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View Article  My Day

A very quick post as not only am I on twelve hour shifts, but I also have lots of other things to do as well. Sleep is coming pretty low down in the priorities unfortunately...

Here is my day.

Eight a.m. - Drunk woman on the tube. Coincides nicely with the British Liver Trust report. We were called by the station staff as they had trouble waking her. By the time (three minutes) we got there she was upright and chatty. We left her to make her own way home.

Then a maternataxi, contractions every ten minutes with this being her first baby meant that delivery was probably some way off.

After that we were sent to a call we was right on top of, and 88 year old man who'd been mugged by a teenage girl. Once more we let the police use our ambulance as an interview room. Luckily he wasn't seriously hurt and we drove him home where he is the sole carer of his disabled wife.

Then a patient who had collapsed in an office. Every test came back normal so we were at a loss to explain it. Off to hospital she went.

After that a student who had apparently been hit on the head with a hammer. Usual story of him being beaten by a gang of fifteen people. He wasn't seriously injured and was more intent on talking to his friends on his phone than to us, so we drove him to hospital and let them try to get some story out of him.

Off we went to a nursing home, one of the decent ones, full of people suffering serious dementia. She was in tears because she had abdominal pain yet couldn't explain it properly to us. We were as gentle as we could be getting her down to the ambulance and off to hospital. I gave her a little hug around the shoulders to calm her down which seemed to do the trick.

Finally we went to the 'bog standard' call of a young child having a febrile fit. By the time we reached the hospital he was sitting up and was intent on playing with some of the toys in the paediatric waiting room.

Add in a couple of jobs where we got cancelled on the way to them and you have a fairly uneventful, and pretty easy day.

Hopefully we'll have the same sort of thing tomorrow.

View Article  If You Have Come Here From A Government Building

Here are my ideas for targets.

What I see in care homes on a regular basis.

This is the sort of thing I see in social care all the time.

How we end up covering for GPs. And narrowly avoid disaster.

The sort of thing that the NHS does well.

(For regular readers, I'll be explaining this slightly strange post at a later date)

View Article  P.O.V.

I remember going to an elderly couple, they had been burgled while they were still in the house. She was in tears while he was trying to keep that British stiff upper lip going. He'd fought in the war and now, years later, someone the same age as his great-grandson had smashed through a window and stolen money from them.

I remember the police being as supportive as they could, but they knew that it was unlikely that anyone would be punished for this crime. I checked the couple out and prescribed a big cup of sweet tea.


He had collapsed and his breathing 'wasn't right', the woman who had been smoking heroin with him had called the ambulance and then fled the scene. Unfortunately it was one of those blocks of flats that hides around the back of other houses, so it was a hard place to find. We carried what seemed to be the whole contents of the ambulance up the three flights of stairs to find our patient.

It's risky going into drug houses without police backup but we do it all the time - on the fly risk assessment and all that.

He was lying on the bed, turning blue and breathing twice a minute.


There was a ninety year old woman that I recall. She was one of the few cases of truly random violence that I'd been to. Her health was normally fine and this was the first time that she'd ever been in an ambulance. She had been doing her shopping when someone had come behind her, pushed her to the floor and stole her purse. She was a little shook up, but was otherwise fine.

We let the police use the back of our ambulance as an interview room so they could collect her details. Then we gave her a lift home.


Our heroin overdose wasn't breathing properly, so I pulled out the oxygen and ambu-bag and started breathing for him. Eventually he stopped breathing altogether. If we'd been a minute later, or if we'd waited for the police he'd be dead.

My crewmate drew up the heroin antidote, placed a needle into his arm and pushed the drug into his vein. The police arrived about this time and turned off the small TV that I'd been half watching while forcing oxygen into the man's lungs. Around the TV were pictures of two small girls, girls who I would later discover to be our patient's daughters.


Another house burgled. The family had come home from an evening out to discover their house had been ransacked. The children were crying and the parents were distraught. I remember the father sitting in my ambulance wringing his hands. Drawers had been turned over, and the contents lay around the floor. The children's Xbox had been stolen and they were being cuddled by their mum. Once more, no injury and nothing I could give them for the pain they felt. Once more we were called to deal with 'shock'.


Our heroin user had woken up, he seemed fully aware of what had happened, so it was unlikely that he had any brain damage from a lack of oxygen. He'd been smoking the heroin and had passed out, the next thing he knew there were police and ambulance people in his flat. He wasn't aware that he'd come so close to dying.

We walked him down to the ambulance to take him to hospital. He told me that he'd just been released from prison. I asked what he'd been in there for and he told be that he used to rob and burgle people.

"For drug money?", I asked.

"Yes", he said.


I know that whenever my car was stolen the thing that made me angry was that I was so powerless to stop it. I know that should someone break into my flat while I was away, they could utterly destroy my life. The irreplaceable things that they could take and the trespass against me would reduce me to a shadow of the person I am now. It would take years for me to get things back to normal. I would wish for them to die, and to die in horrible, horrible ways.


So we saved his life, but as I sat in the cab of the ambulance writing up the events on my paperwork, I wondered who we had helped.

We helped him keep breathing.

Did we help his daughters? Would they hate us for keeping an addict father in their lives? Or would they thank us for letting them keep their daddy, addiction and all?

Did we help the people who had been burgled by him? Or have we just sentenced more people to suffer the anguish of being robbed when our patient goes on to steal more things for drug money?

When confronted by someone who isn't breathing, or is seriously ill, there is no time to think these things through - we do what we do to save lives in the immediate present. If a paedophile stops breathing we have to attend to them in the same way as we would a war hero. It's something that sometimes rolls around my mind keeping me awake at night.

But who am I to judge?

View Article  Utterly Fed Up
I'm going to apologise, for this post is a complete moan. Nothing positive about it in the slightest.

I'm on night-shifts at the moment and they are hitting me particularly hard. Last night I was feeling nauseous, which lasted into the next day. My eyes felt as if they had been taken out and rolled around in hot sand before being returned to their sockets. At one point I had double vision.

I was in an incredibly bad mood, something that turned into depression for the next day. For much of the night my legs were 'jumping', both annoying and painful. It also meant that when I could try and grab a moment's sleep I couldn't manage to do anything other than close my eyes.

So I'm feeling wrecked.

What then was I here for? Surely some sick person needed my aid...

Here are the calls we took, along with their need for an ambulance or A&E treatment.

* A two year old with a bump on their head after falling over. Needed neither ambulance or A&E. Was a 'blue light' response.
* A twelve year old with a cut finger. Needed A&E treatment but he and his mum could have walked 200 yards to the tube station that would drop him off outside A&E. It didn't need an ambulance.
* An emergency transfer from one maternity department to another. we got there before they were ready but the transfer otherwise went well. Needed an ambulance and hospital treatment. Was perhaps rightly a 'blue light' response.
* A young man with a sore throat and temperature for four days, had taken two of the antibiotics that his GP had given him. Needed neither ambulance or hospital treatment. Was a 'blue light' response.
* A teenager with back pain after drinking and smoking pot at a nightclub. Was a 'blue light' response, needed neither ambulance or hospital treatment.
* A woman, new to this country, with a blocked ear which meant she could hear her heartbeat. Another 999 call that apparently warranted a 'blue light' response.

Not a busy night in the grand scheme of things, but it was enough to keep us away from our station.

And I get to do it again and again and again. But first, while the glowing dayball is in the sky, I need some sleep before I start thinking about killing those who annoy me and then myself.

Go on, practice saying it, “He seemed such a quiet man, kept himself to himself...”.

This is why I need a new job.
View Article  Shoelaces, Belts And Other Items Of Harm
We have a number of hostels in our area, some are for young people, some are for people living with mental illness, some for alcoholics and others are for people coming out of prison.

For this latest call we were called for someone who was 'suicidal', we pulled up outside the house and realising that it was the same place that my crewmate had her bag stolen while we were inside dealing with a patient.

We walked in (after making sure that the ambulance was securely locked) and spoke to a member of staff. We had a bit of trouble making ourselves understood, but this is not really unusual any more.

The patient, who was in his room was said to be feeling distressed and had apparently tied a noose in a bit of spare string. The staff seemed very proud that he had taken the string away from the patient - so now the patient was safe.

I asked him if he'd removed the patient's shoelaces, belt, power leads or drawstrings for the curtains. He looked a bit sheepish and told us that he had forgotten about those things...

We went up to the patient's room. He didn't want to talk to us, except to tell us that the 'noose' had just been him fiddling with the bit of string out of boredom. We tried to persuade him to come with us to hospital, it covers our back should he then go on to hurt himself, and it means that he might get some specilist help from the mental health team.

But he refused and in my opinion he was full competent to refuse treatment so we left him.

Going back downstairs to the staff, they seemed very disappointed that we weren't taking the patient to hospital. I had to roll out one of my set monologues, the one where I explain that we can't kidnap people. The staff shook their heads and asked us what they could do. It was night, so there wasn't a chance of a GP or of a mental health team so the only advice that I could give was that they speak to their support staff in the morning.

And so we left, hoping that he didn't go on to hang himself with the belt that the staff had left in his room.


I'm on night-shifts at the moment. After some time being able to keep the same hours as reasonable people it's come as a bit of a shock to the system. So while the weather is lovely I find myself sleeping through it - it's just depressing really. Especially when people annoy me by dancing in the road in front of me while I'm trying to drive on blue lights.

One day...
View Article  Alone

Wow, loads of people editing the holiday wiki - many thanks for all the ideas although if I were to take them all on it'd take me a year to see it all.


I've seen my future, well it'll be my future if I'm lucky and don't drop dead in my 50's.

It was a lovely day, one of the first sunny days we'd had all year and our patients were obviously riffing off the change in the weather, everyone was being really nice.

We were sent on a 'green' job, essentially a transport job with no blue lights or sirens. We were to pick up an elderly man from his flat and run him into hospital. No emergency, no stress, no worries.

One of his neighbours in the block held a key to his flat, so we opened the door and announced ourselves. The interior of the flat was grimy. Junk mail and bills spread on every flat surface. Underpants were hanging over the bath, and a few empty cans of beans spilled over the bin onto the floor. Sepia photographs lined the walls, men in army uniforms, women with babies in arm looking stern.

The reason for the flat being in this state was because of the patient's heart failure, it had caused the lower half of his body to swell up with retained water. He couldn't move around the flat, he was pretty much stuck in his chair, watching the horse-racing on a tiny television.

We had a chat with him, he'd lived in the area all his life, seen his family grow up and move away. He'd seen the population of the area change from English people to Afro-Carribean people to Bangladeshi people, he didn't seem upset by this. He'd only moved house once, when they knocked down where he'd been born and put up this block of flats in it's place.

The only person he saw was the woman who held his key, she hadn't been to visit for some time as she couldn't stand the state of the flat.

We talked about different subjects, from football to politics, the odd joke and the odd tale. We drove him to hospital - none of our medical skills were needed but it still felt like we had used our expertise to put him at ease.

He seemed sad to be wheeled into the A&E department. It was as we went to leave him that he turned to us and with moist eyes said, "Thank you for the company, it's a shame you can't stay with me".

It upset me to leave him there, we had probably been the first human beings that he'd spoken to in quite some time. He'd been living out of that chair for some months. We were company to him for that short time and now he was probably going to become another meat parcel passing through the hospital system.

Hopefully the nurses on the ward will have the time to sit and chat with him, maybe they can refer him to the social services and they might try to place him in a residential home. I think that the company he'd have there would do him a lot of good.

View Article  Inappropriate

After the last post Cookie left a comment asking if I still wanted to leave my job...

We were sent on blue lights and sirens to a young woman who had 'collapsed'. We arrived and found her writhing around on the floor. She wasn't too happy to talk to us, instead she kept pretending to be unconscious.

It transpired that she was having period pain.

My crewmate (who is female) asked her if she had taken any painkillers for it, after some grunting, groaning and flailing around she was told that, no, the patient hadn't taken any painkillers.

"Do you have painkillers?", asked my crewmate.

"Yes", said the patient and named a rather good painkiller.

"Why haven't you taken them then?"

The patient then pretended to be unconscious.

We asked a couple of times, at no point did she answer. Instead she kept 'passing out' in a way that wouldn't win her any Oscars.

So we popped her in the carry-chair (because otherwise she would be throwing herself about) and popped her to the hospital.

She was given two Paracetamol tablets and sat out in the waiting room.

By London Ambulance Service numbers, 8 out of 10 of our jobs are like this, not needing an ambulance or hospital treatment. I think I get more than my fair share. I find myself going to people younger than me, often healthier than me and yet having to carry them downstairs because their 'flu' makes them unable to walk.

I'm glad I don't have 'proper' jobs all the time, I also like it when my patient can walk on and off my ambulance at both ends of the journey. What does happen is that these 'inappropriate' calls* eventually grind you down, the endless parade of people who don't need any of the skills I have except the ability for me to write down what they say and drive them to hospital.

I knew it would be like this before I joined the job.

It's not the main reason why I want to change jobs, not by a long chalk, I'd say it's around reason #17. But the jobs that make me want to stay, the serious jobs where I can make a difference, are few and far between.

*Of course there are, according to people on much higher payscales than me, no 'inappropriate callers', only 'inappropriate responses'. Which is why we spend so much money on dealing with people who don't need hospital treatment but can't be bothered to see their GP or local walk in centre. At times it seems to be our main focus as an ambulance service.

Welcome to Random Acts Of Reality, a Blog based in London, England, written by an E.M.T working for the London Ambulance Service. Also, number one search result for "Womble porn". All names have be changed to protect the guilty. This Blog was previously known as "Why I Hate Humanity" but the antipsychotic medication seems to have kicked in.

All opinions on this website are mine alone, and may not reflect those of the L.A.S or other ambulance crews

Find out more about me here.

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