Day shift: Five calls; two by car; three by ambulance. Stats: 1 Epistaxis; 2 Chest pain;1 Collapsed person; 1 Assault.
An epistaxis at the start of the shift and with no ambulance available in support. Most of these turn out to be little trickles of nothingness or are under control by the time I get on scene but this oneat a hotel/hostelwas different. The 55 year-old alcoholic and drug addict had been suffering 30-minute nosebleeds for the past few days but had been dealing with them himself. This morninghoweverhe became more concerned when yet another nosebleed struck and couldn’t be stopped.
When I arrived he’d already been bleeding for half an hour and he was holding a blood-soaked bar towel to his nose. The flow was watery and constant – not a clot in sight – and he admitted to having taken heroin and cocaine (brown and white) the day beforeas well as drinking alcohol but he didn’t snort the cokeso there was probably anotherpossibly unrelated reason for this flood of blood.
I put a heavy dressing on the nose and wrapped it around his head but the blood just soaked through itso I put another on after I’d done his basic obs and made it a little tighter – this seemed to work. Then I got him in the car and took him quickly to hospital. No ambulances had been assigned and there was nothing on the horizon. I wasn’t prepared to sit there while he bled and bledso I took him myself without a hitch or a complaint.
After a morning meeting and a quick run to help out with a regular caller who feigns chest pain for a hospital bed (a call on which I was no use at all because an ambulance had been sent) I went to the aid of a 39 year-old nurse who was complaining of chest pain with shortness of breath (SOB). This had been going onminus the SOBfor a year and she’d been ignoring it as it always got better but now that her breathing was being affected she felt it best to get checked outas she should. All her obs were normal and her ECG shouted out nothing of any consequence that I could see but something was amiss and her SOB was relatedso she was taken by ambulance to hospital.
A Red call for a collapsed ‘unconscious’ woman resulted in myself and a crew arriving at the same time and climbing lots of narrow little steps to a flat at the top of a building in Soho. She wasn’t unconscious but her husband was dramatically bent over her starfish body as her eyelids fluttered (the tell-tale sign of someone who wants to be unconscious but actually isn’t). She has been suffering from post-natal depression and this was not her first dramatic collapse. She needs further medical care I feel because she isn’t getting better. I’m not unsympathetic here though because PND is a very real and significant problem and she wasn’t coping well with itso her husband was being left literally ‘holding the baby’. We can do nothing for her and the support she gets from her own is really crucial.
Racism and the general hatred of uniforms and authority of any kind is on the rise in my opinionregardless of the soap the statistics are being washed with by the Government. A 30 year-old Iranian Traffic Enforcer (Warden?) was allegedly assaulted by two men who chased himchallenging him to a fight and hurling verbal abuseincluding some nasty racist comments after he’d issued a ticket. They allegedly grabbed him and used his own ticketing machine to thump him in the chestright where he’d broken a rib earlier in his life. Now he had sharp pain which was worse when he breathed in deeply.
None of us like getting tickets and parking fines but it’s the system and costs we dislikenot the people doing the jobalthough most react as if it is personal. A lot of these enforcers will actually be lenient with you and give you a bit of a break if your reaction to them is positive. If they don’tthat’s tough and we all have to pay the fines if they are valid. What we can’t do is assault them for doing the job. And as for racist taunts about not being in this country and taking jobs from Britswellwhere are these Brits? Clearlythey don’t want to do those jobs. This man is in the countryworking hard and paying taxes – contributing to societylike it or not. He's not leeching from the State or causing trouble.
We chatted about his country’s current predicamentgiven that there are practically unveiled threats to attack it and he said ‘why does everyone hate us’ - the man was genuinely distressed about what had happened to him. That’s the problem with the media – they report the ‘evil axis’ stuff and yesthere may be a problem developing in terms of possible nuclear weapons but haven’t we heard all this before? And Iranian people should not be demonised as a population just because of the bad apples. You don't see them falling about drunk in the street and you will rarelyif ever meet an Iranian who is disrespectful. The meat and two veg of my repeated complaints about what is happening to our society is relative to everyone who behaves badly and shouldn't - nothing whatsoever to do with who they are or where they come from because we Brits can often be the worst examples of how to live as a society.
I'm only five foot sevenso I needed a box to stand on for that. Phew!
Stats: 1 Epistaxis; 2 Chest pain;1 Collapsed person; 1 Assault.
An epistaxis at the start of the shift and with no ambulance available in support. Most of these turn out to be little trickles of nothingness or are under control by the time I get on scene but this oneat a hotel/hostelwas different. The 55 year-old alcoholic and drug addict had been suffering 30-minute nosebleeds for the past few days but had been dealing with them himself. This morninghoweverhe became more concerned when yet another nosebleed struck and couldn’t be stopped.
When I arrived he’d already been bleeding for half an hour and he was holding a blood-soaked bar towel to his nose. The flow was watery and constant – not a clot in sight – and he admitted to having taken heroin and cocaine (brown and white) the day beforeas well as drinking alcohol but he didn’t snort the cokeso there was probably anotherpossibly unrelated reason for this flood of blood.
I put a heavy dressing on the nose and wrapped it around his head but the blood just soaked through itso I put another on after I’d done his basic obs and made it a little tighter – this seemed to work. Then I got him in the car and took him quickly to hospital. No ambulances had been assigned and there was nothing on the horizon. I wasn’t prepared to sit there while he bled and bledso I took him myself without a hitch or a complaint.
After a morning meeting and a quick run to help out with a regular caller who feigns chest pain for a hospital bed (a call on which I was no use at all because an ambulance had been sent) I went to the aid of a 39 year-old nurse who was complaining of chest pain with shortness of breath (SOB). This had been going onminus the SOBfor a year and she’d been ignoring it as it always got better but now that her breathing was being affected she felt it best to get checked outas she should. All her obs were normal and her ECG shouted out nothing of any consequence that I could see but something was amiss and her SOB was relatedso she was taken by ambulance to hospital.
A Red call for a collapsed ‘unconscious’ woman resulted in myself and a crew arriving at the same time and climbing lots of narrow little steps to a flat at the top of a building in Soho. She wasn’t unconscious but her husband was dramatically bent over her starfish body as her eyelids fluttered (the tell-tale sign of someone who wants to be unconscious but actually isn’t). She has been suffering from post-natal depression and this was not her first dramatic collapse. She needs further medical care I feel because she isn’t getting better. I’m not unsympathetic here though because PND is a very real and significant problem and she wasn’t coping well with itso her husband was being left literally ‘holding the baby’. We can do nothing for her and the support she gets from her own is really crucial.
Racism and the general hatred of uniforms and authority of any kind is on the rise in my opinionregardless of the soap the statistics are being washed with by the Government. A 30 year-old Iranian Traffic Enforcer (Warden?) was allegedly assaulted by two men who chased himchallenging him to a fight and hurling verbal abuseincluding some nasty racist comments after he’d issued a ticket. They allegedly grabbed him and used his own ticketing machine to thump him in the chestright where he’d broken a rib earlier in his life. Now he had sharp pain which was worse when he breathed in deeply.
None of us like getting tickets and parking fines but it’s the system and costs we dislikenot the people doing the jobalthough most react as if it is personal. A lot of these enforcers will actually be lenient with you and give you a bit of a break if your reaction to them is positive. If they don’tthat’s tough and we all have to pay the fines if they are valid. What we can’t do is assault them for doing the job. And as for racist taunts about not being in this country and taking jobs from Britswellwhere are these Brits? Clearlythey don’t want to do those jobs. This man is in the countryworking hard and paying taxes – contributing to societylike it or not. He's not leeching from the State or causing trouble.
We chatted about his country’s current predicamentgiven that there are practically unveiled threats to attack it and he said ‘why does everyone hate us’ - the man was genuinely distressed about what had happened to him. That’s the problem with the media – they report the ‘evil axis’ stuff and yesthere may be a problem developing in terms of possible nuclear weapons but haven’t we heard all this before? And Iranian people should not be demonised as a population just because of the bad apples. You don't see them falling about drunk in the street and you will rarelyif ever meet an Iranian who is disrespectful. The meat and two veg of my repeated complaints about what is happening to our society is relative to everyone who behaves badly and shouldn't - nothing whatsoever to do with who they are or where they come from because we Brits can often be the worst examples of how to live as a society.
I'm only five foot sevenso I needed a box to stand on for that. Phew!
Be safe.