Wicklow People

RAPID RESPONSE TEAM ATTENDED 225 CALLS IN 2017

- By DEBORAH COLEMAN

LAST year was a very busy one for the life-saving Wicklow Rapid Response (WWRR) service which was tasked 225 times over the 12 month period.

The volunteer service responds to emergency calls around County Wicklow at the requests of the National Ambulance Service.

In 2017, in excess of 200 patients were treated for a variety of complaints stemming from accidents and illness, including 30 cardiac arrests, of which five survived to hospital discharge with a complete recovery; 17 paediatric cases; 40 road traffic collisions; four multiple casualty incidents; two agricultur­al injuries and one stabbing.

In addition to responding rapidly due to being available in the community, the WWRR doctor is also able to bring additional specialist skills and treatments to patients.

In 2017, these included nine General Anaestheti­cs, inducing a medical coma to place a patient on life support to protect their airway in cases of severe head injury or where a patient is deeply unconsciou­s.

Not all casualties required hospitalis­ation. Twenty-six patients were discharged at scene avoiding the need to transport them to the Emergency Department, thus freeing up ambulance resources and Emergency Department capacity.

‘Bringing the hospital to the patient is what Wicklow Rapid Response is all about. There are people alive today due to the treatment that a specialist Emergency Medicine doctor can provide. Wicklow Rapid Response is one of only four such services currently providing this level of care in Ireland,’ said Wicklow Rapid Response Chairman Colm Dempsey.

Wicklow Rapid Response is a voluntary organisati­on which aims to provide near-intensive critical care level treatment to local communitie­s in the Jacinta Jameson and Lucy Hynes at the Arklow Lions Club Nollaig na mBan lunch in the Woodenbrid­ge Hotel. pre-hospital environmen­t, where there are life-threatenin­g circumstan­ces.

The volunteer emergency medical doctor, who specialise­s in pre-hospital emergency medicine, using the Skoda Yeti Rapid Response vehicle to respond, is declared as a National Ambulance Service asset. He is called simultaneo­usly with the ambulance, when a serious emergency, such as a cardiac arrest or major trauma, occurs.

Wicklow Rapid Response receives no statutory funding and is completely dependant on donations to support the service.

For more informatio­n or to make a contributi­on visit www. wwrr.ie WICKLOW Library Service is joining with the ‘First Fortnight’ festival to shine a spotlight on mental health-related books during the month of January.

First Fortnight is a two-week mental health arts festival that has been staged in Dublin and venues nationwide since 2009.

The festival stages arts events in the hope that they will provoke discussion around mental health and end the stigma that can prevent people from seeking help when they most need it.

From factual texts to brilliant works of fiction and helpful informatio­n books, readers will be spoilt for choice as libraries highlight texts that will open up discussion around mental health.

Readers are invited to ask their librarian for help in selecting books during the month.

Some of the books on the list include The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion, Paris for One by Jojo Moyes, and The HundredYea­r-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeare­d by Jonas Jonasson.

Contributi­ons have been made by the libraries, Children’s Books Ireland, HSE, Jigsaw and Reading Well.

To suggest a book for next year’s First Fortnight reading list, email info@firstfortn­ight.ie.

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