My 34yo brother collapsed on Monday night. Luckily he had a friend over at the time and a 999 call was made near immediately at 8:30pm
Now to lay the scene he lives on the N20, in Ballyhea Co. Cork. Certainly a rural location but one with good road access and within 40 minutes of both Cork & Limerick on decent roads. So there was never going to be a 10 minute ambulance response, which is fair enough.
The 999 call triggered the local community 1st responders. They arrived within 10 minutes and went straight to work.
They initially thought that he had had a stroke. He was drifting in and out of consciousness and had lost all power on his right side.
The 1st responders worked to stabilise him and fed his condition back to their control centre.
Who despatched another community responder. Those people did Trojan work in keeping my brother relatively stable, and reassuring the people who were on the scene.
They couldn't do much more for my brother other than keep his airway clear and keep him in recovery position.
Multiple further calls were made to 999 and to SouthDoc to press for the ambulance to be speed up and to have a doctor attend.
The Ambulance arrived a touch after 11:15pm, they were called at 8:30pm!
Over 2.5hrs!
My brother is currently in ICU in CUH, in an induced coma. He has improved slightly today but he has a long and arduous road to recovery.
We are a big family, and he will have all the support we can muster to get him well again.
My 1st concern is his recovery.
My 2nd, when we get him well again? Will be obtaining the complete records of the calls to 999 both from friends on the scene, and whatever Comms log the 1st responders have.
Not as part of a claim or lawsuit, but as part of a review to see how a critically ill patient is identified, triaged and how the response is managed and what priority was assigned to his call.
Rural living comes with risks. There was never going to be an instant ambulance, but? I am certain there are lessons to be learned from how the response to my brother's emergency was managed and prioritised, that will improve the response times for similar cases in the future.
My Brother's collapse was at 8:30pm, the Ambulance arrived at @ 11:15pm and my brother arrived at CUH A+E shortly after midnight.
Time was lost to arrest the brain damage caused by his bleed. If nothing else?
I am going to do my utmost to ensure that priorisation and despatch of emergency ambulance and PHECC is improved in light of our experience.
I would like to say, the care and attention my Brother has and is receiving at every point of this calamity, has been excellent.
The issue I have is with the delay, and the system that allowed it, not the people who have gone above and beyond.
The 1st responders, the staff at CUH's A+E and ICU, along with the accomodation provided by Brú Columbanus have all helped make an awful situation easier to navigate, Bru Columbanus in particular will be getting a donation as soon as I can manage it.
TLDR: Brother is fucked, would likely be considerably less fucked if 999 priority was better managed and ambulance arrived within 1st hour.