Nee Naw


London Marathon

Posted in Ambulances by Mark Myers on the April 25th, 2007

I’m off work on annual leave at the moment, so having left those London Ambulances behind, I promptly jumped into a St John Ambulance and headed down to the 14.5 mile mark of the London Marathon to provide first aid to weary runners. It’s the second time I’ve done this; the first, last year, was very different. Then, I was on the 21 mile mark but it was a cool, drizzly day, so we weren’t inundated with casualties and got to watch most of the runners coming past. I spent a substantial amount of time handing out Vaseline, and my favourite moment of the day was around 5pm, long after the street sweepers and pick up coaches had passed and the streets had reopened, when a lone dalek came staggering down the road.

This year was very different. It was 23C for a start, and at 14 miles the runners are all bunched together and hardly anyone has started walking instead of running. We set up our stall, enjoyed sausage sandwiches for breakfast (we’d all got up at 6am because we had to get there before the roads closed) and sat back to watch the elite runners come whooshing past. I felt really ashamed of my own fitness levels when I saw them - 14.5 miles and they hadn’t even broken a sweat. I am not a complete couch potato (I go to the gym at least once a week) but I would have difficulty walking that distance, let alone running it.

The wheelchairs came past first. I was initially expecting the wheelchair entrants to be wheeling themselves along merrily in ordinary wheelchairs, but in fact they have special sporting wheelchairs which look like miniature racing cars and go really fast - faster than the runners, in fact! Next were the Elite Women, who had a head start over the men, and finally the Elite Men. According to the Flora Clock Truck, the Elite Men came past me after 1 hour and 8 minutes! I doubt I could even run five miles in that time!

After that, there was a steady stream of serious runners, none of whom needed our help. The first person to stop was for non-medical reasons - a wheelchair entrant with a broken wheel. His wheels had cost £1,000 and had gone and broken on him. I bet he was furious, poor bloke. It took us ages to find a taxi for him, and thankfully his wheels were still working enough to get him out of the traffic free zone to get into it!

Suddenly a surge of less serious runners came past (I cannot call them ‘fun runners’, anyone who has run 14.5 miles and is still running is a world class athlete in my book). These people actually looked like they’d run half a marathon; they were puffing and panting, red in the face, their grimaces fixed, their bodies blotchy and dripping with sweat. I was full of admiration, whilst at the same time thinking they must all be crazy. Unsurprisingly, quite a few of their eyes lit up at the sight of our tent, and suddenly we were inundated with casualties.

Quite a lot felt sick/faint/dizzy and most of these just wanted a quick break before ploughing on. None had to go to hospital, but a couple couldn’t face going any further and limped off to the DLR or waited for the pick-up coach to collect them. Loads of people had cramps, so I spent a lot of time massaging sweaty/hairy/muscly calves (we had a physiotherapist come and teach us how to do this at our weekly meeting last week). Lots of people wanted their knees bandaging, which I think is more of a ‘comfort blanket’ type of thing than anything else, but bandaging is St John Ambulance’s forte so we were happy to oblige. I handed out quite a lot of Vaseline, though the hot weather meant chafing levels were down from last year. There were a few nasty cases of jogger’s nipple (which, for those who haven’t heard of it, is exactly what you think it is. Ouch!) One guy asked me to rebandage his ankle and I was horrified when I took the bandaging off — it was swollen like a balloon and bright purple. Apparently he’d tripped over a bottle at mile 5 and twisted it. I did something similar to my ankle last summer and I could barely walk, so I was astounded that he had gone 9 miles like this. I told him I really didn’t think he should be running on it, but he was having none of it, so I rebandaged it and he ran off. Ran!!!

The heat was apparently causing a lot of people to collapse, but being relatively early in the course, we missed all that. Last year we took one collapse to hospital, which was a man dressed in full army uniform who’d marched the 21 miles with a gun over his shoulder. Apparently this year there were 73 hospitalisations over all (none from our station) and 5,032 people treated. Sadly, one man died after finishing the race. Ironically, the only hospitalisation from our station was an elderly spectator who’d slipped on a water bottle and injured her hip. She really picked the wrong place to do that — finding an ambulance (St John have their own, so fortunately I didn’t have to call 999 and speak to my colleagues!) and getting her on it was a nightmare!

Things started to die down a bit after that and I went back to watching the runners. Then another problem emerged — despite having 2,600 extra water bottles each, the water stations were starting to run out, meaning people were begging us for water. Luckily, we had a big container in our mobile treatment unit, a supply of plastic cups and a extremely helpful local resident who let us use his taps!

Watching the tail end of the runners come past I saw Dawn from Eastenders (looking immaculate and fully made up), Santa Claus pulling his sleigh, several people dressed as giant fruit and some guys pulling a giant stone (who apparently didn’t finish until Sunday morning!) There were also people twice my age, twice my size, and people with serious disabilities merrily strolling past. There was one bloke with two false legs walking with the aid of crutches, a blind man (who had sighted ’supporters’ running with him in shifts - one ended at our station and told us ‘we have to do it in shifts because none of us can keep up with him’) and one man who appeared to be paralysed down one side walking along with some kind of caliper contraption helping him use his bad leg. These made me even more ashamed of my own couch potatoness than the elite runners, and I vowed to go running the very next morning. Unfortunately, I got sidetracked by the pub and didn’t quite make it, but I am definitely doing one of those 5km fun runs in the summer. 5km is plenty for me; I don’t want to end up being the one who needs treatment!!

Friday 13th

Posted in Ambulances by Mark Myers on the April 13th, 2007

Back on my usual desk, circa 5am.

Sector Controller: Oh look, it’s Friday 13th…
Me: Load of superstitious nonsense. Nothing going on here at all.
Another Sector Controller: EEP! HEMS! Have you seen call 123?
Everyone in the room looks at call 123
Sector Controller: (reads) 35 year old male jumped from 7th floor window. Father on scene. Resus not attempted, caller states beyond help.

I kept quiet after that.

What a horrible call, and what a horrible way to die. And what a horrible thing for the poor guy’s father to witness. What on earth could drive someone to do such a thing?

West is not Best

Posted in Ambulances by Mark Myers on the April 12th, 2007

I got to work last night to find my name on the manning for the West Desk, as opposed to my usual comfort zone of Desk Which Covers The Area Which I Live. My initial reaction to this was to turn around and run home again. The West Desk scares me; it is full of strange places where I have never been and had never heard of until I started this job. Like Ruislip and Southall. I’m still not entirely convinced these places exist. Maybe one day I will have to take a day trip there and see them for myself.

I settled myself down behind the radio, propped open my map book, wrote out a list of the sector’s ambulance stations and phone numbers and prayed for a quiet night. Well, just thinking the word ‘quiet’ had the opposite effect. As soon as I sat down, about five lost ambulances came up on the radio asking for directions. I resisted the temptation to say “haven’t a clue, you might as well be in Bulgaria for all I know” and managed to direct them with my trusty map book.

It got stupidly busy for some reason, mainly with maternities and overdoses, but there were two very dramatic suspendeds. One was a thirty-year-old male who had hanged himself, and amazingly the crew managed to get him breathing again from a state of cardiac arrest. The next suspended patient wasn’t so lucky. She was a youngish woman, and her husband was performing CPR until we got there. It wasn’t enough to save her. The crew requested the police as soon as they arrived: she’d taken a heroin overdose and there was a small child on scene.

Next there was a bit of high drama as a house in Kensington exploded. Fortunately there were no casualties, but we did have an ambulance and a manager there the whole night, along with the HART (Hazardous Area Response Team) people (see Beaker’s post for more info about the HART people) . In fact, I think the ambulance and manager are still there now. Not the same ones, obviously, they have to sleep, so we swapped them over at 7am.

Around 5am there was a bad moment when one of the crews rang up feeling very cross about a decision we’d made. Holding two equal priority calls, we’d decided to send them to the first (semi conscious, vomiting old person) whilst getting an FRU to check out the second (old person with abnormal breathing). It turned out the first call was A Load of Rubbish, so the crew then got sent to the second, by which time the FRU had been waiting for over half an hour and had determined that the second patient was Actually Very Ill. Unfortunately, with the benefit of hindsight, it’s easy to say that this was the wrong decision, but at the time we thought we were doing the right thing. Often “vomiting, semiconscious” people turn out to be having a stroke or heart attack, and people with “abnormal breathing” turn out to have a cold. The crew went off the road to file an LA52 (the form of doom that we have to fill in when something goes wrong) and thankfully the patient made it to A+E safely.

I was just starting to relax when the police sent through a call for a firearms incident! We had to steal a manager from the North West desk because ours was still dealing with the explosion in Kensington.

Dear boss, if you are reading this, please put me back on my normal desk tonight. The West Desk scares me.