Amigo
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
I totally support your campaign Lynn and have personal experience of delays that could have been life threatening but not necessarily connected to diabetes.
I think you hit the nail on the head when you said it's not just about protocols Owen. I know you're often on the sticky end of these decisions and people are bewildered that we no longer receive the ambulance response of yesteryear. It's about demand exceeding resources and in that situation they'll be fatalities. The cases we've read on the thread were clearly emergencies and badly graded. There's always far too many ambulances parked outside A&E trying to 'off load' their precious cargo safely and at times the emergency departments can't cope either.
I've had sepsis twice and it's a much much greater risk in diabetics. In my situation I got someone to take me but it's not advisable or possible in many other situations. I'm wondering how the technicians grading risk can accurately assess that risk when patients ring unless they can supply all their observations like b/p, pulse, oxygen sats, temp, BG level and infection analysis. I could give them all those plus my current WBC. Sepsis can kill in hours and doesn't often involve chest pain or breathing difficulties, bleeding or the other emergency indicators assessed over the phone. All some patients can say is they feel absolutely dreadful and that won't get you an ambulance!
I hope this campaign is successful and know the ambulance service feel similarity concerned about the situation. It is broken and for a number of reasons not just connected to protocol.
I think you hit the nail on the head when you said it's not just about protocols Owen. I know you're often on the sticky end of these decisions and people are bewildered that we no longer receive the ambulance response of yesteryear. It's about demand exceeding resources and in that situation they'll be fatalities. The cases we've read on the thread were clearly emergencies and badly graded. There's always far too many ambulances parked outside A&E trying to 'off load' their precious cargo safely and at times the emergency departments can't cope either.
I've had sepsis twice and it's a much much greater risk in diabetics. In my situation I got someone to take me but it's not advisable or possible in many other situations. I'm wondering how the technicians grading risk can accurately assess that risk when patients ring unless they can supply all their observations like b/p, pulse, oxygen sats, temp, BG level and infection analysis. I could give them all those plus my current WBC. Sepsis can kill in hours and doesn't often involve chest pain or breathing difficulties, bleeding or the other emergency indicators assessed over the phone. All some patients can say is they feel absolutely dreadful and that won't get you an ambulance!
I hope this campaign is successful and know the ambulance service feel similarity concerned about the situation. It is broken and for a number of reasons not just connected to protocol.