Love the way that some of these people have such great caring neighbours,they are so lucky to have them,particularly if they dont have any family nearhand or maybe no family at all
I am have bad health and my mom too but not as bad. If my neighbor doesn't hear our doggies outside, she calls or comes over to see if we're OK. My mom had to go into the hospital after she tripped, and she brought me meals over for 4 days. We love her like family. She does all this while her husband is unwell and needs help. She is an Angel.
I love Lloyd If I did this job, I would get really emotionally attached to the older people who are really upset that they aren’t feeling well. I’d want to cry with them😅❤
These professionals are so compassionate and caring on a human to human level! That has to be as important to their patients long term improved quality of life as the technical support they provide. The human connection. Showing that the patient's issues never make them a burden and instead that they are a valued person, absolutely deserving of care, goes so far in a positive attitude that is vital to healing. I'm so impressed I must say Bravo and Thank You to these incredible workers! Heros to those whom they serve everyday! ❤️
I've been where Paul is - quite literally. Crawling on the floor in agony with back pain, asking for the needle for meds because several needles would hurt less than you do in that moment. Wishing him well.
I was accosted by an animal when I was younger (not going into detail here). I damaged some internal parts of the limb it bit but nobody seemed to care. Doctors just brushed it off and have some problems that still stim from that injury. I wish I'd gotten the care these patients do.
@love651018: It would have been a simple act of care and love to call for help for this poor man sometime before 10 hours had elapsed! What were his family members thinking?!? 😢
cuz you usually have to wait for like 2-3 hours to get any type of help, i had to get stitches in my finger due to a quite deep cut and had to wait for 3 and a half hour bleeding and in the worst pain ever even tho the waiting area was empty.
honest question here since i am from different country, does ambulance services is needed if the injuries patient sustain not too serious ,,well aware of what is going on? instead of going straight to the ER or critical care unit themself if they able to
19:08 Imagine if you were a patient and as an actual accident, was dropped... They sincerely apologize... Down the road you are watching this episode.... Thinking "They must have not liked me...."
I think it is horrendous that those medics can only administer paracetamol and entenox. In my opinion, given their limitations, they should have called for a HEMS doctor for Paul, so he could have Ketamine prior to transport. Here in the States, our medics can administer opiates without a doctor on scene, so that at least is a little better. As someone who lives with chronic spinal pain I really feel for Paul...
So, in American terms they gave him Tylenol (Acetaminophen) and Laughing gas. Correct? When I shattered my leg (here in USA) they refused to give me anything until we got to the hospital , 15 miles away going through a blizzard. What should have taken us to go 15 miles (about 20 minutes) took almost an hour. and you could see the bones (not stick out of the skin where there would be blood) but, stick out and my ankle was so broken and dislocated that it was almost backward yet, nothing for pain!!
@@vickiwaatti1076 yes, exactly, Tylenol and laughing gas. I am very sorry to hear that you got no pain management at all. Some departments and ambulance services can do pain management and some can't. It depends on whether they are Advanced Life Support certified along with local laws ...
Thanks for your professional opinion.🙄. In the US, many people wouldn’t call the ambulance or go to the ER because they can’t afford it. The lack of healthcare for many Americans is inexcusable.🇨🇦
@@Lauriej117 every system has its issues. Provincial health care in Canada and the NHS in the UK included; this is why so many people in these two countries are going to cash pay medicine if they can afford it. Government funded healthcare is not the panacea people make it to be ...
@@Lauriej117 for what it's worth, I'm a highly experienced hospital chaplain, not a medical provider, but I am very knowledgeable about emergency medicine issues, as well as public health issues
It sounds like tony has a pseudocyst..lots of people with chronic pancreatitis get those. I have chronic pancreatitis but luckily haven't dealt with pseudocysts
I think you will find he was joking. Sorry but we Brits are odd like that. We don't overthink or take every word literally. We find That rather rather lacking in intelligence.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930: I find your attitude towards humor other than the British sort to be insulting. Non-Brits can and do have terrific senses of humor, in my humble opinion. To call other views of humor unintelligent is unacceptable and deeming!
@@elainelessack hahahaha! That is Hilarious! You Are joking? For a start I have probably known and lived among more ethnic groups than you have met in what seems to be a rather sad life, and you know what, we have never had any problem with humour. (It has a U, in the Ciivilised, Literate world) I think you need an enema. Or just get more fibre.
i feel like the fella with the back injury would have been a good candidate for morphine, no?? or is that not good with back injuries as he might injure himself further being too relaxed? i just felt so bad for him and then to hear they were just giving him tylenol woof
Well, they administer it via IV, so it takes effect a *lot* quicker than the OTC pill version. It makes sense to start with that, and then escalate to morphine if necessary.
I know exactly how Paul feels. Epidural eases the pain some. Tramadol is a joke it doesn’t work for a lot of people. My mom is addicted to Tramadol for the past 15 years
@@CantonDem13 When you're dealing with a man who has been paralyzed on the floor for 10 hours, in my opinion, it's common sense more is needed. I believe what was happening here is neither of the 2 paramedics were qualified to give morphine. I've seen where they brought in another crew to do it, but they didn't want to tell him that..
thats an addict, not someone in any other pain but withdrawal. take it from someone who’s been there. if they weren’t there because he was dependent he would not have been so insistent & openly mentioned how it’s made his mental feeling better and his fingers and toes tingly. over the years involved in that stuff and you just learn to know the behavior of someone who is lying for drugs.
He's acting like an addict, not someone in accute pain. In my 58 years and having addicted in my family, it's quite easy to recognize. In my opinion RU-vid, since you enjoy targeting me for telling truth, my truth in your words of woke. God forbid being in serious pain in the U.K! Acetaminophen and Nitrous Oxide?😆😂
Tylenol is most likely not a good option for him. Tylenol affects the liver and since he admitted to alcohol abuse he most likely has liver damage. Tylenol is mostly good for muscle pain. A cyst is extremely painful. Yes he might be getting addicted to morphine but the pain needs to treated.