Tag: Ambulance Service

  • Woman passes away after 15-hour ambulance delay

    Woman passes away after 15-hour ambulance delay

    A diabetic woman was found dead at home and called 999 for an ambulance, but it took the ambulance until the following day to arrive.

    Because of her extremely high blood sugar levels, Sandra Diane Finch called 911 to request assistance.

    The 44-year-old female patient from Lichfield, Staffordshire, reported to the West Midlands Ambulance Service that she had been vomiting, that her blood glucose levels were high, and that she was “sleepy.”

    Her call was labelled “category three,” meaning it was an urgent medical emergency that needed to be handled within the specified one-hour response window, and an ambulance had to be dispatched.

    But when paramedics finally turned up 15 hours later, she had died. 

    Miss Finch had reportedly first called for an ambulance at around 9pm on December 4, 2021.

    At the time, the clinical validation team that carries out a review before an ambulance is sent was ‘understaffed’ and ‘had no time limit attached for an assessment’.

    FILE PICTURE - An East Midlands Ambulance Service vehicle. The family of a great grandfather have been left 'shocked and upset' after he was found lying in a pool of blood while waiting two-and-half-hours for an ambulance. See SWNS story SWMDwait. Charles Hall, 85, was found lying in a pool blood after a suspected fall at his house, by daughter, Joanne and husband John on October 4. Realising the former police officer was in trouble, the family kicked the door down and immediately called the ambulance service. Son-in-law, John, 56, who is first aid trained, tended to Charles whilst he was falling in and out of consciousness on the floor. The family, who said the scene at Charles' house 'looked like a crime scene', said he probably had a fall in his kitchen and tried to reach the telephone near his front door. As the family tended to widow Charles, they had to wait two-and-a-half hours for the East Midlands Ambulance Service to arrive at the address in Hinckley, Leics. Sadly, father-of-two Charles died the following day at Leicester Infirmary - with his cause of death being kidney failure due to a fall, which eventually lead to a cardiac arrest.
    Paramedics were first called at around 9pm – but didn’t arrive until shortly after 1pm the following day (Picture: SWNS)

    It meant that no assessment was attempted until Miss Finch failed to answer a call back from the ambulance service at 7.22am the following day – 10 hours after her 999 call was made.

    By the time the ambulance arrived at her Curborough Road home at 1.08pm on December 5, the type 1 diabetic had died from ketoacidosis – dangerous acidic deposits released when patients’ sugar levels are excessively high.

    Clinicians told coroner Emma Serrano that Miss Finch’s call should have been a ‘category two’ case, in line with those who have suffered a stroke, heart attack, severe blood loss or trauma – the targeted arrival time for which is 18 minutes.

    However, they also felt Miss Finch would not have died when she did if an ambulance had arrived within the accepted category three time limit.

    Last month, Ms Serrano, area coroner for Stoke-on-Trent and North Staffordshire, recorded a narrative conclusion at Miss Finch’s inquest, saying she died of ‘ketoacidosis due to insulin deprivation contributed to by neglect’.

    And now she has issued a report calling for action to be taken by ambulance service chiefs to ensure similar deaths do not happen in the future.

    Ms Serrano said she was concerned that ‘the pathways used by the service to categorise the level of ambulance and ridged and have no capacity for movement away from the path’.

    She said: ‘This led to a type-one diabetic patient, who was feeling sleepy and with deranged glucose levels, not being classed as a potentially serious situation requiring rapid intervention. 

    ‘Clinical opinion in agreement that this was, but the rigidity of the pathway meant it was categorised incorrectly.

    ‘(And) that the use of an assessment team, to assess a category 3 ambulance call, with no time limit for assessments to take place, and no prioritisation system, will lead to further deaths resulting from delays.’

    A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said: ‘We would like to convey our deepest sympathies to the family of Sarah Finch. The introduction of the Clinical Validation Team has led to significant patient benefits.

    ‘Almost 200,000 callers have received the necessary care they required much more quickly than they would have done had we been sending an ambulance to every case.

    ‘All category three and four incidents, except for a predefined list of exemptions now go directly to the clinical validation team. For those where no ambulance is initially sent, outcomes range from a higher ambulance response category, referrals into urgent and community services, and self-care advice.

    ‘By appropriately reducing the requirements for emergency ambulances, those patients with the most acute needs get an ambulance more quickly, while those with less urgent needs get the advice or referral that they require more rapidly than would have been the case.

    ‘The trust now aims to contact category three and four patients for a clinical assessment within 60 minutes. Patients are prioritised for call back in time order, within their incident category.’

  • Man jailed 21 years for beating his eleven-year old son to death

    Man jailed 21 years for beating his eleven-year old son to death

    For killing his 11-year-old son, a man was given a life sentence in prison.

    In June of last year, Michael Harrison murdered his son Mikey in the vicinity of a park in Heanor, Derbyshire.

    He then dialled 911 and informed the operator that Mikey had fallen out of a tree.

    “At 18 minutes past one on Saturday, June 18, 2022, you started a charade solely intended to protect yourself,” Judge Shaun Smith KC reprimanded the 41-year-old.

    ‘That was because you had attacked your 11-year-old son Mikey. You hit and punched him many times. At least one of those blows was so hard it lacerated his liver.

    ‘Rather than face up to what you had done, you made a call to the ambulance service to report that Mikey had fallen out of a tree.

    ‘What you did that morning ended the life of a little boy and emptied the lives of many others.’

    Harrison was jailed for life at Derby Crown Court with a minimum term of 21 years and six months for the murder.

    Michael Harrison had unleashed a violent attack on his young son (Picture: PA)
    Michael Harrison had unleashed a violent attack on his young son (Picture: PA)

    He had previously pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Mikey during a court hearing, but had denied murder.

    Ambulance crews had been called to the Heanor area last June after receiving a report that Mikey was injured.

    He was taken to hospital where he later died.

  • 17-year-old boy fatally stabbed at a house party

    17-year-old boy fatally stabbed at a house party

    Last night at a house party, a 17-year-old boy was fatally stabbed.

    After hearing that a man had been stabbed, Yorkshire Ambulance Service notified West Yorkshire Police, who were dispatched to Salisbury Grove in Armley at at 2.48 am.

    There were several people in the house when the police arrived, and they were ordered to leave right away.

    They discovered an injured teenage boy.
    A short while after being taken to the hospital, he was declared dead.

    A man who lives across the street from where the house party told Yorkshire Live, said: ‘I live opposite the house where the tragedy happened.

    ‘They are new houses and have only been built a couple of months ago and this was the first party I think to be held there.

    ‘The mood was fine, music was a bit loud but everyone was enjoying themselves. I thought no more of it and went to bed.

    ‘It was only in the morning when I woke up that I saw all the police and the area cordoned off.

    ‘Sadly the first party to be held there and it’s ended in tears.’

    A spokesperson for West Yorkshire Police said: ‘Police have launched a murder investigation following the death of a 17-year-old boy in Leeds.

    ‘At 2.48am this morning, police received reports of a disturbance at a house in Salisbury Grove, Armley, where a party involving a large number of people had been taking place.

    ‘A further call was received from the ambulance service who were responding to a male reported to have been stabbed at the address.

    ‘Officers attended and dispersed people from the area around the address, and the victim, a 17-year-old boy from Leeds, was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead a short time later.

    ‘Detectives from West Yorkshire Police Homicide and Major Enquiry Team are treating his death as murder.

    ‘A scene remains in place around the address in Salisbury Grove to undergo forensic examination and specialist searches.’

    Senior Investigating Officer, Detective Chief Inspector Alan Weekes said: ‘The loss of a young life in such sudden and violent circumstances is an absolute tragedy, and we are treating this incident very seriously and doing everything we can to identify those responsible.

    ‘We are continuing to support this young man’s family at what is clearly an incredibly difficult time for them, and we are committed to getting them the answers they need as we progress our enquiries.’

  • Three individuals stabbed in a street fight in London, including two teenagers

    Three individuals stabbed in a street fight in London, including two teenagers

    Three individuals, including two minors, were hospitalised with stab wounds following a street altercation in London.

    The two 18-year-olds who were discovered on Walthamstow’s Stocksfield Road have also been detained on suspicion of attempting to kill someone, according to the Met Police.

    At after 6 o’clock today, the London Ambulance Service dispatched officers to the adjoining Brandon Road.

    A man in his thirties was found with stab injuries, and was taken to hospital.

    His condition is not currently known.

    Stella Creasy, the Labour MP for the area, posted on a local Facebook page about ‘serious violence that has taken place in Walthamstow today’, calling for speculation to end.

    She wrote: ‘Please think carefully that if it was your family or friends involved how you would feel to read such commentary and speculation, as well as about the impact of misinformation and rumour on our local community.’

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    According to the Sun, she also shared a police update saying: ‘Given the proximity of the various victims, the narrow window of time between incidents, and other recent violence, a Section 60 CJPOA was authorised at 18:30 until 06:30 tomorrow morning, covering Waltham Forest Borough.’

  • Bono Regional Fire Service decries abuse of emergency phones lines

    The Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) in the Bono region has decried the abuse of its emergency telephone lines by the general public.

    The Regional Commander, DCFO Heroine Sekyere Boakye, has revealed that her outfit receives many pranks calls.

    According to DCFO Heroine Boakye, the practice has become a major challenge affecting their operations in their quest to fight fire outbreaks in the region.

    She disclosed that because of their preparedness and willingness to serve the public, fire personnel are immediately deployed to supposed disaster zones when they receive emergency calls but some of these calls turn out to be prank calls.

    Describing it as worrying, she said that her men only get to the ground before realising that they have been misled or tricked.

    The situation the commander avers is affecting their operations as it takes a lot of resources to move the fire tender on trips.

    “One major challenge we are facing is prank calls from the public. It is really affecting our operations as movements of the fire tenders to suppose disaster scenes come at a greater cost. When this happens it affects the morale of the personnel.”

    She revealed that placing pranks calls to the emergency unit affects their work as they are unable to attend to actual disaster scenes on time.

    “The other danger is that someone in dire need of our service may be deprived access to us because of the irresponsibility on the part of some individuals.”

    She urged the public to desist from such practices as it is not in the interest of the public.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com