Heartbeat.

Jun 20, 2005
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Yesterday midday one of my Sunday lunch friends collapsed in agonising chest pains. I phoned 999 . Immediate response and put through to the ambulance emergency services. Asked a number of questions and told an ambulance and paramedics were on there way.
We have an emergency automatic Defibrillator on site .I and others six years ago were taught how to use it and also when and how to do CPR. Everyone should try it. CPR is not easy. If you can manage 60 seconds you are doing well!
The three young paramedics were brilliant. Space age technology ,structured and direct link to a Consultant Cardiologist at the hospital. Drugs given to,relax arteries and help,blood flow.

The down side🙀.
Our Small Cotswold Town is 10 miles away on a dual carriageway from the main Great Western Hospital. They have no Cardiac emergency unit open at weekends🤬Unbelievable. Our hospitals are reducing services!!

So the Parademics took him and his wife on a 65 mile trip to the Bristol Royal Infirmary!!

Good news. He’s had a few stents inserted , Will,have tests today and home tomorrow.

I recommend everyone learns how to use a defibrillator and do CPR. You never know.
 
Last edited:
Nov 11, 2009
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For CPR its essential to have the Bee Gees “staying alive” right at the top of your playlist, as it gives the right beats per minute.
 

Sam Vimes

Moderator
Sep 7, 2020
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I was a First Responder in our community for a number of years until the Scottish Ambulance Service stopped supporting us after continually changing what we could and couldn't do. We still have CPR training every so often - in fact we have one coming up in a couple of weeks time sponsered by Lucky2Bhere.

Never used it for real but did answer a number of callouts for other issues. Here, there can be a wait of a some hours for an ambulance to come along. Nearest A&E is about 75 minutes away.

Never forgot how to do it and would step in if needed, The SAS became paranoid about liability but that still wouldn't bother me.
 
Nov 11, 2009
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Seems that the best way to access cardiology is via an emergency admission. Following a severe loss of blood in April my GP gave me three in center ECGs and one 24 hour ECG from a cardiology center in Leeds. The findings were okay other than my average pulse rate has reduced from 56bpm to 51bpm over five years. So she gave me the option of whether or not to be referred to cardiology. The waiting time at Bath RUH is at least another 19 weeks from now, and I was referred early September. Thinking I may go private in the NHS owned hospital near Radstock, which I did five years ago, as with an outstanding referral trying to get travel insurance is either very expensive or denied. It has a knock on effect too on my wife’s annual policy even when she’s away with our daughter or family.
 
Jun 20, 2005
20,069
5,323
50,935
Seems that the best way to access cardiology is via an emergency admission. Following a severe loss of blood in April my GP gave me three in center ECGs and one 24 hour ECG from a cardiology center in Leeds. The findings were okay other than my average pulse rate has reduced from 56bpm to 51bpm over five years. So she gave me the option of whether or not to be referred to cardiology. The waiting time at Bath RUH is at least another 19 weeks from now, and I was referred early September. Thinking I may go private in the NHS owned hospital near Radstock, which I did five years ago, as with an outstanding referral trying to get travel insurance is either very expensive or denied. It has a knock on effect too on my wife’s annual policy even when she’s away with our daughter or family.
Steady Clive. Don’t wish an upset to get earlier treatment. What I saw yesterday could have been Good night Vienna.
If you can afford it go private. You can’t take the money to the grave!
 

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