros!
Brilliant job done by the team
I was thinking perhaps it was internal bleeding but she wasn’t pale or sweating though, but the low bp and tachycardia are definitely signs of that especially in the femoral artery where it can’t be seen till it’s too late
God forbid anything should happen to me but I would want a UK ambulance team working on me 🙌🏾
when i realised she was over 70 i felt so bad for her
Absolutely amazing people here, super heroes
No update on this? The worst thing is when you don't know how it turned out
I heard "70 years old," "hit by a car going 40 miles an hour" and "one pupil's larger than the other" and was like omg there's no way this woman is going to live 😶
I love the professionalism "are you happy to do -blank-"
I wish i could give blood sadly I’m never going to be able to but I’m an organ donor they can take absolutely anything once i am dead.
What an awesome team... I was in a very similar incident and was wide awake when the cut into my ribs it insert a chest tube let's just say I wish these people were my medical team
I wish they'd tell us more about the patients recovery after the rescue. How's Sylvia doing now?
0:49 almost thought they had Sir Alex Ferguson in there, almost choke on my cereal
Why do we never get the ending to know how each patient does? 🥺
I would be interested how that donor blood is transported. We need that here in the USA
I’m kinda disappointed it didn’t give an update
Imagine how much money the medical bill would be if this was in America
Probably be like $500k for us lol
@@popcorn32145 I’m willing to bet more, all those drugs, a blood infusion, an ambulance, an air ambulance, hospital treatment, hospital stay, multiple surgeries, rehabilitation, etc etc that would run you soooo much money in America
@@jamesw9933 Ya dude we are fucked lol. Tricare ftw for now.
@@popcorn32145 well the NHS isn’t exactly a dream either, every system will always have it’s downfalls
We don't pay these people enough.... we CAN'T be paying these people enough
I was put into a medically induced coma by 4 paramedics just last week. It's interesting to see what happens when you have no memory of the night at all.
“Cerebrally irritated” 😭😭😭
Why are they working outside the ambulance ?
5:57 why squeeze ambu so fast
I’m sorry but I laughed when she said “I’m on an airplane, aren’t I?”
See you in hell
Ah,but that's not what she said .
Nothing major - but did it all end well...?
I checked the episode S5E21 and she looks to be ok, (I've scrubbed to the bit where she's talking to the camera I presume outside their home)
Interesting that Doc's are flown in to complete an intubation. This is standard paramedic care in our service.
Paramedics can’t perform a thoracotomy and they can’t give blood, this patient needed both
Intubation is still a paramedic skill but it is not a paramedic procedure in some trusts due to the risks and the relatively rare amount of times paramedics perform them, so LOMs and HEMS tend to be the ones to perform these as they do them much more frequently.
@@tarakay9768 it was a thorocostomy needed in this case rather than thorocotomy
"How're you doing"
"Yeah, better than this lady by the looks of it"
O.O :'D
Ya kinda fucked up thing to say imo
O
@@jeremybarretta5282 It's a strange thing today but honestly if they don't have some sort of light heartedness it makes the job a lot harder. From experience :)
but is she ok now?
I checked the episode S5E21 and she looks to be ok, (I've scrubbed to the bit where she's talking to the camera I presume outside their home)
What it takes to be a helicopter doctor in UK?
In America they would never operate on someone at all it’s straight to the hospital. Quite impressed they can do that
The UK are really good with their trauma care. They would where/when needed do even more intricate life saving measures and procedures
The trauma doctor said it definitely had to happen and the paramedics are trained for the procedure.
well it's because there is actually an emergency doctor coming to the scene.
Due to your inhuman health system that you have in the US, if you don't have 100k in cash on you on the scene off the accident, you are left to die until you reach the hospital..
8:50 'date tested 29th december'...but this was uploaded on the 19th
Maybe it was a year ago...
@@henanigans205 they were talking about recent events
Guaranteed fire brigade cut the roof off the car that clipped this woman 😂😂😂 surprised the ambulance didn't arrive at A&E as a convertible
Amazing humans!
Did she end up surviving or passed away ??? Why would you end it like that without informing us of the outcome.
ive seen it said by someone else who had seen the source episode that in the end part she appeared to be well though i dont recall if they mentioned any sort of long term after effects. Season 5 Ep. 21 i believe
well this is 3 times as painful as my bike accident which i nearly was diasbled nearly couldnt even remember my parents and i was in a coma for about 1 hour and the pain was unimaginable now i recovered had this accident in 2017 when i was 7 next to me was a girl who broke her leg i think oof
Hang on. Are you saying you’re 10 years old? If you are you shouldn’t be watching things like this
@@lisasallery7860 y’all can’t do math she’s 13 and she can watch anything she likes after 12 in my opinion. At least she’s not watching other bad things right and maybe we got a budding paramedic
I am thinking about becoming a paramedic, does anyone have any recommendations on universities or the job itself?
Which episode is this? I want to see the rest! Great Team work
I checked the episode S5E21 and she looks to be ok, (I've scrubbed to the bit where she's talking to the camera I presume outside their home)
First responders don’t get all the credit they deserve. If most people make it, it is because of them to begin with. They make a big difference weather the patient lives or dies. Cuddos to all of them.