Placeholder Content Image

Heart broken widow speaks following the death of her husband

<p>A heartbroken widow has opened up about her husband dying in her warms, while the couple waited over 40 minutes for an ambulance to arrive.</p> <p>Stewart Grant, aged 82, suffered breathing difficulties at 12:30 pm on January 29 at his Phillip Island home in Victoria, but paramedics were not dispatched immediately despite his family calling triple-zero.</p> <p>His wife of more than 50 years, Carol Grant, said she was initially told no one was coming.</p> <p>But a short time later, Mr Grant stopped breathing.</p> <p>An operator called back 12 minutes after the initial conversation and counted with Ms Grant while she performed CPR on her husband.</p> <p>“She asked me to get him out of bed, and put him on the floor, lie him on his back and to start CPR,” she said.</p> <p>After the ambulance was finally dispatched, an alert system to find trained volunteers was initiated and three locals came to help.</p> <p>“I’d just like to thank them for everything they tried to do. I’m just so grateful for their help as I couldn’t have continued (performing CPR),” Ms Grant said.</p> <p>“Even though it wasn’t successful, I’m just so grateful to them for trying.”</p> <p>Health Minister Martin Foley said the case was tragic, and told reporters on Thursday that there were issues with how the call was prioritised by the triple-zero call service ESTA.</p> <p>“As I understand, the issue wasn’t so much the dispatch of the ambulance. The paramedics were there, other volunteers in the nearby community were there, once the call was distributed,” he said.</p> <p>State Opposition Leader Matthew Guy said the case was horrifying and demanded an explanation from the government.</p> <p>“If it’s the call-out and dispatch system, then it’s the government’s to manage ... It’s just not good enough to say it’s someone else’s fault. How the hell can this happen in Victoria in 2022?” he asked.</p> <p>Premier Daniel Andrews sent his condolences and said the coroner would examine the tragedy.</p> <p>“This pandemic has made the job of our ambos really tough, they’re all working as hard as they can and any time that a patient dies I know that that’s carried by our paramedics; they feel it very heavily,” he told reporters.</p> <p>Ambulance Victoria has also sent its sincere condolences to the Grant family and said it had undertaken a review of the case.</p> <p>Mr Grant’s case is not the only recent death in Victoria following a long wait for paramedics.</p> <p>Victorian paramedics experienced their busiest quarter on record in the last three months of 2021. Data shows ambulances were called to 91,397 code-one cases during that period, a 16% increase on the same time in 2020.</p> <p><em>Images: 7News</em></p>

Caring

Placeholder Content Image

One last look for dying woman

<p><em>Image: Ambulance NSW </em></p> <p>Two paramedics in NSW have given a very special treat to one palliative care patient, taking her to The Three sisters in the Blue Mountains for one last look.</p> <p>Penrith woman Evelyn Collins suffered from dementia and was diagnosed with Leukaemia in October, and as part of her treatment is taken to Katoomba’s Blue Mountains Hospital for blood transfusions.</p> <p>While under the care of paramedics Judy Andrews and Mike Horan, the 85-year-old was treated to a heart-warming surprise.</p> <p>“We were asked to take her to Blue Mountains as it was quieter and even though she had dementia as soon as we walked outside she said the fresh air was beautiful,” Ms Andrews told the<span> </span><em>Western Weekender</em>.</p> <p>“As she was not at risk and just receiving treatment and we had a quiet moment, we decided to take her to the lookout to show her the view on the way.”</p> <p>She added that she never could’ve predicted the impact the moment had on Ms Collins and her family.</p> <p>“We wheeled her down and as she was looking around she had this moment of clarity and said she remembered coming there a long time ago with her husband,” Ms Andrews said of the experience.</p> <p>“She had this beautiful glow and look of happiness on her face so I took a photo to send to her daughter Kim, who said the family was overwhelmed that we would take the time to do that.”</p> <p>Ms Collins said it was “lovely” that the paramedics thought to take her there.</p> <p>“It made me feel special. It makes all the difference when you are treated with patience and kindness,” she said.</p> <p>After two years on the pandemic frontline, Ms Andrews said paramedics pride themselves on providing high levels of care to each patient.</p> <p>After sharing the photo on Facebook, NSW Ambulance were flooded with comments on the “beautiful gesture”.</p> <p>“Thank you for being so generous … the world is a better place having you both in it,” one woman commented.</p> <p>While another wrote: “It’s these special moments that make the job mean something. In all the usual nightmares that we all face, it’s these times that have the biggest effect on us. These times and these memories where you become a part of someone’s journey – whether it’s the beginning or the end, it’s these moments that stick with us forever.”</p> <p>“So much respect for our first responders. This is the most beautiful act of kindness,” added another.</p>

Caring

Placeholder Content Image

Royal baby: Ambulance spotted near Meghan and Harry’s home

<p>A private ambulance escorted by police has been spotted driving through Windsor as fans eagerly wait for the announcement of the arrival of Baby Sussex.</p> <p>The ambulance was seen on Thursday afternoon local time close to where Duchess Meghan and Prince Harry reside.</p> <p>The birth has so far been a mystery, as the couple announced that few aspects will be kept private.</p> <p>Simon McCoy, presenter for <em>BBC News,</em> tweeted: “Private ambulance with police escort seen driving through Windsor #justsaying.”</p> <p>Many have already placed bets on girl names for the baby. William Hill was offering 4/1 on Diana, with Allegra and Grace at 8/1.</p> <blockquote class="twitter-tweet tw-align-center" data-lang="en-gb"> <p dir="ltr">Private ambulance with police escort seen driving through Windsor. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/justsaying?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#justsaying</a></p> — Simon McCoy (@BBCSimonMcCoy) <a href="https://twitter.com/BBCSimonMcCoy/status/1123927814439428096?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">2 May 2019</a></blockquote> <p>The news comes after Buckingham Palace announced Prince Harry’s trip to the Netherlands next week, to mark the one year countdown to next year's Invictus Games, convincing some speculators that the Duchess has already given birth.</p> <p>But according to <em><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.thesun.co.uk/fabulous/" target="_blank">Fabulous Digital</a></em>, the 37-year-old is yet to go into labour, with a palace insider saying she has “categorically not given birth”.</p> <p>As the world prepares for the announcement, royal fans are on the edge of their seats with anticipation.</p>

Caring

Placeholder Content Image

Doctor leaves rude note on ambulance

<p>Health professionals of all varieties play an important role in society, but as is the case in any industry this doesn’t mean they’re all going to get along with each other. Never has this rung truer than in today’s story emerging from the UK, when an ambulance driver was left stunned by a rude note left on his vehicle by a doctor.</p> <p>Paramedic Zain Ali Kazmi found a note on his ambulance after parking in a bay at Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield, England, and he couldn’t have been more stunned.</p> <p>The note read, “Think about others before you block others’ car”, and was signed “A&amp;E Consultant”.</p> <p><iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/plugins/post.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Ftscintnewschannel%2Fposts%2F2039600809653933&amp;width=500" width="500" height="752" style="border: none; overflow: hidden;" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true"></iframe></p> <p>Kazmi was fuming in a post on Facebook: “Came out of ED to find this! Another note on an ambulance this time from an A&amp;E consultant outside A&amp;E because he was blocked in a bay where he shouldn’t have parked himself!”</p> <p>“We get enough of this stuff from the public. It’s not nice seeing it from another health care professional.”</p> <p>“There are some spaces there to park in but normally the police park there. It’s not a staff car park. It’s outside A&amp;E.</p> <p>“He was going round taking pictures at first and then he left the note. But he didn’t leave a note on the other consultant’s car that was there.</p> <p>“You don’t just leave a note on an ambulance. It’s not the way to deal with it.”</p> <p>What are your thoughts? Do you think the doctor is out of line?</p>

Insurance

Placeholder Content Image

Paramedics shocked to find extremely rude note left on ambulance

<p>Paramedics are out there every day, saving lives, but according to one heartless driver, that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t follow the same road rules as the rest of us.</p> <p>Yesterday, the West Midlands Ambulance Service in the UK took to Twitter to share their disappointment after not one but two incidents of paramedics being told to move their ambulances to let drivers pass.</p> <p>“Just heard from one of our staff that two crews were treating a cardiac arrest patient today – the most serious case we can attend – and someone banged on the side of the ambulance asking them to move as they couldn’t get their car out!” the WMAS tweeted, adding that no matter what, patients come first.</p> <p>Sadly, it wasn’t the first such incident of the day. Hours earlier, while paramedics were desperately working to save a man’s life, a selfish homeowner left a disgraceful note on their vehicle.</p> <p><img width="500" height="333" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/45633/crew-alerted-an-extremely-poorly-patient-to-hospital-minimal-on-scene-time-arrived-at-hospital-t_500x333.jpg" alt="Crew -alerted -an -extremely -poorly -patient -to -hospital -minimal -on -scene -time -arrived -at -hospital -t" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>It reads, “You may be saving lives, but don’t park your van in a stupid place and block my drive."</p> <p>According to the ambulance crew, who had been treating a man vomiting blood, they were parked outside the Birmingham property for less than half an hour.</p> <p>“Sometimes we just don’t know quite what to say,” the WMAS said. “Our staff will always try and park considerately, but sometimes, there just isn’t time.”</p> <p>Both cases have outraged social media users, describing the people responsible as “disgusting", “selfish” and “narrow-minded”.</p> <p>Tell us in the comments below, what do you think about the note? Is it ever acceptable to berate emergency services like this?</p>

Insurance

Placeholder Content Image

What I learnt from my late-night emergency visit to hospital

<p><em><strong>Rosie Hersch, 68, is a retired pharmacist, whose hobbies include studying, cooking and theatre. Her biggest passion is travel and like the song says, “I've been everywhere man (well almost).”</strong></em></p> <p>We’ve all had that déjà vu feeling and this was my latest. There I was one early evening in January watching a WWII film, the award-winning <em>The Pianist</em>. The Germans were firing at the resistance fighters in the Warsaw ghetto and the resistance fighters were valiantly holding the fort with weapons that had been smuggled into the ghetto that were really no match for the Nazi fire power. People were being shot at close range, blood was spurting everywhere when suddenly I noticed a trickle down my face. Soon that became a pouring torrent gushing from my nose. I yelled to my husband Peter to get me a cloth with ice, struggling to speak as blood was also pouring down the back of my throat. With the background noise of grenade blasts and machine gun firing coming from the television for a split second I was in another place, a surreal world and a thought flashed through my mind that this was not happening. The blood did not stop streaming from my face and 15 minutes later Peter knew he had to call an ambulance. I have heard many stories of ambulances not coming for hours but my guys arrived within seven minutes. They took one look at this blood soaked woman and said, “Right you are going to Cabrini Hospital,” which is fortunately only two kilometres from home.</p> <p>I have never been in an ambulance so the ride to the hospital felt like a dream. The bleeding had become so much more intense that when we arrived at emergency the ambos demanded I be seen straight away. I never did get to thank these guys. They were so professional, sympathetically reassuring and respectful, not to mention very handsome.</p> <p>A lovely looking young doctor, probably the same age as my youngest son-in-law and with very similar looks, came immediately to my aid. Though I was extremely stressed and anxious I still had the usual “Rosie inquisitive pharmacy trait” to ask 20 questions of the doctor. “Where did you study medicine?” was question number one. Of course my voice was rather muffled as I was holding a blood soaked gauze, squeezing the bridge of my nose as instructed and gagging on the blood sliding down the back of my throat.</p> <p>He told me he studied in Scotland. This intrigued me as he had no Scottish accent. “Just a minute,” I said, “Where is your accent?” “My hometown is in England,” he replied with a smile and a wink.</p> <p>While he was spraying local anaesthetic into my nostrils, using tongs to widen the opening so he could see where to cortarise the burst vessels a nurse tried in vain (pun intended) to get a blood sample from a vein on the top of my right hand. “Oh no,” she said “I have collapsed the vein and have to try somewhere else.” My hand blew up immediately into a bubbly bruise which will take weeks to correct itself.</p> <p>Meanwhile the local anaesthetic hit the back of my throat as if it was not bad enough drowning in blood I now had this acrid foul taste in my mouth. Doc was then coming at me with a silver nitrate stick to burn and fuse the broken capilleries. Meanwhile nurse ratchet was poking the inside of my right elbow as if I was a pin cushion. Doc Drew saw what a mess she was making so when she had drawn only some blood he said, “That will be enough”, to which she replied, “but you wanted for more other samples?” He thankfully said, looking into my eyes, “That will do nurse.” Thank God, I thought.</p> <p>So Dr Drew instilled the silver nitrate stick. Not only did it not stop the bleeding, I had a stinging feeling from my eye tooth right up my cheek and the blood was now all over the white hospital gown and the doctor. This procedure had to be done twice more before the bleeding stopped. I had lost a considerable amount of blood. And if that wasn’t enough the doctor then said I need to insert an IV drip needle into the other inside elbow because if bleeding reoccurs we can quickly connect a drip containing adrenaline to cause vasoconstriction. Gratefully he was not going to leave that procedure to the nurse. As he put the needle in I could feel blood trickling down my arm and felt him wipe it off. So there I now was a little calmer with a few pinholes in my body and having been changed twice out of blood stained hospital gowns.</p> <p>It was now 9.30 pm, and I was told I was being admitted to a ward overnight for observation. At 1.15am I was finally wheeled out of the bright lights of emergency, far away from the woman in the next cubicle who had been vomiting and dry retching all night and a couple of children distressed and crying. Their suffering made me quite upset. We arrived at 1 North to be greeted by this very tall skinny black guy and in the dark the whites of his eyes glowed. Again as he took my obs I queried him on where he had come from. He was well spoken and quite amazing looking and said Sudan.</p> <p>I tried to sleep but of course there were the usual disturbances from other patients in this four bed ward. Then there were the bright lights in the hallway, the distant sounds of patient buzzers going off intermittently, the nurses taking our obs, and of course those wonderfully comfortable hospital beds where one slips and slides on crisp white sheets, and lumpy pillows.</p> <p>The next morning 7am came and the joint was jumping. First off the rank a new set of obs taken, followed by the water ladies bringing fresh jugs and glasses, followed by the cleaners, followed by the lady wheeling in a computer on a stand taking meal orders, followed by someone delivering newspapers, followed by a man making up the beds, followed by the delivery of brekki, then someone else with the coffee made in the corridor on an actual espresso machine that she wheeled along on another stand (it was great coffee by the way). This was followed shortly after by another woman wanting my morning tea order and finally a woman handing out cards for those seeking the wisdom and comfort of a religious person, in my case a visit from a Rabbi or some other learned orthodox person. It was only 8.30am. Then there was the constant stream of physiotherapists, doctors and specialists visiting the ward including my physician and haematologist and later a gorgeous ENT specialist giving me instruction on what to do in the event of another occurrence. No wonder hospitals like Cabrini are the most expensive in this country.</p> <p>While waiting for Peter to pick me up at my discharged time of 2pm I pondered the fact of how lucky I am that I can afford private insurance and the silver service of this hospital. Sure beats a public hospital and I realised two things from this experience, firstly how life can change in a split second and secondly how lucky I am to have such a caring supportive husband and family, the fabric of a most fortunate a life.</p> <p><em><strong>Do you have a story to share? Share your story with the Over60 community <a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/community/contributor/community-contributor/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">today</span></a>. </strong></em></p>

Caring

Placeholder Content Image

Prince William opens up about his time as an ambulance pilot

<p>We don’t hear much about Prince William’s time as an RAF Search and Rescue pilot back in 2013, but in a rare interview, the Duke of Cambridge has revealed just how much of an emotional toll the role took on him.</p> <p>Talking to <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37412350" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">BBC Future</span></strong></a>, the young royal opened up about the many challenges and hardships he faced during his time in the air force. “There are some very sad, dark moments and you know we talk about it a lot,” he said. “But it's hard. You try not to take it away with you but it can be quite difficult.”</p> <p>William says sharing his experiences with fellow pilots has helped him overcome the emotional trauma of his work. “If you share the same, in some cases, sad incidents, then if you can get over it together by being able to talk about it in the future,” he said. “Being a close team you come away with a collective way of dealing with it together and it helps you move on to whatever you've got to do next.”</p> <p>Take a look at the interview above as Prince William looks back on his RAF days.</p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/news/news/2016/09/prince-william-helps-fallen-elderly-man/"><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Prince William rushes to the aid of fallen 72-year-old</strong></span></em></a></p> <p><a href="/news/news/2016/09/prince-william-dances-and-bakes-at-youth-centre/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Prince William shows off dance moves and baking skills at London youth centre</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/news/news/2016/09/princess-charlotte-first-official-visit-to-canada/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Charlotte and George to accompany Kate and William on official tour</strong></em></span></a></p>

News

Placeholder Content Image

Panic as air ambulance arrives at Buckingham Palace

<p>A cyclist has been left fighting for his life yesterday after he was hit by a car outside Buckingham Palace.</p> <p>As an air ambulance landed outside the Queen’s residence, the onlooking crowd began to panic.</p> <p>American tourist, Dave, told the Evening Standard: "The helicopter landed and all the medics came running out down the road.</p> <p>"There was a bit of a panic, nobody knew what was going on."</p> <p><img width="487" height="" src="https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CrqwsWeWAAA_7_G.jpg" style="height: 275px; left: -35px; display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>The helicopter landed just after the changing of the guard has finished at midday. Some bystanders wondered if someone inside the palace had a medical emergency.</p> <p>One onlooker took to Twitter to ask: “A trauma helicopter just landed at Buckingham Palace. What's the news?! #GODSAVETHEQUEEN”</p> <p>But police were quick to confirm the ambulance had been called to Constitution Hill due to the collision.</p> <p>“Police were called shortly before midday, 6 September to reports of a car and bicycle in collision on Constitution Hill, SW1,” said a police spokesperson.</p> <p>“Officers, LAS and London's Air Ambulance are all in attendance.</p> <p>“Officers await an update on the condition of the male rider who has been injured.”</p> <p>The cyclist suffered life-threatening injuries from the crash. There has been no update on his condition.</p> <p><strong>Related links: </strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/08/william-and-kate-open-up-about-parenting/"><em>William and Kate open up about the difficulties of parenting</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/08/prince-williams-warning-about-dating-prince-harry/"><em>Prince William's hilarious warning about dating Prince Harry</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/08/prince-william-admits-he-still-misses-diana-every-single-day/"><em>Prince William admits he still misses Diana every single day</em></a></strong></span></p>

News