42:12 that woman is a G!!! poor girl is 89 literally watched her friend die and survived the same accident just to be up walking around again independently . what a strong woman
It's insane to me that kids are encouraged to play a full contact sport that has no safety equipment. More and more American parents won't allow their kids to play football with full equipment, including helmets. Rugby? No way.
@@jeanaprewitt9658 wait till you see the vid in this series where a proud parent of his eight year old (who wasn’t injured that day) extols the virtues of letting and encouraging his EIGHT year old to participate in motocross..full on, motorcycle, dirt hills, jumps, etc. He made the comments as they cart off an 11 year old who might have a broken neck, back, lacerations etc…
I'd say the people in this video are very lucky to be able to walk out of hospital. On a side note, I think it's strange that the ambulance crew spend so much time extricating and treating on the scene... In many countries it's more important to get to hospital as soon as possible.
It's better to treat as much as possible on scene. Stay and play instead of scoop and run. EDIT: Next time think about your dumb comment before you make yourself look even more dumb....
Always always do the most work you can, before ever moving your patient. You’ll do more harm then anything! That’s coming from someone who’s second home is the hospital. Always always do the most work. If they were to wait, those two may have not made it. The pain meds… all of that is a huge help in what they do.
@@JourneyInTheCity It makes more sense when you think about it. I guess it also depends on the situation, the times I've been around paramedics was when my grandfather or grandmother were having problems. They'd check them over and take them to the hospital. Where as with trauma victims they kind of have to do the most as soon as they possibly can
@@kylevogelgesang9996 Actually, I work in the hospital and it is better to get the trauma to the hospital than hang around letting infection set in, bleed internally etc'... pain managment can be done in the ambulance.
You know i always like these guys but i could have done without the SNARKY remark about the 31 yr old on the rope swing. I forgot you're dead and can't have any fun after 21. Jesus.
They act like they have all the time in the world but as a lifeguard we are taught every second matters, I would assume it would be the same for land??
People *vanish* in the water. People can be very-unknown for how long they've been drowned or in-distress for in the water. They will work briskly, but as the waves won't try to steal their patient away they DO have more moments to think things over. Plus the helicopter paramedics are 'trauma medics' as I recall, and most times, the patients are being helped by bystanders or EMTs who simply can't evacuate them OUT in time over land. They can't do a lot of fine work on a helicopter...even the good ones have vibration enough to make inserting a needle in a vein much riskier, so they have to stabilize and secure the patient, THEN move them. Lifeguards HAVE to 'grab and go' because in the worst case, the water can kill THEM too, and then you have two, or three, or four folks getting killed saving one person. The environment is different, the /medium/ is different...water vs land!...and the available support from others around is often wildly different. Bystanders are FAR less likely to help someone in dangerous water than they are to help someone on dangerous-but-they-can-walk-there land. Though, this episode also dealt with a lot of spinal damage stuff and really did take a lot more 'thinking over before we did anything' than the common medical stuff with, say, 'badly broken legs and a 3 hour drive to the hospital' stuff. They needed backboards and braces, and the EMT's had to be EXACT in the patient's movement to reduce the chance of permanent spinal cord damage...so this one had a LOT more 'thinking about it' and 'fiddling carefully' than most episodes. Watch the other episodes; you'll see. Also, watch for other ambulance folks who were there when the air ambulance people arrive, or the local 'medical militia' or whatever it is that has locals run out for first-aid until responders can get there. They're often doctors and 'rangers' and what-all with actual training, even if they are not EMT or full doctors...but many times, SOMEONE is there and the immediate threat-to-life is abated, or too complicated for the initial responders to 'just fix up'. So you're entirely right about lifeguards needing every second, but (air) ambulance drivers need to 'get there and back safely', and only rarely do so by speeding. Lifeguards need to save the victim *and* preserve themselves from hardship/death in the water. It's all to the same end...to maximize patient survival rates while minimizing risk to the first responder folks. They DO have a rather different set of 'rules of engagement' than lifeguards do, I'd think.
Elizabeth Shirako Perfect explanation! I just wanted to add that this is also why we never see them running to the helicopter. They are always walking and discussing if they have remembered to bring everything they need, getting as much information as they can (even if they often get most of it in the air), and so on
@@geiroveeilertsen7112 more injuries and delays from rushing about Willy nilly..and what’s the point of rushing there if you haven’t got what you need? Different series where they include a doctor on each flight, they spend the downtime doublechecking the chopper’s inventory..
Wensleydale..lovely cheese..! Rope swing lady was very lucky, she could have fallen onto the rocks instead.. Something genetic gets triggered in the lizard brain when you see a child so pale.. I had a huge kid jump on my back in a bounce house, laid on the couch a couple days and my parents sent me right back to school, found out twenty years later I had broken my back..
One of uncles a doctor wrote the St. John's first Aid book. Many years later my brother became a paramedic . I asked him what he thought of the way he was trained and all that . He told me that now the medics waste far to much time talking and should instead pick the patient up and get them to the hospital much faster. Even here with a helicopter I can see the medics asking too many questions. Just move faster and ask all you want in the ambulance . The same questions and more will be asked at the hospital anyway
This are highly trained trauma doctors and the more they know in the moment then they can give a better diagnosis and treat the patient more effitienly; some times that makes the biggest difference in critical situations where the patient can potentially die. They're also well equiped to start giving the patient the best care and treat them as if they were in hospital so I respectfuly disagree with your comment
Poor Dorothy losing her friend like that… it broke my heart hearing the policeman ask about her :-(
When I heard her friend didn’t make it I worried about Survivor Syndrome and about her birthday becoming an annual reminder
Poor dear ☹️
42:12 that woman is a G!!! poor girl is 89 literally watched her friend die and survived the same accident just to be up walking around again independently . what a strong woman
"Thunderbirds are Go!" Loved it! I'm old enough to remember that show.
Bless Dorothy little heart 💕, so thankful she made a full recovery, so sorry for losing her friend.
Such beautiful contryside ❤
Sean’s mother is such a trooper for helping out the docs and paramedics 💜
Dorthy is an old school tough gal.
Broke my neck when I was 13 and my mom was fighting to get in the ambulance.
You never know when an accident may occur. Stay alert and thank you for air left.
I've seen the results of some really bad accidents on reddit. Surprised it hasnt given me nightmares
Oh that poor baby crying on the rugby field broke my ❤
It's insane to me that kids are encouraged to play a full contact sport that has no safety equipment. More and more American parents won't allow their kids to play football with full equipment, including helmets. Rugby? No way.
@@jeanaprewitt9658 wait till you see the vid in this series where a proud parent of his eight year old (who wasn’t injured that day) extols the virtues of letting and encouraging his EIGHT year old to participate in motocross..full on, motorcycle, dirt hills, jumps, etc. He made the comments as they cart off an 11 year old who might have a broken neck, back, lacerations etc…
Readeh...steadeh....lift...😮
I wish they had a show that follows the patient, so we know the recovery…..
Wow, that was intensely interesting. Thanks for the real life video.
This is not the New Detectives. Might want to switch out that part of the title to Helicopter ER.
Heck yes! I thought it was a crime in the title 🙄
You are right for those who look, but I don’t look. I like the variety and wait for the video to surprise me
If you read the title it says Real Responders/Helicopter E.R
@@kellyhunte9668 It didn't when it first posted. Then it said New Detectives.
@@kellyhunte9668 It may have been changed. The comment was true on the day it was uploaded
Lee Greenwood is the name of a wonderful American country singer. 💜
Good job All. God bless!🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
I'd say the people in this video are very lucky to be able to walk out of hospital. On a side note, I think it's strange that the ambulance crew spend so much time extricating and treating on the scene... In many countries it's more important to get to hospital as soon as possible.
I was thinking the same thing!
It's better to treat as much as possible on scene. Stay and play instead of scoop and run.
EDIT: Next time think about your dumb comment before you make yourself look even more dumb....
Always always do the most work you can, before ever moving your patient. You’ll do more harm then anything! That’s coming from someone who’s second home is the hospital. Always always do the most work. If they were to wait, those two may have not made it. The pain meds… all of that is a huge help in what they do.
@@JourneyInTheCity It makes more sense when you think about it. I guess it also depends on the situation, the times I've been around paramedics was when my grandfather or grandmother were having problems. They'd check them over and take them to the hospital. Where as with trauma victims they kind of have to do the most as soon as they possibly can
@@kylevogelgesang9996 Actually, I work in the hospital and it is better to get the trauma to the hospital than hang around letting infection set in, bleed internally etc'... pain managment can be done in the ambulance.
I fell from the sofa and busted my lips
Спасибо вам за спасение людей низкий вам поклон ❤️❤️❤️
You know i always like these guys but i could have done without the SNARKY remark about the 31 yr old on the rope swing. I forgot you're dead and can't have any fun after 21. Jesus.
Yeah, no one makes any cracks about the old geezers on the bikes 🤷♀️
They act like they have all the time in the world but as a lifeguard we are taught every second matters, I would assume it would be the same for land??
People *vanish* in the water. People can be very-unknown for how long they've been drowned or in-distress for in the water. They will work briskly, but as the waves won't try to steal their patient away they DO have more moments to think things over. Plus the helicopter paramedics are 'trauma medics' as I recall, and most times, the patients are being helped by bystanders or EMTs who simply can't evacuate them OUT in time over land. They can't do a lot of fine work on a helicopter...even the good ones have vibration enough to make inserting a needle in a vein much riskier, so they have to stabilize and secure the patient, THEN move them. Lifeguards HAVE to 'grab and go' because in the worst case, the water can kill THEM too, and then you have two, or three, or four folks getting killed saving one person. The environment is different, the /medium/ is different...water vs land!...and the available support from others around is often wildly different. Bystanders are FAR less likely to help someone in dangerous water than they are to help someone on dangerous-but-they-can-walk-there land.
Though, this episode also dealt with a lot of spinal damage stuff and really did take a lot more 'thinking over before we did anything' than the common medical stuff with, say, 'badly broken legs and a 3 hour drive to the hospital' stuff. They needed backboards and braces, and the EMT's had to be EXACT in the patient's movement to reduce the chance of permanent spinal cord damage...so this one had a LOT more 'thinking about it' and 'fiddling carefully' than most episodes. Watch the other episodes; you'll see. Also, watch for other ambulance folks who were there when the air ambulance people arrive, or the local 'medical militia' or whatever it is that has locals run out for first-aid until responders can get there. They're often doctors and 'rangers' and what-all with actual training, even if they are not EMT or full doctors...but many times, SOMEONE is there and the immediate threat-to-life is abated, or too complicated for the initial responders to 'just fix up'.
So you're entirely right about lifeguards needing every second, but (air) ambulance drivers need to 'get there and back safely', and only rarely do so by speeding. Lifeguards need to save the victim *and* preserve themselves from hardship/death in the water. It's all to the same end...to maximize patient survival rates while minimizing risk to the first responder folks. They DO have a rather different set of 'rules of engagement' than lifeguards do, I'd think.
Elizabeth Shirako
Perfect explanation! I just wanted to add that this is also why we never see them running to the helicopter. They are always walking and discussing if they have remembered to bring everything they need, getting as much information as they can (even if they often get most of it in the air), and so on
[[Oòiijòj*)ļj*&h&;@@geiroveeilertsen7112.............
@@geiroveeilertsen7112 more injuries and delays from rushing about Willy nilly..and what’s the point of rushing there if you haven’t got what you need? Different series where they include a doctor on each flight, they spend the downtime doublechecking the chopper’s inventory..
I hate hand sticks: giving them or receiving them. However, if it must be to get much needed meds, so be it. Good job Mates!
The poor mother
Why did those rugby organizers let that boy lay there for 30 minutes before calling emergency services? They should be ashamed of themselves!
Kit can rescue me any time 🤩
That's why you were a helmet
And you’re a peanut
Banners obscure the final scene
Wensleydale..lovely cheese..! Rope swing lady was very lucky, she could have fallen onto the rocks instead.. Something genetic gets triggered in the lizard brain when you see a child so pale.. I had a huge kid jump on my back in a bounce house, laid on the couch a couple days and my parents sent me right back to school, found out twenty years later I had broken my back..
I hope they tell if the motorcycle guy lived
Wrong title…
One of uncles a doctor wrote the St. John's first Aid book. Many years later my brother became a paramedic . I asked him what he thought of the way he was trained and all that . He told me that now the medics waste far to much time talking and should instead pick the patient up and get them to the hospital much faster. Even here with a helicopter I can see the medics asking too many questions. Just move faster and ask all you want in the ambulance . The same questions and more will be asked at the hospital anyway
This are highly trained trauma doctors and the more they know in the moment then they can give a better diagnosis and treat the patient more effitienly; some times that makes the biggest difference in critical situations where the patient can potentially die. They're also well equiped to start giving the patient the best care and treat them as if they were in hospital so I respectfuly disagree with your comment
Encouraging little children to play rugby is cruel.
😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳
This is NOT "The New Detectives". I like these videos too but was expecting "The New Detectives".
I agree, but what told me it wasn't "The New Detectives" or similar was the picture of someone in a flight helmet in the thumbnail 😇
WTF is a land whale doing on a thin-rope rope swing???
Yeah we all knew the outcome as soon as she sat in the swing
Really? Yes it was an avoidable accident, but your rudeness is too. So you are in good company with her under your perceived "value judgement".
Thank you! Yes it was avoidable but the women is hurt and as you said being rude is just cruel
And I’m sure Kyle is a gorgeous, fit bloke with gangs of women.🤮😩😖
Better to be a land whale than a jackass thinking he’s a hyena.