Air Ambulance ER: Motorbike Crashes into a Minibus | Medical Documentary | Reel Truth. Science

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2018
  • The Air Ambulance crew head to Northumberland to reach a 65 year old man who lost control of his motorbike and crashed into a minibus. Plus in Hampshire the team must also attend to a cyclist with a major head injury.
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Комментарии • 206

  • @a.w.thompson4001
    @a.w.thompson4001 3 месяца назад +22

    God forbid I have a bad accident, please let first responders include someone just like Jane: all heart, expertise, authority, and humor.
    These crews are a gift to their community. Mad respect!

  • @Skp186
    @Skp186 Месяц назад +8

    Immense respect for these intelligent composed Doctors. The life saving care they provide!!!!So much gratitude ❤️ for you all❤

  • @HaleiwaGirl808
    @HaleiwaGirl808 2 года назад +77

    As a paramedic, when that little boy was being tubed and the tear ran down his face… Killed me 😢

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 Год назад +3

      That really bothered me...does that mean he was still conscious when they put the tube in?? I thought they completely anesthetized people before they do that and they are knocked out.

    • @HaleiwaGirl808
      @HaleiwaGirl808 Год назад +4

      @@ct92404 He is definitely asleep!!!!! That tear was already there when they knocked him out 😉

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 Год назад +2

      @@HaleiwaGirl808 Whew! Ok, good! I was afraid that the anesthetic hadn't worked yet and he was actually FEELING that. Poor kid. I wish they gave an update about how he was doing.

    • @human962
      @human962 3 месяца назад

      ​@@ct92404at the end there is an update

  • @racheld7528
    @racheld7528 8 месяцев назад +7

    I’m with Jane. I’ve been a nurse for over 20 years and I hate eye injuries as well! We all have our thing!

  • @strattonskier7229
    @strattonskier7229 Год назад +14

    Love it, “Men put a new meaning to challenging” brilliant.

  • @lucilledaub5991
    @lucilledaub5991 11 месяцев назад +16

    I love the air ambulance videos. Such caring people.

  • @aprillester-proctor1006
    @aprillester-proctor1006 10 месяцев назад +21

    Can we get the doctor to do audiobooks please. His voice is so beautiful!! Thank goodness the UK has all of you guys !!! You’re SUPERSTARS 🤩🤩

  • @lindajack7969
    @lindajack7969 Год назад +22

    Jane is a real kick. She has a great sense of humor and is a super medic. I don’t know if she realizes it but the camera was on her while she applied her lipstick 💄while in the air ambulance. We’d get along well! Ha! Ha! 😹😹

  • @PSciDoc
    @PSciDoc 2 года назад +52

    In the 1960s, my aunt helped develop the paramedic program for Los Angeles County in California USA. I often wonder what she would think of prehospital care in the 21st century.

    • @tandiparent1906
      @tandiparent1906 3 месяца назад +1

      WoW! I'm sure that she would be amazed!!

  • @kiwigal8134
    @kiwigal8134 4 года назад +21

    All the best to the 16yr lad from another New Zealander. Get well soon sweetie.

  • @karlavonhuben1381
    @karlavonhuben1381 17 дней назад +2

    I just realized the doctors and paramedics also know a lot about the chopper, as they help the pilot run the checklists. Multi-talented folks indeed.

  • @dmwm771
    @dmwm771 4 года назад +26

    amazing to see this level of highly professional people, calm and effective coordination.

  • @melmazing3993
    @melmazing3993 Год назад +25

    Who the hell at that school called emergency services of ANY kind, for a child who had scratched their mouth on a lollipop? What the.. I hope they were billed...

    • @KeebCR
      @KeebCR Месяц назад +2

      It's england so no one was billed. completely free healthcare

    • @gisellep177
      @gisellep177 Месяц назад

      England has the NHS meaning free Healthcare

    • @mrsnoopy2uable
      @mrsnoopy2uable 7 дней назад

      @@KeebCRin my province, you have to pay $400 for ambulance. Our premier cut funds for emergency services. I don’t think other provinces have to pay.

  • @draw1951
    @draw1951 2 месяца назад +1

    Several years ago I spent a year flying with a medevac team documenting their work through art. As with this series, the prehospital teams were all amazing in their proficiency and speed. And like here, humor, especially like Jane, it kept a proper balance to their work.

  • @Jennalynn0019
    @Jennalynn0019 3 года назад +10

    It would be cool to see the patients meet the air ambulance staff that saved them.

  • @Linusthegreat
    @Linusthegreat 4 года назад +145

    Who let's their 16 year old epileptic child ride a bike without a helmet.. that's just a disaster waiting to happen. Kudos to the air ambulance crew for their great and fast work.

    • @elizabethb1096
      @elizabethb1096 3 года назад +14

      As a form of punishment they should make him wear a helmet everywhere he does until he is 18. To remind him of the importance of a helmet

    • @Runtothefire
      @Runtothefire 2 года назад +6

      Should have removed the brakes too! WTF? Kudos to EMS❤️‍🔥🚑

    • @cathybenson5119
      @cathybenson5119 Год назад +40

      It's one thing to insist that the child wear a helmet n it's another one that they will wear it. You don't know what goes on when the parents aren't looking. Unless you know the details you don't have the right to criticise.

    • @tjavendano
      @tjavendano Год назад +10

      @@cathybenson5119 true but at 16 they know full well that they have epilepsy and cannot risk head injuries, more so than non epileptics. The slightest knock can trigger a series of seizures which in turn can cause significant issues. At that age they should know better

    • @shannonobrien9922
      @shannonobrien9922 Год назад +4

      Let's edit your post "who let's their 16 year old epileptic ".......ANYTHING

  • @brianwillerton6628
    @brianwillerton6628 10 месяцев назад +12

    Huge respect, and thanks, to the team. I had the misfortune to have a ride in helimed 63 into James Cook. Great ride, aided by morphine.

  • @rhondapearce523
    @rhondapearce523 3 года назад +17

    Jane “ you could have given me a few inches” haha!! Omg I laughed so hard!! I love Jane!

  • @flynnbojo
    @flynnbojo 3 года назад +28

    This is so cool I’m a student paramedic and this is the dream here in Australia we have super trained paramedics who can do this scope of practice and interventions so cool

    • @TheNecromancer6666
      @TheNecromancer6666 2 года назад +4

      Watch the lectures from Dr. John Hinds on Trauma pre Hospital care on the roadside and racetrack. Brilliant.

    • @serephent
      @serephent 2 года назад +3

      We do to, in the US. My dad was a flight medic

    • @ianchandley
      @ianchandley Год назад +2

      @@TheNecromancer6666 may he RIP…😢

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 3 года назад +17

    that bloke got into a high speed head on collision and suffered no major injuries. that is incredible.

    • @RaeCarson
      @RaeCarson 13 дней назад

      If that doesn't cause someone to consider the existence of guardian angels, I'm not sure what would.

  • @grilledspicydeluxe7834
    @grilledspicydeluxe7834 5 лет назад +46

    20:18
    That tear just made me break down 😢

    • @feraynironmane8101
      @feraynironmane8101 3 года назад +2

      Bruh, I missed that.... I didn't sign my feelstrip form.

    • @ismaelamaro2451
      @ismaelamaro2451 3 года назад

      Medms9ww w9wkw9wkwm2owmw!😗💩😑🤭😗🤭🤩🤡🤡🤡😗💩😗💩😗💩😑🤭😑🤭😃🤕🤭🤡🤡🤒🤕🤪🤕😃🤭😃🤭🤡🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤒💩💩😃😗🤒🤭😃🤭😑🤡😃🤭😶🤭🤭😑🤩🤭😗🤭😑🤭😀wm9wwkw
      Wkw9w qqqo1l😜😀🔴😀😀😀🔴😀🤡😀🔴😀😂😀🤍🤍🤍🤍😂🤍🤍😂😂🤍🤍🤡🤍😂💩

    • @EifelBlaulichtTV
      @EifelBlaulichtTV 2 года назад +2

      @@ismaelamaro2451 did you fall asleep on the keyboard or did someone run across it?

  • @jennygreber7176
    @jennygreber7176 Год назад +10

    Heros ❤❤❤❤ and god bless all those who help fund these amazing life saving teams!

    • @Belchmaster41
      @Belchmaster41 Год назад +1

      unfortunately, fuel is very exspensive in the 💷 to refuel one of those big birds

  • @MrKabDrivr
    @MrKabDrivr 3 года назад +18

    I would be so glad to see these folks come to my rescue, should I ever need to be!... True Heroes, right there! Huge respect to emergency medical response teams, always ready, wherever you are! You have a fan in me!..

  • @hudachemat
    @hudachemat 5 лет назад +33

    They absolutely enjoyed their work..look at their face! And sharing the ice creams 🤗🤗. You did a great job docs 👍👍.

  • @1jazzyphae
    @1jazzyphae 4 года назад +13

    Omg watching them eat their little ice creams made me so happy lol

  • @anitasanford8002
    @anitasanford8002 4 года назад +14

    You guys are great, wish we had a team like this in the states.

  • @Silvervwolfee
    @Silvervwolfee 4 года назад +11

    I think its about time to reapply a little bit o lippy! Jane...so darn cute!

  • @lizbent7993
    @lizbent7993 3 года назад +13

    I love these videos they’re so interesting the only thing that could make them any better would be for a patient update at the end😊

  • @jonaumann5634
    @jonaumann5634 4 года назад +7

    16 yrs old. Wondered why the airway was "wheezing " as they squeezed? Don't normally hear that. Love watching your wonderful work and compassion.

    • @tamasszabo8824
      @tamasszabo8824 3 года назад +10

      Positive end expiratory pressure via an attached PEEP valve can give you a sound like that when you squeeze the bag.

    • @andreanneabc
      @andreanneabc 3 года назад +4

      YeaH its totally normal.

  • @annamarielewis7078
    @annamarielewis7078 3 года назад +9

    A helicopter is the closest thing we may ever see to the Jetson cars. I loved those little bubbles and I really assumed that is what we would be driving by now. I always envisioned flying over to the market in one. 🤣

    • @RaeCarson
      @RaeCarson 13 дней назад

      When you consider how shite humans are as drivers in just two dimensions, you can easily see why flying cars will never be a thing until and unless flight training is added to regular school curricula starting from early grades.

  • @MizzzKitty
    @MizzzKitty 5 лет назад +42

    After watching most of these episodes (as a person that happens to take multi medications with a few other issues) I am now looking into getting a Medical Bracelet 🏥(they also have necklaces and keychains now as well🏩😊. I didn't know)...
    I think it would be a grand idea as seeing sooo many people that are in "unable to talk situations" or the docs puttin people in sleepmode to save their life. That medical info is so deadly important to know, really life or death. Quite scary actually if you think about it.
    Something to think about for you peeps out there that have ailments that are affecting your life too

    • @pattyrrell4624
      @pattyrrell4624 5 лет назад +4

      @Daniella Thoelen I worked as an ambulance attendant and believe me, Medic Alert bracelets are essential for people with medical issues, and who may become unconscious. I wear one because of allergies to pain medications (I react badly to morphine, for example) and if I cannot say anything about that I could be in big trouble if it were given to me. Medications and their doses are not listed on the bracelet, however there is a toll free number to contact the medic alert registry, and they can advise of any medications that the patient may be taking...that being said, it is up to the wearer of the bracelet to keep the registry apprised of changes to medications or other medical issues that EMS and emergency physicians should know.

    • @veronikareynolds3173
      @veronikareynolds3173 5 лет назад +6

      Daniella Thoelen as someone with several severe medical problems you wouldn’t know it looking at me even with all of the medical expertise in the world. It doesn’t matter how much you know you can’t tell what people are allergic to, for instances I’m deathly allergic to one of the most common antibiotics used, which if you’re in a major accident the hospital would put you on in an instance that you come in with any broken skin.

    • @amyfluffyfluff880
      @amyfluffyfluff880 3 года назад +2

      Pat Tyrrell but do the most medics even know about these ? Or even search for them ?

    • @LadyTarasque
      @LadyTarasque 3 года назад +1

      ​@@amyfluffyfluff880 medical bracelets have been a thing for a while.. be surprised if most don't know about it. Now whether they'd search depends on individual's preferences (some will, and some won't because most times the info won't affect what they're doing/using and more likely be needed once at hospital) and situation on hand.

    • @Ipetam
      @Ipetam 3 года назад +5

      I wish our governments would give them for free! I'm a type 1 diabetic and taking blood thinners and I payed almost 80 bucks for mine. They're such life savers! I was found nearly dead in a diabetic coma and my bracelet told them all they needed to know. I also have pins/buttons I put on my backpack and purse. :)

  • @carollockwood7353
    @carollockwood7353 3 года назад +1

    You people are amazing !!

  • @heatherfisher9959
    @heatherfisher9959 8 месяцев назад +3

    My sister was air vacked once. She had a very serious piosonis snak bite. The hospital did not have enough venom for such a bite. So she was transfered to one of the more serious trauma hospitals just a bit away with copter. Ever second counted. She had her own hole team there in ICU and students because it was a kinda rare to happen there. She just kept how small it is in there but that the craziest thing ever. She said look, I dont need to go on vaccation to ride in one! 😂 Luckily it grazed her ankle and didn't sink in cause she jumped into her care. We live in the desert. It was under her car. If it got a good hold she would of not lasted maybe 15 minutes. Its the most moisoness rattle snake out here. We was taught about this snake in school so we would know it!!

  • @SB-cz9vo
    @SB-cz9vo Месяц назад +1

    When I was 16, I had an incident where other kids mocked me for wearing a helmet. About 10 minutes later I was lying on the road.
    My helmet was the difference between being picked up by my mum or the ambulance. The front of my helmet hit the road instead of my forehead. I wear a helmet no matter how short the distance or how hot the weather.
    The air ambulances chasing each other from the trauma pad is a bit crazy.

  • @fredbixeljr7124
    @fredbixeljr7124 4 года назад +2

    Great show

  • @jeffgkc861
    @jeffgkc861 Год назад +3

    Very cordinated, feel like am under utilized anaesthetist here. I need a chance to work there.

  • @bobmcnelis3648
    @bobmcnelis3648 2 месяца назад +1

    I will assume that all of these people volunteer their talents to this great organization. I could only imagine the cost if you had to pay them what their talents would fetch in the hospital setting? God Bless these people and I can see your continuing successes!

    • @freedomofchoice3606
      @freedomofchoice3606 Месяц назад +1

      The medical crew are paid for by the NHS whilst the pilot and all running costs are paid for by people making charity donations.

  • @billy-jadeachiu2296
    @billy-jadeachiu2296 6 месяцев назад +1

    Have a friend that I worked with in the ED June hates eyes so one night I needed to take one of her patients it wasn't a big deal to me but she couldn't come into the room even when I stabilized the eye.

  • @liannemccabe3459
    @liannemccabe3459 Год назад +2

    God 🙏 bless all the helicopter crew who can treat the packets on the seen and get them to hospital quick if need be 😘❤️😘🌟🌟🌟

  • @annamarielewis7078
    @annamarielewis7078 3 года назад +5

    Epileptic 16 year old with no helmet. That about sums it up. Teenagers ⁉️

  • @DeputatKaktus
    @DeputatKaktus 5 лет назад +5

    What was that klaxon sound inside 65 before landing at RVI?
    GPWS? TCAS? Do helicopters even have those systems?

  • @genevatilsley794
    @genevatilsley794 4 года назад +2

    Hero’s

  • @dancing.with.adagio
    @dancing.with.adagio 3 года назад +2

    I wonder is TXA is given as much here in Canada, as the UK? I'm super allergic to it!

  • @ch007eh7
    @ch007eh7 Год назад +3

    *Road accident & motorbike* is probably the worst combination when it comes to road accidents 😰.
    Chances are high that the person on the two-wheeler loses the game 😣.
    "Dooon't know what to saaay." 😂
    _But eyes are a really critical body part for me too 😖😝._
    "Eyeball on a stick." 🤣

  • @jeanetteandersen-wv2ty
    @jeanetteandersen-wv2ty Месяц назад

    Im in southern ontario canada. We have public health care fujnded directly from the province and secondary federaly. Im glad to say Ohip. Funds orange air our air amulance based in toronto. Which gives it access to the bulk of the population. Ny ex. Was local volonteer fiire xhief in a rural area. Near a major borxer crossong. He was imvolved in several air
    rescuses amoung others. So i appriciate the work and its importance. But jt took its toll on our family. It sholkd only be a job for those with out one

  • @ryanwillis2513
    @ryanwillis2513 5 лет назад +10

    Has epilepsy > doesn’t wear helmet

    • @infernalhaze4663
      @infernalhaze4663 5 лет назад

      I wouldn't want to wear a helmet everywhere...

    • @GeraldTheChampionOfEarth
      @GeraldTheChampionOfEarth 5 лет назад +5

      Infernal haze i think he means on a bike

    • @CovidConQuitTheCensorship
      @CovidConQuitTheCensorship 4 года назад

      Yes good point. Why wasn't he wearing a helmet? I don't know much about the condition but are there alarm/alert type devices they can wear to warn of an approaching fit, or that sends a signal to someone else when it happens? It must be the most awful thing, not knowing when the next fit will come, and of course the associated dangers with where they might be when it happens

    • @EvilasFUDGE
      @EvilasFUDGE 3 года назад

      @@CovidConQuitTheCensorship Even if he is a known epileptic that isn’t a guarantee that he often has the type seizures where you lose consciousness, he may have only experienced absent seizures or small seizures, this might have been his first time losing consciousness. Most people with regular seizures can feel them coming on. There aren’t really any devices you can wear constantly, you can measure electrical impulses in the brain but that implies wearing a pretty big device similar to an ekg and is more of a temporary thing. There are seizure dogs though, but they’re often very expensive. Some epileptics who have frequent big seizures have a device similar to a pacemaker implanted in their chest to manage seizures, and most people with frequent seizures take medication to manage their seizures. Some also manage with diet. Keto is actually a medical diet, invented to help manage seizures, not weight.

    • @613miami
      @613miami Год назад +1

      I have epilepsy with grand mal seizures. You get a few seconds warning but you would not be able to stop harm occurring.

  • @lorettacarroll6015
    @lorettacarroll6015 2 года назад +2

    Now where did we park the helicopter?

  • @kittyrichardson68
    @kittyrichardson68 4 года назад +1

    I might be the only person that basically is told your ok and don’t make any noice.

  • @treatpeoplewithkindness9231
    @treatpeoplewithkindness9231 3 года назад +1

    Dr. Dion reminds me of Eliot Gilles. Not in a mean way, in a calm kind way. When Elliot isn’t going bonkers bc of Ben.

  • @MichaelJTritter44
    @MichaelJTritter44 3 года назад +1

    Props to them, but NPAs are a no no for head trauma cases.

  • @pjdlol
    @pjdlol 2 года назад +3

    why do they always casually stroll up to an emergency in all these videos? are they trying not to be tired and huffed when they reach the patient or something like that??

    • @artspooner
      @artspooner 2 года назад +7

      Exactly that and to avoid injury. They have heavy kit and if you are all puffed out then you are not going to be able to think straight and they need to have energy for if they need to perform CPR (which is actually very tiring) or move the patient.

    • @pjdlol
      @pjdlol 2 года назад +2

      @@artspooner makes sense! Thanks

  • @lindaarnold5683
    @lindaarnold5683 7 месяцев назад +1

    Perhaps the parents said “ helmet”! The 16 yer old thought he was too cool to wear a helmet?? 16 year olds can be a bit hard headed. 😊

  • @KeebCR
    @KeebCR Месяц назад +1

    As an American I watch this show and cringe because I know that this would cost me so much money to have an air ride to a hospital let alone an ambulance ride. We'd be 10K before I even got thru the doors of the hospital.

    • @freedomofchoice3606
      @freedomofchoice3606 Месяц назад +1

      Thank goodness the rest of the world hasn't followed the American healthcare INDUSTRY, this helicopter is completely free of charge, just like healthcare should be for everyone no matter where you live.

    • @KeebCR
      @KeebCR Месяц назад

      @@freedomofchoice3606 Industry is definitely the correct word.
      I have friends who worked for Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance which is one of the biggest in the US and they are taught to find any excuse not to medical bills. One friend was fired for getting too many paid.
      I don’t have health insurance and will not call an ambulance even if I get injured because of the cost for even that.
      I found that in my area to be airlifted to the nearest hospital which is just a few miles away it’s 80k

  • @gattamom
    @gattamom 2 месяца назад

    I wondered if they carry machetes and wire cutters to get through those thick fences and shrubs.

  • @jessicahummel1691
    @jessicahummel1691 5 дней назад

    Helmets all the way any age!!

  • @Josh-dr3fj
    @Josh-dr3fj 4 года назад +2

    hi, love the videos, got a question though, why are there fire services personnel greeting the aircrew at RVI? I am American so apologies if this is a silly question.

    • @rianneorgellinnetje4116
      @rianneorgellinnetje4116 3 года назад +3

      I'm not sure if it's the same in England as in the Netherlands, but if fire services personnel or police might get there faster than the ambulance and the situation is severe enough, like resuscitation and probably trauma, it's just a race who gets there first.

    • @Josh-dr3fj
      @Josh-dr3fj 3 года назад +1

      @@rianneorgellinnetje4116 I was more referring to at the hospital.

    • @flynnbojo
      @flynnbojo 3 года назад +7

      @@Josh-dr3fj hey josh, I’m a student paramedic in Australia and we have a similar system here. The reason is pretty simple, basically the larger trauma or RSI hospitals have there own fire department so if there is an emergency services are always ready. You could imagine if there was a fire at a hospital how much of a catastrophe that’s could be. There aren’t fires every day though so the fire department guys and girls help with patient unloading of the chopper and other tasks.

    • @Josh-dr3fj
      @Josh-dr3fj 3 года назад +1

      @@flynnbojo ah, thanks!

    • @russell7054
      @russell7054 Год назад +2

      Which minute is that? Dont see any fire service back at hospital.
      However, as they cut people out of crashes, I am sure they have key info to pass onto next rescue team. Though that would happen at the crash site.

  • @nofs1448
    @nofs1448 Месяц назад

    S01 E 02 is supposed to be Teams come to the aid of a mother and daughter involved in a high-speed motorcycle crash, before helping a four-year-old girl with a serious leg fracture.. This is epsiode four

  • @AS-yz2iz
    @AS-yz2iz 2 года назад +2

    Interesting to me how they call the ground the "floor" in these. Is that typical in the UK?

    • @russell7054
      @russell7054 Год назад +1

      The UK being the place the English language you speak originates from.
      And explain the difference.....

    • @AS-yz2iz
      @AS-yz2iz Год назад +1

      @@russell7054 I know where the English language came from. I simply asked I that was typical. Outside we call it the "ground". In a house or building, we call it the "floor ". I found the difference interesting, that's all.

    • @solgoddess2283
      @solgoddess2283 Месяц назад

      Yes, it’s typical they call the ground the floor
      Lots of other lingo too!

  • @CQBify
    @CQBify 5 лет назад

    Where is this?

  • @Qweoiu
    @Qweoiu 4 года назад +2

    Hope the boy is ok !🙄

  • @elizabethharris156
    @elizabethharris156 5 лет назад +12

    So happy they are so experienced at their job. Sadly, they are only this experienced in the UK. Unfortunately, we don’t have this experience in America. All our money and freedom and no experienced paramedics.😞

    • @paleblueeyesxx4433
      @paleblueeyesxx4433 5 лет назад +6

      Lmfao. The USA is better. My cousin was flown in an air ambulance to shock trauma in Baltimore. A civilian saved his life with CPR before they arrived. You must not personally know anyone who is an emt or paramedic like meself.

    • @optimist3580
      @optimist3580 4 года назад

      Why do most Americans think they are free, check out this link worldpopulationreview.com/countries/freest-countries/ it might surprise you.
      You do have experienced medical personnel but I think the reference to money answered that query!

    • @looksirdroids9134
      @looksirdroids9134 3 года назад +2

      What freedom?

    • @artspooner
      @artspooner 2 года назад +1

      @@paleblueeyesxx4433 Better in what way?

    • @tandiparent1906
      @tandiparent1906 3 месяца назад

      My better half, who was disabled, & I used to pay a monthly fee with an emergency helicopter business. It wasn't at that time that bad price wise & although we never had to use their services, it was good to know that we had it available if either of us had ever needed it.

  • @joycesmith3259
    @joycesmith3259 Год назад +1

    Looks like lots of medicine

  • @wunderlichcatt4420
    @wunderlichcatt4420 5 лет назад

    how bout you guys?

  • @shredtillyadeadtv9555
    @shredtillyadeadtv9555 4 года назад

    why do they were helmets and not just headphones?

    • @MichaelJTritter44
      @MichaelJTritter44 3 года назад +3

      Thats just how the equipment comes, it's also easier to do than just head phones and also provides extra protection for turbulence etc.

  • @johannasutcliffe5077
    @johannasutcliffe5077 5 лет назад +1

    Johanna.Sutcliffe Spcial Olympials Smlie. 😀😊☺😋😎😍😘😚😙

  • @VictoriaRosanna
    @VictoriaRosanna 3 года назад +1

    Now they carry blood .

  • @scaro81
    @scaro81 5 лет назад +3

    Why does the kid have a nosetube?

    • @heatherrowles2580
      @heatherrowles2580 5 лет назад +15

      Because they never give up an airway, even an inferior one or an IV site once its established......if something goes wrong with the et tube, that tube in the boys nose may be what saves his life.

  • @rosaamaro8966
    @rosaamaro8966 Год назад

    Nendoe k

  • @jcbaxendaleguitars7683
    @jcbaxendaleguitars7683 4 года назад +3

    Why do British people say “go to hospital” instead of “ go to THE hospital” ?

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 3 года назад +7

      I don't know why it is, but I think the British way makes sense. Adding 'the' implies everyone knows which specific hospital is being referred to, and that's not always the case

    • @sergialadid
      @sergialadid 3 года назад +7

      When you go to hospital you are the patient, when you go to the hospital you are a visitor.

  • @joanpashinsky-greve8760
    @joanpashinsky-greve8760 3 года назад

    Why do the put the helicopter in the hanger at night?? Don’t they fly at night??

    • @llamacannon1714
      @llamacannon1714 3 года назад +8

      Late reply but here's the answer. Bigger Heli-bases have dedicated night and day helicopters. Some of them need to go down during the night for reassesment and repairs. These vehicles have extremely tough safety-standars and they have a very hard limit on how many hours they can be flown each day, this can not be avoided unless there is an extreme emergency.

    • @tandiparent1906
      @tandiparent1906 3 месяца назад

      I would think that it would be dangerous for a helicopter to try to land in unfamiliar places with electric lines, etc.

  • @tejadeja9542
    @tejadeja9542 5 лет назад +3

    Seriously, my iPhone 6 has GPS....why do they have to get out a road map?...at all?... even for the ground?...yet they’re high techie-techie in the air?...

    • @boocomban
      @boocomban 5 лет назад +16

      many locations doesn't have fully digital maps. and that is aviation map, it show more than just location, they use that map combine with GPS and digital map to make sure they have as much as information as possible for landing

    • @CovidConQuitTheCensorship
      @CovidConQuitTheCensorship 4 года назад

      @Teja Deja - I thought the same thing 😁 I guess the above replies answered the question, though the second one didn't need to be quite so rude. Actually I was thinking they'd have to take an engineer to refold the map 😂😂

    • @optimist3580
      @optimist3580 4 года назад

      The UK is the worlds most completely mapped country and has been for the last 200+ years. Try using the digital OS Mapfinder on whatever phone/tablet you own.
      www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/shop/os-maps-online.html
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordnance_Survey
      Other comments correctly pointed out the air charts are designed for flying aircraft

    • @freedomofchoice3606
      @freedomofchoice3606 Месяц назад

      Late comment here, mobile phone signals rarely transmit above a certain height, also paper maps do not require electricity and rarely do they fail, unlike modern tech which can and does fail, why take the risk especially when lives are at risk.

  • @RobertJamesChinneryH
    @RobertJamesChinneryH Год назад

    Motorcycle "drivers" are the most dangerous...weaving in and out of traffic at high speeds ignorant to law abiding motorists

  • @RAVETOR
    @RAVETOR Год назад

    What's the thing in the nose for? at 22:55

    • @maryshafer
      @maryshafer Год назад

      Pitot static tube to get into undisturbed air for airspeed and pressure altitude, maybe? That's the right location at any rate. I noticed one on one of the helicopters. Analogous to the nosebooms on fighters. I'm a retired NASA research engineer who dealt with fixed-wing aircraft so I'm not a helicopter expert in any way except as a passenger.

    • @RAVETOR
      @RAVETOR Год назад

      @@maryshafer Just a lot of gibberish here coming out from your mind; you sound schizophrenic, either that or you're just trolling. This is what another viewer wrote in the comment section: "Because they never give up an airway, even an inferior one or an IV site once its established......if something goes wrong with the et tube, that tube in the boys nose may be what saves his life." So the real answer to my question is this: the "tube" helps the person to breath and that it also acts as a safety measure if the other equipment (et tube) fail for some reason.

    • @maryshafer
      @maryshafer Год назад +1

      @RAVETOR I was referring to the nose of the helicopter, not the nose of a person. Goes to show a difference in perspective.

    • @RAVETOR
      @RAVETOR Год назад

      @@maryshafer OK, but I still don't get it how you couldn't understand what I meant, that it was the thing in the nose off the person I meant, I even added a timestamp at 22:55, and you clicked on it, and you give me an answer about the helicopter? That's just weird. haha You can give me the timestamp in the video of what you mean instead if you like.

    • @maryshafer
      @maryshafer Год назад +1

      @RAVETOR I didn't know I could click on the time, thanks. I just watched five of these shows and I'm don't remember where I saw the pitot static tube. I don't even remember which episode had the Optica and that was pretty noteworthy as I'd only seen it in Flight International about 40 years ago. I did notice the fenestron because those are less common in the US. What, this isn't a show about aviation?

  • @rosaamaro8966
    @rosaamaro8966 Год назад

    Kzosmdoozowk❤❤kdnsomsnsso🇧🇱🤡💋💋🛑🇧🇯🛑🛑📞🌃🌃🌃🎁🇧🇱🎁🇧🇯🇧🇯🎁🇧🇯

  • @jacksimi
    @jacksimi 4 года назад +2

    Why do the British call the ground, the floor?

    • @optimist3580
      @optimist3580 4 года назад +1

      Because the Brits speak English

    • @billybogg3602
      @billybogg3602 4 года назад +1

      we called it the deck when i worked on choppers

  • @darlenelang3681
    @darlenelang3681 11 месяцев назад

    No lipstick Jayne. People matter

  • @patkelly6349
    @patkelly6349 3 года назад

    Who’s the tubby bird is she just a gofer

  • @AllenTax
    @AllenTax 2 года назад

    Was he that naked when driving? I know some patients might loose clothing to open area to get body to move, be released, but I saw nothing to that effect or blood. If blood however. I say it is best to keep clothes on with it. To not cause,increase possible rate of affection and bleeding.

    • @stefanieebling2785
      @stefanieebling2785 Год назад

      They remove the clothing so they can properly examine the patient and treat any injuries that may be hidden behind clothing and not be distracted by any obvious injuries

  • @stephenludlum9746
    @stephenludlum9746 8 месяцев назад

    Unfortunately America has nothing like this.

    • @tandiparent1906
      @tandiparent1906 3 месяца назад

      Actually the U.S. have several emergency helicopter ambulances around the country.

    • @stephenludlum9746
      @stephenludlum9746 3 месяца назад

      @@tandiparent1906 They have many emergency helicopters, which is not what I am saying. The the emergency helicopter in England always carry doctors as part of the flight crew. I have worked as a paramedic in the US, and no company has a doctor as part of the flight crew.
      It makes a big difference when you have a doctor onboard train in the emergency management of a trump patient.

  • @RICDirector
    @RICDirector 5 лет назад +11

    They need to quit saying that ketamine is a pain medication--it's NOT. It's an anamnestic--it makes you forget--but it does NOT relieve pain. That's why vets can't use ketamine alone for cat spays--it's not humane! Just makes me cringe when they 'give pain medication' and then hurt the hell out of them, just because they won't remember.
    Do it right, there's lots of meds out there that ARE pain meds. This is just inexcusable.

    • @boocomban
      @boocomban 5 лет назад +15

      onafixedincome actually it does ease pain. While it is anamnestic medicine, it does ease pain as it prevent nerve receive signals in short temporary. While it not last long like other addictive pain killer like morphine, it does help to ease pain in short of time since it block your nerve from receive signal completely for short of time. It have been use as pain ease by military combine with morphine! And they are doctor as well as paramedic. I'm sure they know what they are doing! And you don't use ketamine to cat spray alone because it doesn't last long!

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector 5 лет назад +2

      @@boocomban Golden words--'in combination with'. If it blocked all the signals for pain, the people or animals would not be screaming and yes, suffering, when it is used. Just because you may not remember it doesn't mean it didn't happen, or that the stress isn't there and won't affect your health and stability.
      And docs/parameds SHOULD know better!

    • @mitchpage6748
      @mitchpage6748 5 лет назад +11

      Ketamine is a pain medicine when dosed correctly (much less than the sedative doses) I have used ketamine for pain many times and the patients remembered the events but had improved pain (sometimes in combination with fentanyl but often just ketamine). There a large body of evidence showing ketamine is effective for acute pain with or without concomitante opiates. It can also be given safely to patients who are unstable.
      see this paper: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29775117

    • @heatherrowles2580
      @heatherrowles2580 5 лет назад +7

      Trust me ketamine relieves pain.....Ive had ketamine following open heart surgery I still remember everything, it doesnt work as an amenesic med for everyone and it doesnt for me....does make me trip balls though, I cant stand the stuff....but it DOES relieve pain.

    • @guymacdiarmid8163
      @guymacdiarmid8163 5 лет назад +1

      Lol look it up on Wiki you muppet. First sentence says it's an analgesic. It's really not that hard to be informed these days.

  • @patkelly6349
    @patkelly6349 3 года назад

    Has he got a radial pulse as the patient is talking and has a gcs of 15. This stuff is boring

    • @Butterfly1025A
      @Butterfly1025A Год назад +1

      This may blow your mind, but an important part of medicine is collecting redundant data. Got to make sure you’re not getting a quick number from somewhere and that number’s wrong! It’s important for documentation. Also, you don’t want to get in trouble for not being thorough.

    • @patkelly6349
      @patkelly6349 Год назад

      @@Butterfly1025A yeh I get that mate

  • @blakekerr8924
    @blakekerr8924 2 года назад

    We fbff

  • @rosaamaro8966
    @rosaamaro8966 Год назад

    Dkebdmee wiwpelw os