Chichester Observer

CPR lifesaver is awarded

- Isabella Cipirska news@chiobserve­r.co.uk 01243 534153

A school receptioni­st has been awarded a top life-saving honour after she rushed to help a 92-year-old driver who had crashed.

An East Wittering woman who has been praised for saving the life of a 92-yearold motorist said she was just doing ‘what anyone else would have done’.

Tracey Holcombe, a receptioni­st at Birdham Primary School, has been awarded a top national honour by the Royal Humane Society for assisting the man, who crashed after suffering a heart attack at the wheel.

The 49-year-old motherof-two said: “I’m not a hero, I just did what anyone else would have done. Hopefully someone would have done it for my parents.”

Tracey had finished work early that day in November last year and was planning to see some friends with her husband Mark that afternoon.

As she was driving along the B2179 near Chichester at around noon, she noticed the car coming towards her was drifting into her lane. “I moved and I heard him crash into the barrier,” she said.

Tracey spun her car around, pulled up and ran to his vehicle. Recalling the ‘horrible’ experience, she said she heard the man give ‘a horrendous groan’ and feared he was dying. She dialled 999 and, placing her phone on the dashboard, followed the instructio­ns of the paramedic to administer cardiac pulmonary resuscitat­ion (CPR). Tracey said she quickly became worn out, adding: “You’re giving everything you have in your body to keep doing what the ambulance crew are telling you.”

Eventually she looked up and was ‘so grateful’ to see a lorry driver, who had parked in front of the car. This was Keith Galmoye of Havant, who took over the CPR until the paramedics arrived shortly after. “By then I was just in pieces,” said Tracey.

“I was a right mess for quite a few days after that. I kept bursting into tears.”

She said she was relieved to hear that the motorist went on to make a remarkable recovery and was released from hospital just a few days later, and was touched to receive a thank you card from his wife.

Tracey had some knowledge of CPR, as she had been a first aider at a school she worked at a long time ago.

Butshebeli­evesherint­erest in watching emergency response programmes on TV may have contribute­d to her swift response.

Both Tracey and Keith were awarded Royal Humane Society Resuscitat­ion Certificat­es, and were praised by society chairman Andrew Chapman as being ‘the right people in the right place at the right time’.

He said: “They both richly deserve the awards they are to receive. There is little doubt that without their swift help, the man would not have survived.”

 ??  ?? Tracey Holcombe from East Wittering was awarded a Royal Humane Society Resuscitat­ion Certificat­e
Tracey Holcombe from East Wittering was awarded a Royal Humane Society Resuscitat­ion Certificat­e

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