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Health

Getting an ambulance

(5 Posts)
kittylester Tue 28-Feb-23 10:43:19

I totally agree with your point, Lucky, brilliant or hopeless. Luckily, they seem to be brilliant when necessary - at least our experience lately. And, lovely with it!

Fleurpepper Tue 28-Feb-23 10:41:22

Oh my goodness not so lucky at the moment. How do you feel now? And how is your foot?

Surely ambulance staff must have by-pass emergency number. When you are feeling better- call 111 back and speak to them about this, and your MP. This is beyond ridiculous!

FishandChips15 Tue 28-Feb-23 10:38:14

My DH fell in the bathroom 3 hours after discharge from hospital. We had to wait almost 10 hours with him in agony on the floor. I phoned again after 4 hours and was told they would eventually arrive, but not to phone again!

Grannybags Tue 28-Feb-23 10:15:08

My husband went into AF and as he had only been home from hospital for four days after an emergency heart op we called an ambulance. The really lovely call handler refused to stop talking to me till the ambulance arrived. Even when I told her it had just parked outside (less that 10 minutes after we called) she stayed on the line until they were actually in the house.

I was more stressed about her being held up talking to me rather than answering other emergencies than I was about my DH!

Luckygirl3 Tue 28-Feb-23 09:47:09

The weekend before last I went into AF in the middle of the Friday night and after about 12 hours of this I rang 111, as I was very weak and barely able to walk. I live alone so thought it was time I got some help. 111 sent an ambulance so an ECG could be done.

The ambulance arrived within half an hour and during the time they were here running tests, I asked them how busy they were. They had gone on shift at 6.30am and were with me at around 5pm and they told me that I was their THIRD call of the day!! I was staggered.

I declined to go to A&E and asked whether they could contact a doctor on my behalf so I could get phone advice based on the ECG results. In order to do this they had to ring 111 - unbelievable! They too had to sit on the phone for half an our listening to the repeated message about getting a flu jab, before they could arrange this.

I had assumed they would have some sort of "hotline" or passcode that would get them put through speedily so that they can get advice when needed.

I had 3 phone calls during the evening advising me to take larger and larger beta blocker dosages - it did not settle until half way through Sunday morning.

On the Monday morning I rang the GP surgery and asked for an appointment to speak to my GP about management of the problem in the future. I was told it would be 4-5 weeks for an appointment, unless it was an emergency - I said that maybe we might treat this as an emergency. GP rang back in 10 minutes.

Funny old service the NHS - either very good or hopeless with some strange organisational rules.