South Wales Echo

Soldiers on Covid duties help paramedics deliver babies

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A PAIR of British Army soldiers have been praised after they helped two mothers with the births of their babies.

Sergeant Wayne Delahunty, 35, and Lance Corporal Dan Ells, 25, jumped into action during separate call-outs with the ambulance service.

Both men, from 1st Battalion The Rifles based in Beachley Barracks, Chepstow, are among 60 soldiers from army units in Wales who have been trained to support the Welsh Ambulance Service during the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Their link-up is part of UK Defence’s 20,000-strong Covid Response Force, set up to put service personnel and reservists on standby to support public services in response to the pandemic.

Former carpenter L/Cpl Ells is a section second-in-command who has been with 1 Rifles since 2015, having been deployed overseas on exercises and operations to Afghanista­n, Kenya, Bosnia and Georgia. He was working in Tredegar, Blaenau Gwent, around midnight when he was called to a home to assess a pregnant woman.

He said: “We were called to a house and the idea was to assess before a crew arrived to take over, and it seemed like we had enough time, but then all of a sudden the baby started coming.

“I’ve not been involved or seen a baby born before but I wasn’t nervous about it at all because the paramedics we work with are absolutely fantastic. Whatever is going to happen, they are 100% in control.

“I can remember a feeling of excitement. It was all new to me. It’s very humbling. The paramedic I was with took the lead on it and my role was to provide pain relief. But when the baby came the umbilical cord was wrapped around its leg so I was asked to help to untangle the cord. I then continued to administer pain relief with gas and air.”

Sgt Delahunty, a former nightclub manager who has been with 1 Rifles since 2008, serving two tours in Afghanista­n and one in Iraq, was also working in Tredegar when he and a paramedic responded to a mother who was in labour.

He said: “When we got to the house the woman was ‘crowning’, which I believe is the term used for someone on the brink of giving birth.

“I set up the gas and Entonox for pain relief and was helping to reassure the mum when the midwife came in to take over.

“I was just very happy to support the paramedic and midwife doing what they are absolutely brilliant at. It was a magical experience to be involved in.”

 ??  ?? Sergeant Wayne Delahunty
Sergeant Wayne Delahunty
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