11 Nov 2007 : UKgser Group Bikers First aid course

Well this is something I wasn’t expecting to be writing so soon if at all but this afternoon I had the opportunity to put Sunday’s training into practice. I’d like to say it went swimmingly and, looking back, the training worked but I failed to do one thing, I don’t know why, and it is really bugging me.

I was out for a walk, it was nearly dark and I was about 100 yards from home when I heard a noise behind me. Loud enough to make me turn round but initially I couldn’t see anything. After a moment I realised there was someone lying in the road which was only one lane wide at that point because of cars parked on the road.
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With a car approaching the chap lying in the road, the training did kick in. I got the car stopped and got the driver to block the road and stop traffic from the other direction. The chap in the road had, we think, hit a parked car on his bicycle and gone flying.
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By the time I got to him after stopping the traffic, he had got up but was very unsteady and was already beginning to slump against a car and I insisted he lay down. He had a badly cut face. By this time I had asked one of the drivers who had stopped to get an ambulance. I removed his helmet in the approved fashion – possibly not necessary but his head was rolling on the ground.
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He was conscious throughout but some while later complained of pains and then pins and needles in his arms. I managed to get him to lie still but I didn’t hold his head. I don’t know why and this has really unsettled me – it was what we were told to do after all and was the obvious thing to do.
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Apart from stopping the blood running into his eyes, checking he wasn’t feeling sick and reassuring him, there wasn’t much else I could do.
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Fortunately 3 doctors have moved in near us recently (I didn’t know they were doctors until today!) so a couple of them came out (including Julia who is already one week overdue and looked more in need of the ambulance than the victim!) and they took charge.
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The ambulance seemed to take forever but I suspect arrived quite quickly and they spent a lot of time and care getting him onto the stretcher and loaded up and away. (And there was still one group of lads in a car who tried to get round the vehicles and people blocking the traffic!).
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The paramedics seemed relaxed about his symptoms but the doctors were very concerned. The docs reassured me there was nothing else I could have done and any damage had already occurred. I just hope he’s OK.
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Sorry for the length of this – it helps to get it “on paper”. Did I handle it better than I would have done this time last week? Definitely. Could I have done better? Also definitely.
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Well done Paul, and sooner than expected.

I find that my eyes are open now for this kind of situation, although hoping it won't be of course. I'm much more secure in the knowledge that I will do the right thing, perhaps not perfectly but the casualty will be better off for the assistance...just as yours was:clap
 
Paul, very well done!

Post FBOS we all said that we hoped never to have to use the training, but we felt we were better equipped to deal if the need arose.......

Training is all very well but your experience just goes to show that in real life situations, what we do in the heat of the moment may not be as perfect as we would wish, BUT will be more than we could have done without the training!

This poor bloke is definetly better off than he would have been if you had'nt intervened, so well done again.

The hard part i guess is now to be positive about the good things you did and keep what you may see as a negative in proportion, remember after all, he was up and walking around, and you did get him to lie down and stay still, so minimising any injury.
One thing is for sure, having "popped your cherry" you are now fully experienced, take the whole thing as a positive, and if God forbid you have to use your training again, I am certain you will have actually gained from this incident:clap:clap
 
Well Done Paul :clap :clap
Don't beat yourself up. Remember he was walking around as you came to him.
He is undoubtedly better off for the help you have given him :clap:clap.
 
Thanks chaps. I have things more in perspective today.

There is no doubt I am very glad that I had the training. Looking back, perhaps the one thing that stands out over and above knowing what to do with the patient was the ability and confidence to take complete control of the situation. As a quiet and diffident person (honest), this does not come naturally to me but really was no problem at all yesterday.

I'll try and find out how he is today.
 
Well done

Well done Paul, as with the other; sad to see it have to be put into action.. but at least you did something. Imagine what would have happened if you hadnt been there. Could have been another story entirely.

When I came across the biker who had frontalled a cleo near the Ponderosa Cafe earlier this year, I didnt think about whether i should help, i just parked up safely and went to help. That incident proved to me I needed to know more. I was able to help, but not quite as much as I could have if it had been worse. After the course, at least I feel a lot better prepared.

Well done..:thumb2
 


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