The 999 Emergency Call Handler | Paramedics On Scene | BBC Scotland

Ойын-сауық

Call handlers like Sarah take emergency 999 calls from all over Scotland at the Ambulance Control Centre in South Queensferry.
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Пікірлер: 14

  • @lucylou9030
    @lucylou9030 Жыл бұрын

    When I was 4 I got a sherbet lemon stuck in the back of my throat. My brother looked at me and shouted my dad and told him I'd turned blue. My dad ran outside with me, turned me upside down and hit my back , the sweet flew out. If he hadn't of done that i would of chocked to death. Just saying.

  • @ArcticWolf-bg4mx
    @ArcticWolf-bg4mx8 ай бұрын

    All calls are priority one when i worked there

  • @christinafast4459
    @christinafast44597 күн бұрын

    Wow, of course you don’t slap if it just gets worse

  • @Mezame9
    @Mezame9 Жыл бұрын

    I am highly confused. In every First Aid course I have attended I have always been trained to apply back strikes and chest thrusts if coughing does not dislodge the obstruction. Even First Aid videos found online today advise the same thing. So why on earth is this 999 dispatcher advising against First Aid? Please be consistent NHS, is it advisable or not advisable to deliver back strikes to a chocking victim? Especially when the obstruction is still present.

  • @callum6835

    @callum6835

    Ай бұрын

    The dispatcher will ask "Is s/he breathing, coughing or crying at all", if the answer is yes then it's assumed some air is able to bypass the blockage to some extent, meaning some form of breathing can be sustained. If this patient receives back blows and chest thrusts it is possible the object could become dislodged further and cause a complete blockage rather than partial. On the other hand, if the caller answers "no" when asked if the patient "is breathing, coughing or crying at all?" then a full blockage is assumed and Heimlich instructions are advised. Hope that helps

  • @callum6835

    @callum6835

    Ай бұрын

    Replace *"Crying" for an infant/child, with "talking" for an adult *... I think is the correct wording dispatchers will ask

  • @ArcticWolf-bg4mx
    @ArcticWolf-bg4mx8 ай бұрын

    I worked there for two summers

  • @admiralsturgeon
    @admiralsturgeon2 жыл бұрын

    So what are we supposed to do then if we can't slap them on the back?

  • @rachaeltaylor5387

    @rachaeltaylor5387

    Ай бұрын

    I thought exactly the same . I'm a dental nurse abd every CPR course has said the same? Confused

  • @Autisticbanmeforbeingdifferent

    @Autisticbanmeforbeingdifferent

    24 күн бұрын

    Ever heard of Heimlich maneuver?

  • @irrelevance3859

    @irrelevance3859

    2 күн бұрын

    @@rachaeltaylor5387let the cough it out. I did this job and reason its said is because one, Its assumed the person calling has already slapped them on the back and it hasn’t come out yet. And two its very hard to instruct back blows over the phone correctly. People do it wrong or sometimes the person calling doesn’t have the right force to do a proper back blow. So it can turn a partial obstruction into a full one. If the person can still breathe/cough. They should try cough it out. If they can’t then abdominal thrusts/Heimlich is instructed. If they go unconscious then CPR.

  • @user-lc7eu9ny8d
    @user-lc7eu9ny8dАй бұрын

    Wont do you need for ambulances call handing ok

  • @Michael-vf3ih
    @Michael-vf3ih19 күн бұрын

    Innocent not the only one Do the crime do the time & don't cry like the police courts of law guards judges cps ect, squeal piggy squeal

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