A Night of Critical Rescues - Ambulance UK - Medical Documentary

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Banijay Bluelight

Banijay Bluelight

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 38
@carlaferrovecchio950
@carlaferrovecchio950 11 ай бұрын
These two ladies are absolute gems, they’re angels in disguise. Our world needs more ladies like them. ❤
@lakotafire2804
@lakotafire2804 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for another episode. I dearly love them! The 🇬🇧 UK is usually so very nice to us from the USA. 🇺🇸
@butchieblock9118
@butchieblock9118 11 ай бұрын
Working at a desk job like that must be like having a suspense movie on with audio ONLY!! What a stressful occupation!! Thank you for ALL you do!!!
@gsdalpha1358
@gsdalpha1358 11 ай бұрын
But it must be horrible to not know the outcome! In the US, once the 911 call is completed, dispatchers rarely receive a follow-up on the end result.
@Colorista_1
@Colorista_1 11 ай бұрын
As a flight nurse in the USA, I can honestly say that the dispatcher can make all of the difference in the patient outcomes. I’ve had some who thought they knew everything and gave very bad advice to the caller or failed to get appropriate information for the responders (your call can be something completely different than was told to you). On the other hand, they can be awesome at keeping the caller calm and getting vital information to us. It’s a very fine line. As a first responder knowing the final outcome of the patient you worked so hard on is generally never known. It’s a part of medicine that can be incredibly intimate to a critically ill patient. But once you place that patient into the hands of the receiving doctor, your job is done. In decades of work, I rarely if ever know how my patient ultimately did. It’s just part of the job. If you feel the need to know how your patient does, emergency medicine isn’t probably a good fit for you. You need to be able to deliver that patient, clear your mind, and deal with something completely different a few minutes later. It’s a very different type of medicine. Ask current medical personnel and most don’t want anything to do with it. It’s either part of who you are, or it isn’t. You need to be VERY independent, yet follow a strict set rules. It’s a way of life. Y’all have a truly blessed day and thoroughly enjoy watching these wonderful professionals!
@amys2650
@amys2650 11 ай бұрын
Please please upload all of these. The 999 what’s your emergency is one of my favorites
@Ripplesinthewaters
@Ripplesinthewaters 4 күн бұрын
I love it when they say, “is the patient breathing”? Soooo important!
@seti4967
@seti4967 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the uploads of this show.
@sharonread7674
@sharonread7674 11 ай бұрын
Thank you Cagney and Lacey. You DO make a difference every day. Every caring word and gesture, every encouragement, every time you cocoon someone in a blanket, it's like giving someone a hug. You are amazing and so are your colleagues. ❣🙏
@EvelynPeake
@EvelynPeake 8 ай бұрын
I wish our ambulance in south Africa was like UK ambulance use are doing a great job I am a private enrolled nurse here in south Africa cape town I work for my self so I know it a very stressed job
@Duncan_McFly82
@Duncan_McFly82 9 ай бұрын
These should have way more likes and views!
@dustinplatt6882
@dustinplatt6882 11 ай бұрын
0:43 i swear using this as a thumbnail would have increased viewership by 525%
@cybercat1531
@cybercat1531 11 ай бұрын
XD
@altavanrensburg9423
@altavanrensburg9423 8 ай бұрын
What a wonderful and caring service these people are providing for the general public, but they spend too much time on srlf inflicted injurues related to drugs and not seeing progress. Those patients should be last to get attention and the really sick peple should get the care. The really sick people have the hope and 57:56 concentrate onbthe peopke who need abdvdeserve help thecwill to survive, but these druggies and drunkies are doing it to themselves and then the valuable care is taken caway from the people who realky needs help.
@peace-love-on-the-right
@peace-love-on-the-right 11 ай бұрын
Video did not load!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@carlaferrovecchio950
@carlaferrovecchio950 11 ай бұрын
240 million people a year dial 911 in the United States 🇺🇸 that’s a lot of emergencies. 😮
@QuiltLady
@QuiltLady 19 күн бұрын
But in the UK they don’t have to worry about some doctor taking their home if they can’t pay. Their doctors don’t have to worry about out being paid. And they take care of everyone, not just the richest. And their meds cost a little or nothing. Our less than transparent corporation based systems do all they can to not pay, except to their stock holders.
@xadosgang861
@xadosgang861 6 ай бұрын
1:27 fighter ?
@deniseackermann7116
@deniseackermann7116 11 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for the 17 year old homeless man. But most 16 year olds are considered to be adults in Britian. He made the decision not to want treatment and kept trying to get away from the paramedics, but they kept with him. NHS in Britian is free, so if he wanted help or warmth, he could go there. But while continuing to follow this man even after he said he did not want their help, they should have moved on. As I watch this, I wonder about the impact on the lives of those who want help. 🤔 the paramedics are understaffed so each call could be life or death. I admire them for trying, but you can't force treatment on adults. With the 3 hours they spent trying to make the guy to accept their help, they could have helped 3 or 4, maybe more people in need, who actually want their help.
@gsdalpha1358
@gsdalpha1358 11 ай бұрын
It was explained that other ambulances were available so it's not like anyone needing emergency services had to wait. And if there'd been an emergency, dispatch would've put the crew back on duty. Didn't you see the part where the two ladies had to get permission from central dispatch to help the teen? I'm sure their procedures specify emergency calls take immediate priority over non-emergency assists.
@kimberlysevastyanenko3798
@kimberlysevastyanenko3798 11 ай бұрын
They would likely have been pulled from that case and sent to a more pressing need had there been one.
@zofiawaters4913
@zofiawaters4913 8 ай бұрын
NHS is not “free”…. Technically…. You work, you pay into National insurance…….. you get NHS for “free”….. a great idea initially…… but for some reason not “worked” on to expand/improve….. and sadly, often taken advantage of….
@ninalefevre3467
@ninalefevre3467 8 ай бұрын
That kid is a bother. He doesn’t really want help. He’s walked away from help a few times now. Let him go and help the people who want it.
@JaneHall-f9j
@JaneHall-f9j 4 ай бұрын
How does a 17 year old discharge himself from hospital?
@johncspine2787
@johncspine2787 4 ай бұрын
@@JaneHall-f9j He gets up..and then..walks out.
@corvettesbme
@corvettesbme 11 ай бұрын
Hoax calls are viciously taking time from real patients.
@zofiawaters4913
@zofiawaters4913 8 ай бұрын
For the hoaxer/s….. read the story of the boy who cried wolf… oh, and HOW DARE YOU?!!!!!!!!!
@snahg2356
@snahg2356 7 ай бұрын
She's probably had her two year shots at the Dr that day and it's having a bad reaction to them. Those shots eventually killed my son. Gave him seizures and it was downhill from there, to he passed at 14.
@KeyairaSymoneBrown
@KeyairaSymoneBrown 7 ай бұрын
Cjcfvchcɓffudùdhsgstsffaf4fsgddtdtdfsfdfdfdfrferufyfdfyddychg
@johncspine2787
@johncspine2787 4 ай бұрын
She feels really warm, so I’ll bundle her up in a fleece. And yeah, tying up an ambulance chasing some kid who won’t receive proper help..sorry, no. Maybe those ladies are just avoiding work..they spent three hours of a twelve hour shift chasing that kid. “I drank a lot and my nose is bleeding!” Again, no. They’ve got to have non emergency vans for the non emergency stuff..