Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Shots fired: the medical aftermath

This is part one of a series in which writer Chelsea Geach and photograph­er David Ritchie (African News Agency) document the impact of violent crime on the Western Cape’s health services. We focus on the EMS medics who put their lives on the line to save

- NEXT WEEK: We take a look at the doctors on the front lines of trauma surgery for victims of violent crime

IT’S DUSK at the Lentegeur Psychiatri­c Hospital and the parking lot is full of ambulances pumping their sound systems.

Heavy house beats fill the air, drowning out even the low-flying planes on their flight path from Cape Town Internatio­nal Airport. Men and women in green reflective uniforms carry medical supplies from the replenishm­ent store to the vehicles, grooving along to the music.

They count packs of gauze, fold fresh linen and stow them away, run a test on the defibrilla­tor, check for leftover smears of blood from the previous shift. Nothing in their demeanour gives away the danger implicit in the 12-hour overnight shift ahead: the risk that they could have a gun pointed in their faces again tonight, be searched at knifepoint again tonight, drive into an ambush again tonight.

These are medics on duty for the Western Cape Health Department’s Emergency Medical Services (EMS).

We’re in an ambulance with Advanced Life Support paramedic Grant October and his long-time work partner Rushaana Gallow, who is an Intermedia­te Life Support medic. They will be serving the areas of Lentegeur, Mitchells Plain, Philippi and surrounds. It’s a Friday night just after payday and that means it could be a busy shift – where there’s money there’s alcohol, and when people are drinking, violence isn’t far behind.

Before they clock on for the nights’ calls, Gallow teaches us how to stash our phones so they’re harder to find if a criminal frisks us at gunpoint while we’re responding to a call. October shows us the secret nooks in the ambulance where we hide the rest of our things. They know, from experience.

A call comes in: a pedestrian has been knocked down in Philippi East. Red lights flashing, DJ Ganyani blaring, siren used sparingly, we move off. It’s in a red zone, which means ambulances have been attacked there recently, but Fire and Rescue is already on scene and we don’t wait for a police escort.

When there’s no patient in sight, we make a U-turn and get out of there in a hurry, suspicious of a set-up. It turns out this time there was a legitimate patient, who was taken to hospital in a private car – but ambushes happen often enough to warrant constant vigilance.

The next call is to a shooting. There is no life to be saved, just a victim to be declared dead, which must be done by a medic. The man was shot six times in the head while washing his father’s car. Along the tightly packed row of houses in Philippi, neighbours spectate and chat while the police forensic officer processes the scene, placing evidence markers where the bullet casings lie on the tar. October munches a plum.

Later we rush to a stabbing, Gallow and October pulling on latex gloves while changing gears and punching details into the touchscree­n tablet which records data for every call.

A young man has been stabbed twice for his phone and a little cash in Brown’s Farm, Philippi. He sits in the light of four police vans, holding his perforated side. Blood runs down the steps of Lina’s Hair Salon.

The police agree to wait a few more minutes for protection while the medics cut away blood-soaked clothing in the back of the ambulance, hang an IV to replace lost fluids and patch up the wound with fat and bowel bulging out. Without a police presence, they wouldn’t dare linger on the scene.

When the next stabbing call comes, there’s no use hurrying. We can’t enter this area without a police escort and police are in no rush. We wait outside Philippi SAPS for around 15 minutes while less than a kilometre away, a man is bleeding.

When we finally arrive, everyone in the house is drunk and the stabbed man walks himself out to the ambulance. Gallow drives him to Mitchells Plain District Hospital’s makeshift emergency centre, only accessible by a long route round the back of the hospital and a painstakin­g reverse up a narrow gravel driveway.

The new revamped emergency centre was opened this week on Wednesday, after a fire destroyed it in February last year.

People sometimes accuse the medics of being heartless because they remain impassive and profession­al in the face of pain and trauma, but their care is clear in the way they handle families and patients. It’s in the way Gallow carefully tucks a young poisoned patient’s feet into a blanket so she doesn’t get cold en route to hospital; how October changes the ambulance soundtrack to smooth jazz because it helps soothe a panicking family member.

It’s in the sensitivit­y with which they treat a woman who “collapsed” as an attention-seeking antic after a fight with her boyfriend and how they reassure the daughters of an elderly woman with dementia that while her vital signs are all fine, they can call again any time they’re worried.

At 5am, just as it looks like our shift will end quietly, another call arrives on the tablet screen. The incident descriptio­n says Bundu Court.

“Do you know what a bundu court is?” Gallow asks. “It means community justice. Now you’ll see something.”

A man has broken into a house and the neighbourh­ood has been roused to deal with him. He has suffered severe head injuries, but another ambulance reached the scene first to whisk him to Groote Schuur Hospital.

We arrive just in time to see neighbours upending buckets of water to rinse the blood down the street.

Back at Lentegeur Psychiatri­c Hospital, Gallow and October check that the ambulance has been thoroughly cleaned with alcohol to disinfect it from blood and other bodily fluids.

The sun is up and another shift down. They’ll be back for more tomorrow night.

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 ??  ?? A NIGHt spent with paramedics Grant October and Rushaana Gallow of the Cape Metropole: Southern Division Emergency Medical Service (EMS). Paramedics are constantly at risk while out on emergency calls.
A NIGHt spent with paramedics Grant October and Rushaana Gallow of the Cape Metropole: Southern Division Emergency Medical Service (EMS). Paramedics are constantly at risk while out on emergency calls.
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