Gordon and Shirley broke my heart, the way he was holding her foot on the ambulance and the female paramedic near to tears, I really felt for them. Poor man, I just wanted to hug him.
Same here I noticed that as well. Gordon holding his wife’s foot in ambulance. It’s letting her know that he was there and that touched me very deeply. And Laura broke my heart when she started crying and you knew what she was remembering as a 12 year-old little girl and that just had my tears.
Fascinating. One doctor for 2.8 million people? As a German EMS doctor I just can't imagine this scenario. In Berlin, for 3.4 million people we have 27 doctors on the road, 2 in the air and if needed 5 more for inter-hospital intensive care transport.
Natürlich ist 1 zu wenig, jedoch muss man sagen, dass das Angloamerikanische System nicht auf NEFs basiert. Wenn man sieht wofür bei uns einer raus geht, kann man ab und zu nur lachen.
I know what it’s like losing your partner after so many years and to be left behind is tragic. Life just isn’t the same. You can’t look at the same things because you used to look at it together. You can’t go to your favourite restaurant anymore because it was his favourite restaurant too. It’s just the way it goes. There’s always one left behind to grieve the one that’s gone. My husband passed away on our front lawn actually before he hit our front lawn. He passed away never to be brought back and it’s been 3 1/2 years And I still have great difficulty going out and doing anything without him. It’s just the way it is. The first time I went out, I could hear his voice back when I was just dating him telling me about different places here and there around the lower mainland and I relished in that knowledge of knowing that this is going to be our life together. We were one week shy of our 31st anniversary all the presents were bought and then to have the date come and go with just tears being shed. I never knew so much pain that goes through your heart but I knew then that my heart would always be in pain because he wasn’t around. It’s so great being in a long marriage, but it’s so hard when you lose them in death. My heart goes out to Gordon because I knew he was going to lose his wife and to see him fill up in tears at home and in the ambulance made tears come to my eyes. I know what that’s like seeing a paramedic work on your partner and you’re there, hoping and hoping that they’re going to work their magic and bring them back but sometimes they’re never going to come back.😢
The Morse Coder Translator had such a distinct way of wording things. Hula girls? Island maidens. Why’d he stop hiring a nurse? ‘Perhaps maybe the cost’. Does he need hearing aids? He has, but he’s better now (no he was not 😂)
Great insight into the paramedics and what a fantastic job they do as do the call handlers too. Yes this one made me cry too when Gordon was in the ambulance with his wife 😢 Would have liked to know what happened to Paul who was on the bathroom floor. He did not look well at all.
When you call 911 in the US and for some reason the line disconnect, they call you back to make sure you're allright. Why's that not anywhere in Europe?
my mum shops in manchester at 86 years old she doesnt see anything bad or mad its weird ,i go with her some days and see crackys mc donalds fighting banglas wheel chair nutters , my mum cant see it .
Less time for patients on the wards? If patients are sent home too early, before it's clinically safe, a lot of them will end up needing another ambulance and clogging the system up even more. More resources would be a better answer, but that would mean more money.
Yes, but so often they cannot be released because of lack of nursing homes, homelessness or being unable to live independently. That’s a huge problem in Ireland as well.
A lot of the time the wards are trying to get patients out when clinically ready and for those that have their own home, families and carers in place or well enough to carry on like nothing happened, the system works perfectly. Where the system fails is for 99% of the time the elderly. If they cam in from home but have to either be discharged with care or into a care home or nursing home, this is where there is the struggle as there arnt the services available, especially nhs services. There are plenty of private but there "rent" for a bedroom can be upwards of £500 A WEEK!!!!!
Gordon and Shirley broke my heart, the way he was holding her foot on the ambulance and the female paramedic near to tears, I really felt for them. Poor man, I just wanted to hug him.
I sat there and cried 💔 so so sad !
Same here I noticed that as well. Gordon holding his wife’s foot in ambulance. It’s letting her know that he was there and that touched me very deeply. And Laura broke my heart when she started crying and you knew what she was remembering as a 12 year-old little girl and that just had my tears.
Aww❤😢. Seeing elderly people, almost crying here. How he loves his wife. :(
If we could all be so blessed.
And now to have lost her a few days later must’ve just broke him right up. Poor guy.
Poor husband of the lady in cardiac arrest . It’s the Seniors that tug at my heart after spending many years together ❤
This one is breaking my heart... I just wanted to give Gordon the biggest hug, and be there for him..
Fascinating. One doctor for 2.8 million people? As a German EMS doctor I just can't imagine this scenario. In Berlin, for 3.4 million people we have 27 doctors on the road, 2 in the air and if needed 5 more for inter-hospital intensive care transport.
Natürlich ist 1 zu wenig, jedoch muss man sagen, dass das Angloamerikanische System nicht auf NEFs basiert. Wenn man sieht wofür bei uns einer raus geht, kann man ab und zu nur lachen.
true, but we also have advanced paramedics and other kinda stuff. we seriously need more MERIT Doctors though
Das liegt daran dass die viel fortschrittlicher als wir sind und Paramedics haben
@@alpen_rider_1259 Mit Fortschritt hat das wenig zu tun, es ist halt ein anderes System.
@@beansmeanzwe need more paramedics, docs , nurses etc period … we all know where our taxes should be going 👍👍
I have so much respect for these people who do this job
I live in Wigan and it's amazing that there is not enough space at the hospital and not enough ambulances on duty for the people who need them.
It’s not just a Wigan issue it’s a uk wide issue blame the government
My sister in law lives in Wigan with my American brother. How would you explain Wigan as someone who's never been?
I know what it’s like losing your partner after so many years and to be left behind is tragic. Life just isn’t the same. You can’t look at the same things because you used to look at it together. You can’t go to your favourite restaurant anymore because it was his favourite restaurant too. It’s just the way it goes. There’s always one left behind to grieve the one that’s gone. My husband passed away on our front lawn actually before he hit our front lawn. He passed away never to be brought back and it’s been 3 1/2 years And I still have great difficulty going out and doing anything without him. It’s just the way it is. The first time I went out, I could hear his voice back when I was just dating him telling me about different places here and there around the lower mainland and I relished in that knowledge of knowing that this is going to be our life together. We were one week shy of our 31st anniversary all the presents were bought and then to have the date come and go with just tears being shed. I never knew so much pain that goes through your heart but I knew then that my heart would always be in pain because he wasn’t around. It’s so great being in a long marriage, but it’s so hard when you lose them in death.
My heart goes out to Gordon because I knew he was going to lose his wife and to see him fill up in tears at home and in the ambulance made tears come to my eyes. I know what that’s like seeing a paramedic work on your partner and you’re there, hoping and hoping that they’re going to work their magic and bring them back but sometimes they’re never going to come back.😢
I love Paul. He’s confident in his profession.
I’m in the U.K. and sad to say I feel
the NHS slipping from our grasp 😢
i am so sorry for the loss of your partner beyond heartbreaking your partner will always be beside you with you in spirit 🙏🙏🙏❤️🫶🫶
Never a greater honor than to serve your fellow man.
7:24 it’s like listening to the phone call to the ambulance about my uncle all over again.
The Morse Coder Translator had such a distinct way of wording things. Hula girls? Island maidens. Why’d he stop hiring a nurse? ‘Perhaps maybe the cost’. Does he need hearing aids? He has, but he’s better now (no he was not 😂)
Great insight into the paramedics and what a fantastic job they do as do the call handlers too. Yes this one made me cry too when Gordon was in the ambulance with his wife 😢 Would have liked to know what happened to Paul who was on the bathroom floor. He did not look well at all.
When you call 911 in the US and for some reason the line disconnect, they call you back to make sure you're allright. Why's that not anywhere in Europe?
it is..
Something about the medic with the beard sounded off. I thought he was rather sharp and condescending towards his colleague
Yes same he was rather belittling towards his colleague
I'm glad I'm not the only one!!
I noticed it too I get a feeling those two don’t get on well at all off cameras too
The medic with a beard is a bully .he can't have a normal conversation with his colleague
Like to be center of attention a Little too
great show
please put that next one up
It was a sad story.
What happened with the other patients? Especially that guy caught under the tram?
I wouldn’t have a job if i was assigned to always work with guy with bread. hes cocky rude very inconsiderate of other employees & their feelings!!
That guy with the beard is rude I’d hate to work with him.. and he’s a magistrate!
I really want to know the cost of that whole tram operation 🤔😶
my mum shops in manchester at 86 years old she doesnt see anything bad or mad its weird ,i go with her some days and see crackys mc donalds fighting banglas wheel chair nutters , my mum cant see it .
Problem is population increase worldwide
Population increasing much faster than the amount of available resources.
And countless failed governments not taking this into consideration
Has the NHS ever changed policy since it began ?
No amount of policy change is going to fix the damage done by decades of underfunding
Pelican do you never want to Visit the USA ever again
❤❤🩹❤❤❤🩹❤ 👼👼👼
The NHS needs to plan less time for patients on the wards before it colapses completely.keep things moving along.
Less time for patients on the wards? If patients are sent home too early, before it's clinically safe, a lot of them will end up needing another ambulance and clogging the system up even more. More resources would be a better answer, but that would mean more money.
Yes, but so often they cannot be released because of lack of nursing homes, homelessness or being unable to live independently. That’s a huge problem in Ireland as well.
A lot of the time the wards are trying to get patients out when clinically ready and for those that have their own home, families and carers in place or well enough to carry on like nothing happened, the system works perfectly. Where the system fails is for 99% of the time the elderly. If they cam in from home but have to either be discharged with care or into a care home or nursing home, this is where there is the struggle as there arnt the services available, especially nhs services. There are plenty of private but there "rent" for a bedroom can be upwards of £500 A WEEK!!!!!
6000 USD a month for nursing rehab home care for an elderly alert woman who lost her legs....CA, usa
South African hospitals don't have patients on the wards so ridiculously long.why carry on doing something that doesn't work ?
Could of just said a cooked breakfast
You don't need breaths anymore just compressions
Breaths for children first