I think you have to be to be a paramedic, its very hard work very stressful, very mentally impactful.. and they do it because they want to save and help people. Nothing but respect for them, but then i feel that way towards all emergency workers. They get a lot of hate from the public, because the public depend on them so much and it doesnt even work out. I can't imagine the stress she must feel, to turn up somewhere and get abuse for taking so long to get there when it isnt her fault. British people need to feel more compassion towards one another and direct their anger to those who are at fault. The Tories.
She's the sweetest person - like a lot of people said, all paramedics I've met were incredible. Such a shame they're not paid enough, because they're truly heroes!
Poor guy man. I know we all want everyone to find love but not everyone will. That's something I've had to realise. The paramedics did a great job, they're all doing an amazing job. Thank you.
They are both so strong! Very touching to see the interactions with the patient as well as the emotional support amongst each other! It’s very admirable
I love that British paramedics can chat your ear off all night to keep you calm, they're like hairdressers that save your life. Bedside manner and patient morale is extremely important to first responder healthcare, so I'm very proud of our social bunny heroes.
There's no shame in feeling overwhelmed, sad, angry or whatever you feel in this kind of jobs because you see and experience things which you have to deal with. We are emotional beings and should not have to constantly push it away. It's very unhealthy. Bless her. She's simply acting human.
The NHS is a marvel. They have saved myself and members of my family in our darkest of times. My mother recently was taken down by Sepsis, but they did everything they could, and thankfully she is now on the road to recovery. I cannot thank them enough for their support and dedication to her. Protect the NHS at all costs. It cannot be allowed to fall and be stripped back bit by bit. Without them, neither me, my mum, my grandad, my grandma and my brother and sister would be here.
The two paramedics who help me last year in August done a fantastic job and did save my life by how quick their was getting to me and taking me to the hospital I had two blood clots on one on each side of my chest I owe them the doctors and nurses everything with out them I wouldn't be here now ❤
God bless all the paramedics and first responders...that is not a job I could withstand emotionally. I think it takes a very special person to do that type of job and still be so pleasant and kind...
Bless her. I see value in her reaction. It shows me she has real compassion, and that’s what we need in this line of work. Compassion and a desire to help. They are a wonderful bunch, our EMT’s.
As a newly qualified paramedic this is so refreshing to watch. The autonomy of the role means that you’re first day on the job is filled with immense responsibility, you are thrown in the deep end and it’s so overwhelming. People very rarely will open up and admit that the stress/pressure of it all is getting to them. Big well done to this paramedic for being honest with how she’s feeling, we need more of this! ❤ x
She's a hero, and even heroes get scared sometimes. I really hope she's getting good support to continue her training and feel more confident as she goes.
I hope he gets a dog for companionship and healthy walks out, they are indeed man’s best friend; an excellent question and suggestion from our brave and wonderful paramedics
Beautiful hearted ladies. When my daughter finished her EMT training her first ride along was an active gunshot scene victim that was lying in the street until they got police clearance to approach and she did her first response they got him to the hospital sadly he didnt make it but he lives in her to this day 8+ years later. God bless you all "gutter doctors" for all your hard work and compassion ❤
Now that is one beautiful caring woman. My father was taken to hospital last we with a broken hip and developed delirium due to his dementia and I can honestly say that they were 2 very caring young ambos. My father was also a grave digger for 28 years before his retirement. 😢
Men like Keith should be celebrated and given decent retirements. He did backbreaking work for decades so that families and loved ones could visit those that have passed on. His work allowed others to properly grieve, to miss, to love, and to continue living. As noble a profession many first responder, he was many people's last responder, giving them proper burial. Thank you, Keith.
She’s a hero, she goes into the jaws of death and snatches back peoples lives to give them a chance. Sometimes they lose but I imagine you understand being in the emergency medical profession and just being a private person you will come to realise how precious and fragile life can be. I’m grateful to know people like her are out there doing this and any tears or crying is totally understandable - We are all human after all.
I was like this, when I done end of life Care when people used to pass over I was so strong keeping it together. I used to get them all dressed ready to be taken to the morgue. Then I used to go home and just cry in the bath it just hit you. All of a sudden you got realise what a wonderful job you do and how much you are a good part of the NHS and people need people like you it is hard, but it’s better to cry and let it out but it is hard ❤
I did palliative care and end of life care, along with less 'serious' care for 10 years. I was very badly affected when I lost clients as you genuinely get to know them and their family if they have any. Unfortunately Nnw I'm too ill to work and it's been really awful for my mind to accept the transition from being a carer to needing a carer. I'm not even 40 years old yet so I feel like a real waste of space.
It should be neither. It should be good to see and easy to support. It's an absolutely normal and healthy reaction to have to a rough situation like this. It's actually scary and really dangerous when ppl suppress their emotions and stay stoic. Processing is a single good cry or minute of pain, and you're actually great after that. Suppression seems "OK" but it builds up and up like poison and starts wreaking havoc in the most terrible ways. Ruining health, ruining sleep which also ruins health, ruining mental health which ruins physical health AND decreases social abilities and that decreases ability to care in that work and care for yourself and close ones and care to get help. It's really really worse to NOT just go and have that good healthy cry in proper company!
I had tear watching it I had septic 8 years ago, I was in a rehab hospital recovering from surgery I start to feel unwell the nurse didn't do much to when I push her to do check me out when she did I had high pulse rate and low blood pressure. They had to rush me to a bigger hospital. I was place in ICU for mu birthday weekend. If I didn't push I don't know if I would be live. Good to hear he out of hospital and feeling better
So much respect. EMTs do NOT get paid enough!! I wanted to become one until I saw the pay. Yes, work is not just about the pay but I’m not working 10 hrs for next to nothing. I assume this job is so satisfying but it seems EXTREMELY stressful.
My mother worked in HR and she used to say you don’t get paid for the hours nor for the education, you get paid for the responsibility. EMTs carry SO much responsibility!
I went on my first ambulance ride from the hospital 2 years ago (mental stuff) and they were really trying their best to keep my mind off of the horror my brain was being put through, I went through a very messy and horrible breakup (for both parties) and I essentially hit the end of the line one night and needed to go somewhere or do something to stop myself from you know. They also knew when to just not talk to me to, so they shut off the light in the back of the ambulance, and just knowing she was there still with me but silent was more than enough for me. I just didn't want to be alone.
She needs to get a handle of it though to become part of this job. I was a firefighter for quite a few years and I saw some guys like this to start with and they never made it because I am telling you, the things you see, do and most importantly the things you just are unable to do if you let them, will take you down fast, if you do not learn to leave them behind. Bless her, I hope she goes on to do great things and live her dream
People and the Media, BBC especially, slate emergency services any chance they can get but never appreciate the incredible and difficult work that they do day in day out, no recognition whatsoever, jut expected to get on with it because that’s the job, until a mistake is made, then its full blown coverage.
As a paramedic myself, this case to me demonstrates a failure of our ambulance services to correctly mentor newly qualified paramedics. The panic in her eyes, and the lack of action to begin preparing for resuscitation (getting out defibrillator pads or a BVM, attempting vascular access etc - even when verbalising that she suspects the patient may be going into ventricular fibrillation), shows her inexperience. We should not be in a world when someone 10 minutes out of university is paired with an EMT and put out on the streets to provide care to patients unsupported, however we are in a position now where we have such terrible staff retention that there aren't enough experienced (Band 6+) paramedics to support these NQPs.
Ah, of course an EMT is beneath you and unable to play an effective part of the team. Ive been an EMT for 12 years and in the ambulance service for 17. Ive helped many NQPs find their feet and supported them in applying their theoretical knowledge in real world practice. I, and many other experienced technicians, know the job just as well as you pal. You might have a higher scope, but the assessment and decision making from us is just as good as yours.
Ultimately though, an EMT is not a registered healthcare professional though are they, and yes there are many fantastic EMT's out there who support paramedics but the fact is that NQPs require the support of a more senior paramedic to help them develop in their career. The scope of assessment and management skills taught to a paramedic is more complex and detailed than that taught to an EMT or they wouldn't be two separate jobs - one of which is registered with medicines exemptions and prescribing eligibility, the other of which is not
@user-oz3nu8iq1f You've been indoctrinated to believe this. Tell me. You never did any time as an ECA, tech or otherwise... straight to paramedic. Am I right?
Indoctrinated to believe that I didn't have the clinical abilities of a paramedic when I was an EMT because I hadn't spent 3 years at university at that point... OK. Most dangerous thing in this job is an EMT who thinks they're a paramedic - no registration, no responsibility
Paramedic is one of those jobs I don't think I could do, the stress would break me overtime. Maybe its one of those things you develop a thicker skin for after awhile but I don't think I could see people in trouble and not be highly stressed about it
It's good. Giving a good cry is a 1000 times better than swallowing it. All the better with a colleague there. They can take turns. They'll be healthier grieving what is to grieve while it's fresh. It festers if we don't. So all the love to all of them, who are there for ppl in need. For us. But really also, for themselves and each other in these moments that are scary and just rough. Our societies have a lot of actually social growing to do. We're barely teenagers yet, as societies. Some still being toddlers. No society has reached maturity before we're not in a place where all base needs of ppl are covered and guaranteed (e.g. safety and freedom, community and self-expression, base physical & mental and emotional & spiritual needs, external and internal). We'll not be mature societies, till we acknowledge "Human dignity shall be inviolable" in live AND death for real and give ppl both, grace in living AND choosing not to. We'll not be able to attend to ppl for real so long as we put all burdens on them to stay alive no matter the circumstances with no way out and regardless of their suffering. Because only when ppl can claim the right to leave when live gets too rough, is when we'll be going all out to fight and assure that quality of life IS good for ppl across all of society. These things are not this traumatic because human lives end. It's this traumatic because watching ppl possibly die without being loved and cared for and supported on their last journey, is utterly heartbreaking and scary to everyone still having that life before them, with little hope they'll be any better at old age. Particularly ppl working in Emergency related services are barely left with resources to attend to their own lives and any families and friends. They should be working less than anybody else, with such a straining line of work. But here we are, still messing up priorities as societies. How long, until we take the things that matter most really seriously?
that's what happens to my kind. We don't have any families, children, friends or loved ones, we don't have animals. Why? Because there is no time for a Dog for example. We work until we die. We die alone in a dark rom. Hopefully in our sleep pain free 🙂
These woman represent virtually all paramedics I've met. Lovely down to earth people.
I think you have to be to be a paramedic, its very hard work very stressful, very mentally impactful.. and they do it because they want to save and help people. Nothing but respect for them, but then i feel that way towards all emergency workers. They get a lot of hate from the public, because the public depend on them so much and it doesnt even work out. I can't imagine the stress she must feel, to turn up somewhere and get abuse for taking so long to get there when it isnt her fault. British people need to feel more compassion towards one another and direct their anger to those who are at fault. The Tories.
I worked with them. Most have a shocking attitude
She’s doing an abdo exam. She wouldn’t have a clue. This is laughable
Look at her panicking. lol
@@patkelly6349 oh damn, never knew that.
She's the sweetest person - like a lot of people said, all paramedics I've met were incredible. Such a shame they're not paid enough, because they're truly heroes!
Definitely heroes 💯💯💯
What an astonishingly empathetic young lady. Those first responders are angels.
see that number 111? It's means that she is doing right in her life it's a confirmation from god and her angels🪽🪽
@@draughtgamer1417 lol
She is so kind to that gentleman
Bless her, what a caring person she seems,the NHS and us the public are lucky to both these people looking out for us.
Poor guy man. I know we all want everyone to find love but not everyone will. That's something I've had to realise. The paramedics did a great job, they're all doing an amazing job. Thank you.
Never say never!
@@jonathanlandau-litewski7405 appreciate it.
As a student paramedic, my heart sank when he began deteriorating. Such a horrible feeling of dread.
Incredible paramedics, thank you for what you do!
Wonderful, compassionate and professional women.
You are incredible have a good cry my darling it shows you are human
They are both so strong! Very touching to see the interactions with the patient as well as the emotional support amongst each other! It’s very admirable
I love that British paramedics can chat your ear off all night to keep you calm, they're like hairdressers that save your life.
Bedside manner and patient morale is extremely important to first responder healthcare, so I'm very proud of our social bunny heroes.
We are the nhs best and free hospital in the world
Bushra ❤
Her name means "good news". What a wonderful capable and empathetic lady.
Fitting name for a paramedic, a very beautiful name
It does? I had a fantastic friend at High School named Bushra, fitted her character too.
Thank you for explaining that! Love it.
There's no shame in feeling overwhelmed, sad, angry or whatever you feel in this kind of jobs because you see and experience things which you have to deal with. We are emotional beings and should not have to constantly push it away. It's very unhealthy. Bless her. She's simply acting human.
Brava! to this young paramedic - kind, professional.
You've got to let that stress out. Crying is one of the best ways! Good on her.
My mother sadly died of SEPSIS two days before my bday in june last year. Glad the gentlemen made it. ❤
My heart breaks for you ! I lost my Mum to it Nov 2018 I feel your pain ❤🙏🏻
@@MargaretHill65_Hope both of you georgeous babues are okay, prayers for both your families ❤
@@MargaretHill65_ sending hugs to u ❤️🙏🏽🫂
The NHS is a marvel. They have saved myself and members of my family in our darkest of times. My mother recently was taken down by Sepsis, but they did everything they could, and thankfully she is now on the road to recovery. I cannot thank them enough for their support and dedication to her. Protect the NHS at all costs. It cannot be allowed to fall and be stripped back bit by bit. Without them, neither me, my mum, my grandad, my grandma and my brother and sister would be here.
The two paramedics who help me last year in August done a fantastic job and did save my life by how quick their was getting to me and taking me to the hospital I had two blood clots on one on each side of my chest I owe them the doctors and nurses everything with out them I wouldn't be here now ❤
@JohnL1984 It’s great to hear that you survived. Best of luck to you 💐
Dont think its the same guy@@shirleyw8720
God bless all the paramedics and first responders...that is not a job I could withstand emotionally. I think it takes a very special person to do that type of job and still be so pleasant and kind...
Bless her. I see value in her reaction. It shows me she has real compassion, and that’s what we need in this line of work. Compassion and a desire to help. They are a wonderful bunch, our EMT’s.
Bless their hearts.💙 It’s a very overwhelming field to work in.
As a newly qualified paramedic this is so refreshing to watch. The autonomy of the role means that you’re first day on the job is filled with immense responsibility, you are thrown in the deep end and it’s so overwhelming. People very rarely will open up and admit that the stress/pressure of it all is getting to them. Big well done to this paramedic for being honest with how she’s feeling, we need more of this! ❤ x
She's a hero, and even heroes get scared sometimes. I really hope she's getting good support to continue her training and feel more confident as she goes.
They need to be paid more and appreciated more literally saved my life multiple times!! True heroes
Bless her ,your only human and your doing a great job 👍👍
"A hero is someone who has given his or her life to something bigger than oneself."
I hope he gets a dog for companionship and healthy walks out, they are indeed man’s best friend; an excellent question and suggestion from our brave and wonderful paramedics
What an honor it is to provide comfort and care to someone in their final moments.
Beautiful hearted ladies. When my daughter finished her EMT training her first ride along was an active gunshot scene victim that was lying in the street until they got police clearance to approach and she did her first response they got him to the hospital sadly he didnt make it but he lives in her to this day 8+ years later. God bless you all "gutter doctors" for all your hard work and compassion ❤
What a lucky man! you saved his life, sepsis is no joke. Let those tears go, compassion is not a weakness!
I think I actually know him glad to see he’s on the mend ❤
So amazing and respectful, these people are the backbone of this country and ought to be cherished. Compassionate politics towards healthcare please.
New Paramedics? These two definitely born to do this job.
Now that is one beautiful caring woman. My father was taken to hospital last we with a broken hip and developed delirium due to his dementia and I can honestly say that they were 2 very caring young ambos. My father was also a grave digger for 28 years before his retirement. 😢
💙My Dad has dementia too. Awful disease.
I lost my grandad from dementia. The saddest thing was watching him deteriorate and forget the things he loved
@@stopmotionperson972 it’s so sad. 💙
Men like Keith should be celebrated and given decent retirements. He did backbreaking work for decades so that families and loved ones could visit those that have passed on. His work allowed others to properly grieve, to miss, to love, and to continue living. As noble a profession many first responder, he was many people's last responder, giving them proper burial.
Thank you, Keith.
She’s a hero, she goes into the jaws of death and snatches back peoples lives to give them a chance. Sometimes they lose but I imagine you understand being in the emergency medical profession and just being a private person you will come to realise how precious and fragile life can be. I’m grateful to know people like her are out there doing this and any tears or crying is totally understandable - We are all human after all.
I gaurantee he will remember her, and will most likely get a dog. Everyone involved saved that mans life heros
blessed you lovely woman
I was like this, when I done end of life Care when people used to pass over I was so strong keeping it together. I used to get them all dressed ready to be taken to the morgue. Then I used to go home and just cry in the bath it just hit you. All of a sudden you got realise what a wonderful job you do and how much you are a good part of the NHS and people need people like you it is hard, but it’s better to cry and let it out but it is hard ❤
I did palliative care and end of life care, along with less 'serious' care for 10 years. I was very badly affected when I lost clients as you genuinely get to know them and their family if they have any. Unfortunately Nnw I'm too ill to work and it's been really awful for my mind to accept the transition from being a carer to needing a carer. I'm not even 40 years old yet so I feel like a real waste of space.
what a beautiful thing to see the positive side of humanity, just caring for others. Loved it :)
Yay for good warm hearted people ❤
Aww hope Keith enjoys a long and happy retirement
she's so lovely and did so well
Love to all our blue light crew and NHS xxxx
That kind of stress sob is scary to see, but also scary to have. I hope both women are doing well now.
It should be neither. It should be good to see and easy to support. It's an absolutely normal and healthy reaction to have to a rough situation like this. It's actually scary and really dangerous when ppl suppress their emotions and stay stoic. Processing is a single good cry or minute of pain, and you're actually great after that. Suppression seems "OK" but it builds up and up like poison and starts wreaking havoc in the most terrible ways. Ruining health, ruining sleep which also ruins health, ruining mental health which ruins physical health AND decreases social abilities and that decreases ability to care in that work and care for yourself and close ones and care to get help.
It's really really worse to NOT just go and have that good healthy cry in proper company!
I had tear watching it I had septic 8 years ago, I was in a rehab hospital recovering from surgery I start to feel unwell the nurse didn't do much to when I push her to do check me out when she did I had high pulse rate and low blood pressure. They had to rush me to a bigger hospital. I was place in ICU for mu birthday weekend. If I didn't push I don't know if I would be live. Good to hear he out of hospital and feeling better
What a pair of hero's!
A wonderful woman you hope stays in the profession. I'd love her to be there if I ever needed an ambulance. ❤
To feel is to be human. We need more people like these paramedics.
So much respect. EMTs do NOT get paid enough!! I wanted to become one until I saw the pay. Yes, work is not just about the pay but I’m not working 10 hrs for next to nothing. I assume this job is so satisfying but it seems EXTREMELY stressful.
My mother worked in HR and she used to say you don’t get paid for the hours nor for the education, you get paid for the responsibility. EMTs carry SO much responsibility!
I went on my first ambulance ride from the hospital 2 years ago (mental stuff) and they were really trying their best to keep my mind off of the horror my brain was being put through, I went through a very messy and horrible breakup (for both parties) and I essentially hit the end of the line one night and needed to go somewhere or do something to stop myself from you know.
They also knew when to just not talk to me to, so they shut off the light in the back of the ambulance, and just knowing she was there still with me but silent was more than enough for me. I just didn't want to be alone.
I have nothing but the hight of respect for you
God bless you all for caring
Thank you so much for what you do I could imagine the stuff you see
Thankyou guys. What an amazing job you do
She’s amazing
We lost our youngest brother to sepsis last year. He had just turned 24.
Incredible compassion. Would never see that with paramedics in NYC.
Keep up the amazing work you both do ❤
Nothing but heros!
As a fellow Keith with no wife or children, this hit a bit close to home!
Take the win when you can girl x
I thought people were going to be unnecessarily racist in the comments. I'm pleasantly suprised. It's very rare. Alot of people are racist.
Shes such an empath :( 🙏
God bless her
Thanks to NHS for looking after me and keeping me healthy and good from Blantyre uk britian 😊😊😊😊
Amazing paramedics
She needs to get a handle of it though to become part of this job. I was a firefighter for quite a few years and I saw some guys like this to start with and they never made it because I am telling you, the things you see, do and most importantly the things you just are unable to do if you let them, will take you down fast, if you do not learn to leave them behind.
Bless her, I hope she goes on to do great things and live her dream
Thank you, Dear Lord, that he’s still with us…amen. 🙏🏻♥️
No, thank the paramedics.
Your god did fuckall to save him.
@@DrWhoFan_Jfinally someone said it🙏😭
Incredible ❤
What wonderful women, not easy working in the care field but a rewarding role caring for people. ❤❤❤
People and the Media, BBC especially, slate emergency services any chance they can get but never appreciate the incredible and difficult work that they do day in day out, no recognition whatsoever, jut expected to get on with it because that’s the job, until a mistake is made, then its full blown coverage.
We should be paying these people whatever they want.
Show this to Rishi who is trying divide our great country!
Such heroes ❤ I truly hope the NHS all get raises somehow, very soon!
Thankfully they didn't end up digging his own grave...
Well done great lady
It's criminal how little this lot get paid.
As a paramedic myself, this case to me demonstrates a failure of our ambulance services to correctly mentor newly qualified paramedics. The panic in her eyes, and the lack of action to begin preparing for resuscitation (getting out defibrillator pads or a BVM, attempting vascular access etc - even when verbalising that she suspects the patient may be going into ventricular fibrillation), shows her inexperience. We should not be in a world when someone 10 minutes out of university is paired with an EMT and put out on the streets to provide care to patients unsupported, however we are in a position now where we have such terrible staff retention that there aren't enough experienced (Band 6+) paramedics to support these NQPs.
Ah, of course an EMT is beneath you and unable to play an effective part of the team. Ive been an EMT for 12 years and in the ambulance service for 17. Ive helped many NQPs find their feet and supported them in applying their theoretical knowledge in real world practice. I, and many other experienced technicians, know the job just as well as you pal. You might have a higher scope, but the assessment and decision making from us is just as good as yours.
Ultimately though, an EMT is not a registered healthcare professional though are they, and yes there are many fantastic EMT's out there who support paramedics but the fact is that NQPs require the support of a more senior paramedic to help them develop in their career. The scope of assessment and management skills taught to a paramedic is more complex and detailed than that taught to an EMT or they wouldn't be two separate jobs - one of which is registered with medicines exemptions and prescribing eligibility, the other of which is not
@user-oz3nu8iq1f You've been indoctrinated to believe this. Tell me. You never did any time as an ECA, tech or otherwise... straight to paramedic. Am I right?
EMT for 6 years...
Indoctrinated to believe that I didn't have the clinical abilities of a paramedic when I was an EMT because I hadn't spent 3 years at university at that point... OK.
Most dangerous thing in this job is an EMT who thinks they're a paramedic - no registration, no responsibility
THEY ALL DONT GET PAID ENOUGH
Happy international women's day ™
Mashallah such a sweet hijaabi Muslim lady ❤
Bloodyhell he nearly ended up digging his own grave then
Jaysus
Paramedic is one of those jobs I don't think I could do, the stress would break me overtime. Maybe its one of those things you develop a thicker skin for after awhile but I don't think I could see people in trouble and not be highly stressed about it
It's good. Giving a good cry is a 1000 times better than swallowing it. All the better with a colleague there. They can take turns. They'll be healthier grieving what is to grieve while it's fresh. It festers if we don't. So all the love to all of them, who are there for ppl in need. For us. But really also, for themselves and each other in these moments that are scary and just rough.
Our societies have a lot of actually social growing to do. We're barely teenagers yet, as societies. Some still being toddlers. No society has reached maturity before we're not in a place where all base needs of ppl are covered and guaranteed (e.g. safety and freedom, community and self-expression, base physical & mental and emotional & spiritual needs, external and internal). We'll not be mature societies, till we acknowledge "Human dignity shall be inviolable" in live AND death for real and give ppl both, grace in living AND choosing not to. We'll not be able to attend to ppl for real so long as we put all burdens on them to stay alive no matter the circumstances with no way out and regardless of their suffering. Because only when ppl can claim the right to leave when live gets too rough, is when we'll be going all out to fight and assure that quality of life IS good for ppl across all of society.
These things are not this traumatic because human lives end. It's this traumatic because watching ppl possibly die without being loved and cared for and supported on their last journey, is utterly heartbreaking and scary to everyone still having that life before them, with little hope they'll be any better at old age. Particularly ppl working in Emergency related services are barely left with resources to attend to their own lives and any families and friends. They should be working less than anybody else, with such a straining line of work. But here we are, still messing up priorities as societies.
How long, until we take the things that matter most really seriously?
Poor man
This is the hardest job ever I wud feel upset too
I am from Portugal but lived in UK for 4 years... the ambulance noise is sooooooooo loud...louder than Hell louuuuuud...
There are politicians that look at this job and have the audacity to say that they are being paid a fair wage…..
its a shame most of the jobs they go to dont require an ambulance
I tried to find a comment from the nhs staff or the man lol goid job
Hi, I hope it's okay to ask, could you please add a warning for the flashing lights in this video please? Thank you so much!
Its literally called Ambulance? Of course there is going to be flashing lights!
@@keyboardsmash1231😭
I didn't know grave digging was still its own job. I assumed they just hire a construction firm with a digger or something.
SHE WEARS A VEIL ; unstrutable
All PR ive had awful experiencees with paramedics some can be very rude and on a power trip for some reason. Not all but still
❤⭐🧚♀️⭐❤👍🌹🧚♀️🧚♀️🕊🧚♀️🧚♀️🌹great work 👍⭐
Add Canada 🇨🇦 to your Flags❤😊
that's what happens to my kind. We don't have any families, children, friends or loved ones, we don't have animals. Why? Because there is no time for a Dog for example. We work until we die. We die alone in a dark rom. Hopefully in our sleep pain free 🙂
Watching this hurts my heart watched sepsis slowly kill my nan over a 2 week period worse thing ever to witness 😭
Breath in and out 😮💨😮😨😮💨😯😮😮💨😮💨😯🥺☹️😞😞😞😞😞😞😞😞🙏🏽
£11 per hour