Bringing this elderly patient back to breathing on his own is such a wonderful effort for all involved. Even the strangers who helped on the seen at the accident. You strangers are Angels also as the medical team.
They never did reveal the poor souls eventual outcome, and after witnessing the whole process it actually kind of upsets me ...because it's a part of me now, just like it's a part of them and a part of him, and you whoever may be reading this.... And I believe every traumatic eventevery story or I hate to call it a story because it's not a story it's a man's life that's not what I meant, what I meant was I believe that any time someone or anyone witnesses something like this, a traumatic event, I feel you need to have you seen the beginning in the middle you need to at least know the ending regardless of the outcome 1:32 simply so that one can get closure or attempt to
There’s a high chance he coded again when they got him to ICU after “stabilizing” him in the ER/A&E. Post Code patients are very unstable for the first 24 hours after ROSC especially being down for a while before getting to hospital.
All 3 of us knew CPR when a neighbour found my husband and he started CPR then when he got tired, my son took over and I did the breathing part, all this until the paramedics came. They worked on him for a half hour when they called his death. That was three years ago and three months and it still shocks me that he’s not alive and with us. Everybody should know how to do CPR.
If I have dementia in my old age, I hope to be a sharp and sassy as Mary. Bless her and her Husband her cares for her. Wishing all the Ambulance crews a Happy Holidays. Thanks for your service
Just a couple weeks ago, midnight on Saturday, I thought I was having a heart attack following a fire alarm in my apartment building. The ambulance and emergency room nurses and doctors were fantastic. this was in spite of a packed emergency room on a weekend. All my love and gratitude to them. This show hits close to home.
@@KevintheRhea Thank you. As we were going to the hospital the paramedic who was with me in the back of the ambulance told me she was glad I decided to go. All to often people think they're ok only to have an attack later, so it was good that I went.
Seeing Dennis reminded me of my grandma on her death bed. The head turned up, mouth open, voice fainter than a wisp of air until nothing would come out. Watching her die was one of the most difficult and out-of-body experiences of my life, despite her being in hospice and as comfortable as she could be. I miss you, Gramma. I wish I could have read your lips to understand your last words to me.
I have done CPR several times. The most taxing was when I was doing HH nursing out in the country and I had to do it on a man 30 minutes before a volunteer firefighter got there to assist with an ambu bag. Another 15-20 minutes before the ambulance got there. The patient didn’t make it even though they tried at the ER also. I gave it my all when I got to the house, so did the ambulance crew.
That is SO true! So painful I was fetal on the floor at night. Husband drove us to ER, with our newborn. ER gave my muscle relaxers. A week later on the floor again. We drove to ER. Muscle relaxers again. 3 days later vomiting and screaming. The ambulance was called. Gall bladder with a side of sever pancreatitis!! Hospitalized for a week to cure pancreatitis before the surgery to remove my gall bladder and a week to recuperate after. Idiots in the ER. They never did any blood tests.
Always better to go in when you get concerned. In 2021, I knew I had gallstones (proven by scan) but ignored the pain due to having a large amount of projects with quick deadlines at work. I passed out at work, was taken by ambulance to hospital and had to have emergency surgery for sepsis.
@@leehalifaxI wasn’t given an option. Manager wouldn’t let me call off sick. I am ended up quitting the day after the surgery because she said either I show back up to work or I am fired
Every one should have a cpr and every one else should learn how to do it God bless you all for especially being paramedics and not only the all of the people who loves to take care of every single person on this planet sincerely Shannon by the way merry Christmas to you all sincerely Shannon
Not sure I heard this exactly but when they said that they shocked him 10 minutes prior DOESN’T mean that his heart was beating and CPR is continued because the heart is so weak. His heart was in V-Fib and those always get shocked as well as they get medication to try to get it out of V-Fib. When the heart is in V-Fib it’s not actually beating but it’s actually quivering. Blood doesn’t circulate when it’s in V-Fib and shocking the patient doesn’t always get the person out of V-Fib and into a regular rhythm. In many cases it may remain in V-Fib or even change to an asystole which is a flat line and those can’t be shocked at all
Here in the u.s we have very similar protocols though it very states to state . All ambulances in my city must have a Lucas device on each apparatus … it is an automatic CPR device and it allows for us to focus on other things … also being able to drive because the machine is still 100% effectively given cpr while the ambulance is in motion
I am surprised they moved the guy in arrest. Here in the US we only move the PT once we achieve ROSC. Every scenario is different but we like to work the codes where they are found to minimize interuptions in compressions. But all went well thats a clinical save
If there is a Stanley thermos in the UK you will have boiling water for 24hrs, put your t-bags in just add milk! Amazing things. Love this series ❤️ from Port Elizabeth Eastern Cape South Africa 🇿🇦
A single mum paramedic that already places a call from a friend to get away from a date because he "doesn't look like his picture". Says all I need to know about someone like that.
That is SO true! So painful I was fetal on the floor at night. Husband drove us to ER, with our newborn. ER gave my muscle relaxers. A week later on the floor again. We drove to ER. Muscle relaxers again. 3 days later vomiting and screaming. The ambulance was called. Gall bladder with a side of sever pancreatitis!! Hospitalized for a week to cure pancreatitis before the surgery and a week to recuperate after. Idiots in the ER. They never did any blood tests.
They are so kind and truly care for all they help save😢 in the US i dont feel that and its a lonely scared feeling.acting more bugged than they are caring for you
I feel so bad about Dennis. He looked awful laying on the floor like that. And he’s all by himself. It just shocks me that he isn’t in a home for the elderly so that he’s watched very closely. So great to hear that all the others are doing better. Thanks for another great video!!🥰🥰🩷🩷 🚑🚑
I’ve seen a lot of cardiac arrests and very few survive and I mean very few. The ones that do survive is because many are already hospitalized and someone is watching the heart monitors and would have seen the patient go into cardiac arrest or the ones that survive in the field is usually because there were other people there who started CPR right away. I’ve done CPR probably 20 times or more and that’s usually when I wasn’t running the code. Many times I was the only medic on scene so I was in charge of the entire code and I also had to do the advanced skills because EMT-B can’t intubate, start an IV or IO, administer medications as well knowing when to shock a patient so my partner was usually doing all of the CPR unless there was another crew (we usually were on our own with first responders or we had no help) or first responders on scene
With the addition of AED's in most public places in the US, the survival rate in cardiac arrest is well over 50% now. Being an RN over 22 years and working in the medical field 26 years, the biggest concern I had with the way this cardiac arrest was run is that they didn't take his airway into consideration. He was in a car accident. Although the accident appeared minor, never assume that there is no injury to the neck. They shouldn't have bent his neck back to insert his airway. They should've done a jaw-thrust maneuver to insert his airway. The team is very efficient with their communication, and the bystanders are a gift from heaven. I'm very relieved to find that the man survived.
@@darcyjeanske821 The 50% figure refers to those admitted following out of hospital cardiac arrest, not general survival rate. Most out of hospital cardiac arrests are terminated on scene or in the ER.
11:02 When I looked on my phone _- I'm drawing while I watch -_ I was like: "Wait..." *I look from driver to passenger and back "I'm confused." Those poor patients! 😂 Trying to differentiate between them 🤣.
Its so crazy to see the difference in culture. We got ppl in their 50s here in the usa permanently in nursing homes. The UK people in their 90s home alone with no help. Wild.
The UK has a very good support system for the elderly. IF they choose to use it. It's much like the assistance available to homeless people in the US. Often the help is available but people choose not to take advantage of it often due to mental illness.
@@PaddyPawsRescueI’d also say that sometimes people don’t know what help or funding is available. My grandmother was an occupational therapist so spent a lot of direct contact time with elderly people and she spent a LOT of time helping people to get both the welfare benefits and the help they needed from local council and other services. In a lot of cases people simply didn’t know that this benefit or this grant existed or that they could get help with something.
@@aaronquevedo9099they didn’t say EVERY person in their 50s lives permanently in a nursing home, they said the US has people in their 50s in nursing homes. Which is a TRUE statement. Nursing homes have skilled units for rehabilitation services specifically and short term patients recovering from surgeries or long hospital stays, who may be significantly younger. Their homes are not suitable for their recovery, making it unsafe the recovery to happen in the home. Source-I’ve worked in more than one nursing home.
I've seen plenty of people here in the US who "should" be in nursing homes. Their families are at their wit's end, but there are either no homes in their region, they are totally unaffordable, etc.
if i remember usually for bystanders who use AED scattered around yes, as it doesnt show the rhythm, whereas paramedics because of the Zoll and defib pads, they can see the rhythm, and its q distinguishable between a cardiac arrest rhythm or rhythm with possible pulse
Europe: We put doctors in fast cars and helicopters to assist with the most critically ill patients in the community. United States: Our EMTs can give aspirin and Tylenol now
@@missg.5940I don’t think the medics in the UK have more training and can do a lot more procedures than medics in the states. I’ve watched a lot of these shows and the skills are usually about the same except we didn’t have a doctor on scene. There may be a couple of cities in the US where they do but those are the bigger cities. Off duty docs have helped us before but they can’t take over patient care as a doctor in the field unless they ride to the ER with the patient. Chest tubes can only be done with a doctor and I have seen them on this show insert them but they are not medics doing it. We also can’t put them in but we can do a needle decompression which is the next best thing to a chest tube. US medics can intubate, insert IO’s, administer a wide variety of meds including Morphine or Fentanyl, sedation like Versed and where I worked we could sedate and paralyze the patient before we intubate and more.
@@ICU306 It said right in the video that these are emergency field doctors who go with ambulance to complicated situations. So they did know, you don’t.
We're I live the Ambo never transport a deceased unless the person dies in public. In every other case they will ask for a mortician/funeral home for the pick-up. The Ambo is needed to save life. Not transport dead people
@@lesleysmith51they definitely played a huge part because had they not started CPR before medics arrived he would have had almost no chance of surviving. Surviving a cardiac arrest in the field is extremely rare and I’ve see a lot of cardiac arrest but very few survived and that’s also true for going into cardiac arrest in the hospital
Here's to people who just step in and start doing CPR on a stranger until the ambulance can arrive. You keep the world turning.
Those people are pretty much the only reason why some people are able to survive cardiac arrest out of hospital
Absolutely!!! Early cpr and defibrillation save more lives than people realize. It’s vital to keep the brain in fresh blood.
❤
Which is why it should be a mandatory lesson taught in all schools
I would certainly try my best
Bringing this elderly patient back to breathing on his own is such a wonderful effort for all involved. Even the strangers who helped on the seen at the accident.
You strangers are Angels also as the medical team.
They never did reveal the poor souls eventual outcome, and after witnessing the whole process it actually kind of upsets me ...because it's a part of me now, just like it's a part of them and a part of him, and you whoever may be reading this....
And I believe every traumatic eventevery story or I hate to call it a story because it's not a story it's a man's life that's not what I meant, what I meant was I believe that any time someone or anyone witnesses something like this, a traumatic event, I feel you need to have you seen the beginning in the middle you need to at least know the ending regardless of the outcome 1:32 simply so that one can get closure or attempt to
He was a working 60 year old. Hardly elderly.....gosh I am 68. I now think of elderly in their late 80s😅
There’s a high chance he coded again when they got him to ICU after “stabilizing” him in the ER/A&E. Post Code patients are very unstable for the first 24 hours after ROSC especially being down for a while before getting to hospital.
@@jasonjames5076 din't watch the end im guessing?
My mom was saved by CPR and a shock when she suffered sudden cardiac arrest - can't stress enough the importance of people learning these skills!
All 3 of us knew CPR when a neighbour found my husband and he started CPR then when he got tired, my son took over and I did the breathing part, all this until the paramedics came. They worked on him for a half hour when they called his death. That was three years ago and three months and it still shocks me that he’s not alive and with us.
Everybody should know how to do CPR.
If I have dementia in my old age, I hope to be a sharp and sassy as Mary. Bless her and her Husband her cares for her.
Wishing all the Ambulance crews a Happy Holidays. Thanks for your service
Just a couple weeks ago, midnight on Saturday, I thought I was having a heart attack following a fire alarm in my apartment building. The ambulance and emergency room nurses and doctors were fantastic. this was in spite of a packed emergency room on a weekend. All my love and gratitude to them. This show hits close to home.
Glad you're ok
did you have one?
@@RigaToeKnee Luckily, no, though I did have one a few years ago so I'm really aware of my heart health.
@@jimvandemoter6961I'm so glad you called 911 anyways
@@KevintheRhea Thank you. As we were going to the hospital the paramedic who was with me in the back of the ambulance told me she was glad I decided to go. All to often people think they're ok only to have an attack later, so it was good that I went.
These elderly couples are so sweet, that’s what true love is about , together for ever through thick and then ❤❤❤!
The elderly couple are just adorable the "I love you sam" 😭
“you’ve got a nice face”
“right then, we’ll get your eyes tested too, Mary” 😂😂😂
Love the humor, even when people are in not good scenarios, the paramedics and patients still find the humor in dark times, resilient and powerful.
Seeing Dennis reminded me of my grandma on her death bed. The head turned up, mouth open, voice fainter than a wisp of air until nothing would come out. Watching her die was one of the most difficult and out-of-body experiences of my life, despite her being in hospice and as comfortable as she could be. I miss you, Gramma. I wish I could have read your lips to understand your last words to me.
Sorry for your loss
I have done CPR several times. The most taxing was when I was doing HH nursing out in the country and I had to do it on a man 30 minutes before a volunteer firefighter got there to assist with an ambu bag. Another 15-20 minutes before the ambulance got there. The patient didn’t make it even though they tried at the ER also.
I gave it my all when I got to the house, so did the ambulance crew.
It’s EXHAUSTING when done correctly!! The fact that you were able to do it that long without another person to swap out is amazing!!
❤❤Thank you! ❤❤Thank you!❤❤
Wow didn't expect ROSC on that one at all. Great bystander CPR. WtG UK👏and team!
Always a joy to see more first responders video. Thank you to all who are in the episodes. Be safe. Love to you all.😊❤
What an amazing couple and loving one another still all the same
Sam and Mary made me cry.
“Why doesn’t the Queen wave with this hand? Because it’s mine.” OMG what a brilliant joke. 😂😂😂
32:54 As a Canadian, the description of snowmobiles is priceless!
So much respect for all the people involved -ambulance, police, bystanders… ❤
Mary is pretty with it for eight years into a dementia diagnosis.
Gallstones! She needs surgery and then her issues will be resolved. That pain is no joke
Yup very common after birth happened to me. I had surgery
That is SO true! So painful I was fetal on the floor at night. Husband drove us to ER, with our newborn. ER gave my muscle relaxers. A week later on the floor again. We drove to ER. Muscle relaxers again. 3 days later vomiting and screaming. The ambulance was called. Gall bladder with a side of sever pancreatitis!! Hospitalized for a week to cure pancreatitis before the surgery to remove my gall bladder and a week to recuperate after. Idiots in the ER. They never did any blood tests.
Always better to go in when you get concerned. In 2021, I knew I had gallstones (proven by scan) but ignored the pain due to having a large amount of projects with quick deadlines at work. I passed out at work, was taken by ambulance to hospital and had to have emergency surgery for sepsis.
Glad you’re doing well now, my father just went through the same thing he had to be stabilized first before surgery though. Scariest moment of my life
Wow that is really not smart. You ignore a potentially dangerous or fatal medical condition because you had projects at work? You gotta be kidding me
@@leehalifaxI wasn’t given an option. Manager wouldn’t let me call off sick. I am ended up quitting the day after the surgery because she said either I show back up to work or I am fired
elderly couple was soooo wholesome
Every one should have a cpr and every one else should learn how to do it God bless you all for especially being paramedics and not only the all of the people who loves to take care of every single person on this planet sincerely Shannon by the way merry Christmas to you all sincerely Shannon
The lady who was doing cpr while waiting for the ambulance to arrive is a legend
Sam and Mary were adorable. I seriously wish them all the best
What a lovely bright home Sam keeps for Mary!!
Not sure I heard this exactly but when they said that they shocked him 10 minutes prior DOESN’T mean that his heart was beating and CPR is continued because the heart is so weak. His heart was in V-Fib and those always get shocked as well as they get medication to try to get it out of V-Fib. When the heart is in V-Fib it’s not actually beating but it’s actually quivering. Blood doesn’t circulate when it’s in V-Fib and shocking the patient doesn’t always get the person out of V-Fib and into a regular rhythm. In many cases it may remain in V-Fib or even change to an asystole which is a flat line and those can’t be shocked at all
Here in the u.s we have very similar protocols though it very states to state . All ambulances in my city must have a Lucas device on each apparatus … it is an automatic CPR device and it allows for us to focus on other things … also being able to drive because the machine is still 100% effectively given cpr while the ambulance is in motion
I am surprised they moved the guy in arrest. Here in the US we only move the PT once we achieve ROSC. Every scenario is different but we like to work the codes where they are found to minimize interuptions in compressions. But all went well thats a clinical save
Well if they move him they can help him better.. that's why the Lucas machine is SUCH a dealbreaker! Do you have access to anything like that?
@@ingridakerblom7577 There are very few ways and very specific circumstances that a hospital can help better than EMS already can, actually.
@@Atlas_Fortiswhat are you talking about?
ive been on the job 34 years and love it more and more. It's my christian ministry
Sam and Mary are sooo sweet❤
Bloody brilliant, my darlings!
Many thanks for sharing ❤
If there is a Stanley thermos in the UK you will have boiling water for 24hrs, put your t-bags in just add milk! Amazing things.
Love this series ❤️ from Port Elizabeth Eastern Cape South Africa 🇿🇦
The world shud watch tis n know wats happening inside the ambulance while rushing to hospital...pls
GIVE WAY TO EMERGENCY VEHICLES...
Awwe loved the elderly couple 71 yrs wow. And they were still crazy for each other. Tho she was flirty with the paramedic lol she was funny
A single mum paramedic that already places a call from a friend to get away from a date because he "doesn't look like his picture". Says all I need to know about someone like that.
I had a gallbladder attack and my gallbladder was removed the next day. Worse than labor.
That is SO true! So painful I was fetal on the floor at night. Husband drove us to ER, with our newborn. ER gave my muscle relaxers. A week later on the floor again. We drove to ER. Muscle relaxers again. 3 days later vomiting and screaming. The ambulance was called. Gall bladder with a side of sever pancreatitis!! Hospitalized for a week to cure pancreatitis before the surgery and a week to recuperate after. Idiots in the ER. They never did any blood tests.
My new favorite show.
They are so kind and truly care for all they help save😢 in the US i dont feel that and its a lonely scared feeling.acting more bugged than they are caring for you
I feel so bad about Dennis. He looked awful laying on the floor like that. And he’s all by himself. It just shocks me that he isn’t in a home for the elderly so that he’s watched very closely.
So great to hear that all the others are doing better. Thanks for another great video!!🥰🥰🩷🩷 🚑🚑
I’ve seen a lot of cardiac arrests and very few survive and I mean very few. The ones that do survive is because many are already hospitalized and someone is watching the heart monitors and would have seen the patient go into cardiac arrest or the ones that survive in the field is usually because there were other people there who started CPR right away. I’ve done CPR probably 20 times or more and that’s usually when I wasn’t running the code. Many times I was the only medic on scene so I was in charge of the entire code and I also had to do the advanced skills because EMT-B can’t intubate, start an IV or IO, administer medications as well knowing when to shock a patient so my partner was usually doing all of the CPR unless there was another crew (we usually were on our own with first responders or we had no help) or first responders on scene
With the addition of AED's in most public places in the US, the survival rate in cardiac arrest is well over 50% now. Being an RN over 22 years and working in the medical field 26 years, the biggest concern I had with the way this cardiac arrest was run is that they didn't take his airway into consideration. He was in a car accident. Although the accident appeared minor, never assume that there is no injury to the neck. They shouldn't have bent his neck back to insert his airway. They should've done a jaw-thrust maneuver to insert his airway. The team is very efficient with their communication, and the bystanders are a gift from heaven. I'm very relieved to find that the man survived.
@@darcyjeanske821 The 50% figure refers to those admitted following out of hospital cardiac arrest, not general survival rate. Most out of hospital cardiac arrests are terminated on scene or in the ER.
11:02 When I looked on my phone _- I'm drawing while I watch -_ I was like:
"Wait..." *I look from driver to passenger and back "I'm confused."
Those poor patients! 😂 Trying to differentiate between them 🤣.
Its so crazy to see the difference in culture. We got ppl in their 50s here in the usa permanently in nursing homes. The UK people in their 90s home alone with no help. Wild.
The UK has a very good support system for the elderly. IF they choose to use it. It's much like the assistance available to homeless people in the US. Often the help is available but people choose not to take advantage of it often due to mental illness.
@@PaddyPawsRescueI’d also say that sometimes people don’t know what help or funding is available. My grandmother was an occupational therapist so spent a lot of direct contact time with elderly people and she spent a LOT of time helping people to get both the welfare benefits and the help they needed from local council and other services. In a lot of cases people simply didn’t know that this benefit or this grant existed or that they could get help with something.
That's a damn lie lol. There's people in their 50s that do live independently without a nursing home.
@@aaronquevedo9099they didn’t say EVERY person in their 50s lives permanently in a nursing home, they said the US has people in their 50s in nursing homes. Which is a TRUE statement. Nursing homes have skilled units for rehabilitation services specifically and short term patients recovering from surgeries or long hospital stays, who may be significantly younger. Their homes are not suitable for their recovery, making it unsafe the recovery to happen in the home. Source-I’ve worked in more than one nursing home.
I've seen plenty of people here in the US who "should" be in nursing homes. Their families are at their wit's end, but there are either no homes in their region, they are totally unaffordable, etc.
aren't you supposed to stop and check for a heart rate after shocking ?
if i remember usually for bystanders who use AED scattered around yes, as it doesnt show the rhythm, whereas paramedics because of the Zoll and defib pads, they can see the rhythm, and its q distinguishable between a cardiac arrest rhythm or rhythm with possible pulse
ERC algorithm says: No!
After shocking you're supposed to do 2 more minutes of CPR
Arron calls her like a border collie. Come by, Come by.
It's a joke?
First time seeing Nightwatch (British version) and I love it
What the fu*** did they do during this CPR. This is far away from good prehospital CPR standarts... absouloutely catastrophic!
What’s a standarts? And the patient survived so the bystanders saved his life.
Bad cpr is better than no cpr
Sam and Mary are major couple goals! :D
I love watching this TV Show
Fiat ambulances 😂 that cracks me up its like could they have chosen anything less reliable?
I love this show
Aww Dennis...😢❤
Omg, Sam and Mary 😭❤❤
Did The Man In Cardiac Arrest Make It Or Saddy Died
He made it.
1946... wow... absolutely unfathomable amount of time for someone like me whos 32....
Loving the new episodes. Glad to see the jokes are worse than ever before 🤣
Mary and Sam 🥹💕
Europe: We put doctors in fast cars and helicopters to assist with the most critically ill patients in the community.
United States: Our EMTs can give aspirin and Tylenol now
A family friend’s heart stopped for 20 minutes. I haven’t seen him since it happened, but he has brain damage.
What about those people in the pool and suddenly they cant breathe
You dont have doctors here in the states going out into the field like that. Too greedy
They are trained doctors who rotate between E.D and Dispatch work.
@@missg.5940I don’t think the medics in the UK have more training and can do a lot more procedures than medics in the states. I’ve watched a lot of these shows and the skills are usually about the same except we didn’t have a doctor on scene. There may be a couple of cities in the US where they do but those are the bigger cities. Off duty docs have helped us before but they can’t take over patient care as a doctor in the field unless they ride to the ER with the patient. Chest tubes can only be done with a doctor and I have seen them on this show insert them but they are not medics doing it. We also can’t put them in but we can do a needle decompression which is the next best thing to a chest tube. US medics can intubate, insert IO’s, administer a wide variety of meds including Morphine or Fentanyl, sedation like Versed and where I worked we could sedate and paralyze the patient before we intubate and more.
What??? Those aren’t doctors, they’re paramedics… you have no idea what you’re saying
@@ICU306 It said right in the video that these are emergency field doctors who go with ambulance to complicated situations. So they did know, you don’t.
@@missg.5940 okay, and since that the case, the OP comment still doesn’t make sense because we have a set system for a reason.
I love Sam and Mary ❤❤
There are real things EMS can be attending to other than people who are purposely passing away just because they “” have to have their independence
We're I live the Ambo never transport a deceased unless the person dies in public. In every other case they will ask for a mortician/funeral home for the pick-up. The Ambo is needed to save life. Not transport dead people
Honor
👍👍 👍👍 👍👍 👍👍👍👍👍👍 for this TV Show
Why are they shifting if there is no clutch???? 14:27
You know they're is alot smaller cameras now y'all should get them they have enough to carry
what is their accent called?
English
Scouse
Brummie
Cockney
Who knows?
Amidarone sucks it's awful I took it for a fib yeah
Könnt ihr bitte auf Deutsch untertitel machen danke. Kann kein Englisch
Hahaahhha
Great job medics on the male heart attack victim‼️ You saved his life!🫀
I think the pedestrians doing CPR when the ambulance crews showed played a huge part too.
@@lesleysmith51they definitely played a huge part because had they not started CPR before medics arrived he would have had almost no chance of surviving. Surviving a cardiac arrest in the field is extremely rare and I’ve see a lot of cardiac arrest but very few survived and that’s also true for going into cardiac arrest in the hospital
When you get so old, I mean seriously stop putting so much pressure on the emergency emergency service. Just get yourself into a home.
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Is normally time to, chest camera 📷 is working or not? Can you do video about your ambulance 🚑???