- 7/7/2025
Close Calls On Camera S10E16 (25th July 2022)
Category
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CreativityTranscript
00:00A close call. A moment of danger when life can hang in the balance.
00:05It was absolute panic and fear.
00:08A split second where the outcome could go either way.
00:11They'd have been lucky if they'd have stayed conscious.
00:13The difference between disaster and survival.
00:16It's literally, that's all it takes.
00:20These are the people that have been there and lived to tell the tale.
00:24I was terrified. I thought I was going to die.
00:27It's a day they'll never forget.
00:29The day they had a close call.
00:46Today on Close Calls.
00:49A road worker calls 999.
00:52His friend has been run over by a fully loaded tipper truck.
00:56He's caught his groin open.
00:58And he just got the main archery.
01:00He's gone really.
01:01He's losing consciousness.
01:03Hurry up, please.
01:04His main archery have been done.
01:06And I can see that pumping.
01:07An attending helicopter medic is stunned.
01:10The injuries made me think of some of my tours in Afghanistan on the medical emergency response
01:15team helicopter.
01:16I would say it was 50-50 as to whether he would actually survive.
01:24Also today, a thatched cottage catches fire while work is being done inside the roof.
01:30A workman and the homeowner are still inside as his son-in-law calls 999.
01:35We've got a fire thatched roof.
01:37Everyone out.
01:38Get out.
01:39Get out.
01:40Get out.
01:40The owner's wife urges him to flee their home.
01:44Help me.
01:45Fire crews arrive with seven engines, a water carrier and a hydraulic platform in an attempt
01:51to control the blaze.
01:52It was the fastest spreading attach fire that I'd ever seen.
02:05The A14 near Kettering.
02:08A road worker calls 999.
02:11One of his colleagues has been injured on site.
02:15Ambulance, tell me exactly what's happened.
02:17One of the guys working on site has been hit by a dumper.
02:19CCTV captures the moment the man is crushed under the wheels of a reversing dumper truck.
02:28Is it really service?
02:29Would there be an ambulance try, all right?
02:31His workmates are doing all they can, but he needs urgent medical help.
02:36They fear for his survival.
02:3732-year-old Jamie lives in Corby, Northamptonshire, close to his family.
02:51He's worked in construction for some time and enjoys the variety of roles on offer.
02:56At quite a young age, I got a job offer that required me to move away and I earned a lot
03:02of money at a very young age.
03:04It gave me the drive to want to go into different sectors and try different things.
03:08But what Jamie really loves is the atmosphere on site.
03:12Usually everyone on site looks out for each other.
03:15It doesn't matter what site you go to, it's the same type of thing.
03:19Do you know what I mean?
03:19You can have the same type of banter with people.
03:22One of Jamie's colleagues is machine driver Jim.
03:25They hit it off from the word go.
03:27I liked him straight away.
03:29He's a really nice man, yeah.
03:31I'd see Jim outside of work and stuff as well.
03:35It's like you're working with your mates, really.
03:37And I like that because you build a better relationship with the people you work with.
03:41It's not just a colleague, it's something a little bit more personal.
03:44But one day in summer, when the two men are working together, an accident involving a
03:50vehicle on site leaves Jamie fighting for his life and Jim and fellow road workers battling
03:56to save him.
04:01It's a warm and sunny Sunday in August and Jamie's working on a job close to home.
04:07This project was on the A14 just outside of Ketrin.
04:10And it was a dual carriageway and they were just installing a third lane on each way.
04:16Jamie's working in tandem with Jim.
04:19He checks where I'm digging.
04:21He checks the levels.
04:22He keeps the environment I'm working in free of danger.
04:27They're operating in a tight space alongside a busy dual carriageway with passing traffic.
04:32We've got maybe a lane and a half to work in it.
04:36So it's very single file and narrow.
04:38There was only about six or seven of us on that area at the time.
04:43After a long slog, Jamie's relieved when a message comes down the line to say they're
04:48almost finished for the day.
04:50We'd been working on this area from about half seven in the morning and it was coming
04:54up to around about half past two or three o'clock.
04:57It was literally 10, 15 minutes before we were about to go home.
05:00Sight CCTV captures the scene.
05:04Jamie is here in a high visibility yellow jacket.
05:08As his colleagues finish up, he sits down on a circular section of concrete and starts
05:12to text a friend.
05:15There was no machines running around me at the time.
05:18But there is a stationary dumper parked a few metres away.
05:23Moments later, he's distracted by a sound above the throb of traffic.
05:27It wasn't quite like normal traffic.
05:30And then when I looked up, the dumper truck was right in front of me.
05:33And it's reversing straight towards him.
05:36There's no time to react.
05:37And then before I knew it, it was on top of me.
05:42The 10-ton truck rolls straight over Jamie, its huge wheel pinning his left leg to the
05:48ground.
05:49The tyre is around about this high anyway, so it's come up between my legs.
05:54It's caught me like a piece of cloth.
05:58It's pulled me underneath the tyre, straight off of this concrete thing.
06:02And as I've come down, it's torn all my back wide open.
06:05And just sheer panic, like there's nothing you can do.
06:09It's just absolute helplessness.
06:12But still, the dumper truck doesn't stop.
06:15The reversing driver hasn't seen him, and he's still unsighted.
06:19I was kind of praying that I'd just pass out, because I didn't want to see what was about
06:23to happen.
06:24But at the last second...
06:26I've twisted underneath the wheel.
06:28So the tyre, instead of coming straight up and over me, is now coming at me from a side
06:32angle.
06:32My left leg was pinned to the ground.
06:37The truck comes to a stop.
06:40The pain that I felt then was like burning, searing, sensation.
06:45It just felt like I had the world on top of me.
06:48I couldn't breathe.
06:49The CCTV shows Jim and other colleagues rushing to help.
06:54It's a 10-tonne dumper, fully loaded.
06:57Sitting on top of him.
06:59Blood everywhere.
07:00It was savage.
07:02It really was.
07:04Jamie's colleagues do what they can.
07:06Adam removed the dumper away from Jamie.
07:09And we knew we had to remove Jamie from the manhole ring.
07:12Because the way he was laying, it was doing more damage.
07:17Once they took the truck off, it was an absolute relief.
07:19But almost instantaneously, then I thought to myself, I need first aid.
07:24I need medical attention.
07:26Fellow road worker Adam calls 999.
07:29This is that call.
07:31An ambulance is coming.
07:32Tell me exactly what's happened.
07:33Yeah, could I get an ambulance please?
07:34Did it?
07:34814 East Bounds.
07:36One of the guys working on site, he's been hit by a dumper.
07:39You need it really quick.
07:40He's bruising my blood.
07:42Emergency medic dispatcher Tracy Chester takes the call.
07:46You sort of envisage what has happened.
07:48You just think, I need to get some help there fast.
07:51You just click into action.
07:53Tracy needs to pinpoint their exact location
07:55so an ambulance crew can reach them as fast as possible.
07:59So, you're on the 814 at a junction.
08:02Just under junction 8.
08:03We're actually in the road works.
08:05Is it really serious?
08:06We do need an ambulance.
08:07Ambulances are all right.
08:09Ambulances and paramedics are dispatched.
08:11While Tracy gathers all the information she can
08:14to help them treat Jamie when they arrive.
08:17Are you with the patient now?
08:19Yeah, we are, yeah.
08:20Okay, and how old is the patient?
08:22How old are you, Jamie?
08:2425.
08:25Is he awake?
08:27He's awake, yeah. He's conscious.
08:28He's breathing.
08:29He's breathing, yeah.
08:30He needs to be quickly.
08:31He was panicking himself.
08:33So, I was trying to keep him calm.
08:35He was trying to keep Jamie calm.
08:37Okay, and what part of the body is he bleeding from?
08:39He's bleeding from the legs.
08:40The two legs.
08:42He's caught his groin open, and he looks like a main archery.
08:45His main archery have been done, and I can see that pumping.
08:48He's done really.
08:50He's losing consciousness.
08:51Hurry up, please.
08:52Until the medics arrive, it's up to Tracy to tell Jamie's co-workers what to do.
08:58I'm going to tell you how to control the breathing.
09:00Do not use a torn, okay?
09:01Okay.
09:02Yeah, get a clean, dry cloth or towel, and place it right on the wound.
09:06Two of Jamie's colleagues fetch first aid kits and grab as many bandages as they can.
09:11It was funny.
09:12Managed to put a big ball of it together, and I'd applied the pressure.
09:17Yeah, we've done that now.
09:18We've got a gauze tape, and it's right on the wound.
09:21Now press down firmly, and don't lift it up.
09:23Press down firmly.
09:24Yeah, it's on firm, yeah.
09:26That is the bleeding control now.
09:28It's not controlled, no.
09:29It's really bad.
09:30It's the main artery, so I knew I had to get pressure on it.
09:34That's who would have bled to death.
09:35It was like time just stopped.
09:37I was convinced I was going to die.
09:44Later, Jamie is rushed to hospital by air ambulance, but his friends don't hold much hope for his survival.
09:51I actually said to the paramedic, what's the chances, mate?
09:54And he went, it don't look too good, you know?
09:58It really don't look good.
10:00Middleton-on-Sea, West Sussex.
10:11A man working in the eaves of a thatch cottage notices sparks.
10:15The contractor shouted out, quick, have you got a fire extinguisher?
10:20The homeowner finds one within seconds, but it's already too late.
10:26The smoke was getting so heavy, I said, we've got to get out of here.
10:30Firefighters rushed to the scene.
10:32We had a serious fight here, a very serious fight.
10:35Firefighters rushed to the scene.
10:45Len and Yvonne met as teenagers at a local village youth club.
10:49Yvonne moved away when she finished school, so it was some time later that a chance encounter brought them together again.
10:57I went on my own to a fair in Godstone
11:00and I saw Yvonne standing by the hoop last door
11:05and I thought, she looks good.
11:09And I went over and asked her if she'd like a ride on the Dodgums
11:13and it went on from there.
11:16Their first date may have been on the bumper cars
11:19but the couple's relationship ran a lot smoother after that
11:22and they've now been married for 62 years.
11:27Leonard is a gentleman, caring and most of the time very tolerant.
11:34I have to be tolerant.
11:36I suppose I would be said to be the bossy one
11:39and he only does it if he wants to.
11:42Yvonne is a very happy, jolly person,
11:45very warm-hearted and a very generous person.
11:49The couple have a large family.
11:51Three lovely daughters.
11:53The grandchildren are lovely.
11:55They've grown and they now have their own families
11:58and we've got, I think it's now, four great-grandchildren.
12:02As a young man, Len was called up for national service,
12:05becoming an RAF military policeman.
12:07Later, he joined the Surrey Police Force.
12:09I worked most places in Surrey and retired from Guildford
12:15as a detective superintendent.
12:18Their next move was to the coast for their retirement.
12:21They found a pretty thatch cottage with a wonderful garden
12:24that suited them perfectly.
12:26We started off having our 40th wedding anniversary in the garden
12:30and from then on, we have had parties for various anniversaries.
12:37We thought it was a chocolate box-style home with the thatch.
12:42It was intended to be our forever home.
12:45But while thatch roofs might be pretty as a picture,
12:49they're vulnerable to fires,
12:51as Len and Yvonne discover during work to their much-loved home.
12:58It's a sunny Tuesday in summer.
13:00The couple's youngest daughter, Louise, who lives in Spain,
13:03is visiting with her family.
13:05It was a beautiful August day.
13:07Yvonne was out by the picnic table.
13:10A contractor booked to carry out some work in the eaves has arrived.
13:14Yvonne is in the garden, daughter Louise is out,
13:17and her husband, Sandy, is working on his laptop in the living room.
13:21I could smell smoke.
13:24And I thought, hmm, I think someone's got a barbecue.
13:28Len pops upstairs to see how the workman is getting on.
13:31As I got up two or three stairs,
13:34the contractor shouted out,
13:37quick, have you got a fire extinguisher?
13:39It took me seconds to grab the fire extinguisher
13:42and take it up to him.
13:44The man is working in a cupboard in the eaves.
13:46I could see some sparks,
13:49and he took the fire extinguisher from me
13:52and started spraying it onto the thatch.
13:57I thought that we'd actually caught it.
14:00But they haven't.
14:02The loft hatch was open,
14:05and I could see a glow,
14:07and then I realised just how serious it was.
14:10The workman hurries up the ladder into the loft.
14:13He was then, with his halfway up into the loft,
14:17trying to spray,
14:19and then by that time,
14:21the smoke alarm was screaming at us,
14:23the house was filling with smoke.
14:25In the garden,
14:27Yvonne is oblivious to what's happening inside.
14:30My neighbour came running up the drive and said to me,
14:34Yvonne, there's smoke coming out of your roof.
14:38Yvonne runs to the house.
14:40As she does, her son-in-law Sandy emerges.
14:43Then they realise both Len and the contractor are still inside.
14:47The smoke by now was, you know, getting quite thick.
14:51And I said to the contractor,
14:52we've got to get out of here.
14:54And if we didn't get out then,
14:55the chances are that we would be overcome by smoke.
14:59Yvonne's son-in-law makes this call to the fire service.
15:03Hello, fire service.
15:04Yeah, we've got a fire attached roof.
15:06Just caught fire.
15:07Everyone out.
15:08Get out, get out.
15:09Sandy and Yvonne shout to the men to leave the house.
15:13You need to come out, come out, come out.
15:14Eventually, they emerge.
15:18I saw him by the front door,
15:19and then I could see all the smoke coming out of the front door
15:22with Len and the young man.
15:25So whereabouts is the fire in the house?
15:27In the roof.
15:29All right, we'll just stay outside.
15:30We'll get crews there now.
15:33Ten minutes away, fire station manager Simon Foster
15:36responds to the call.
15:38The best way of us fighting a fire in a thatched roof
15:41is for us to get there early enough
15:42to be able to make a break in the thatched
15:45and trying to stop that fire spreading throughout the thatched roof.
15:49The first engine arrives within minutes
15:52and a local journalist begins filming the scene.
15:55I did think it might be confined to the first floor.
15:59But Yvonne is less optimistic.
16:01As I was standing at the bottom of the drive,
16:04then the flames came up through the smoke
16:07and I just knew that there wasn't going to be much saved.
16:10More fire appliances arrive and Simon assesses the scene.
16:14The fire had actually broken out in three separate places on the thatch
16:18and we had a serious fire here.
16:20It's too late to create a fire break.
16:22Simon takes charge of the operation.
16:24We were going to have difficult access.
16:27There was a lot of public around
16:29and the first thing I did was order the police
16:31to help us with managing the road.
16:35Simon seeks out Len to discuss attempting to salvage items
16:38from the ground floor.
16:40Leonard was obviously in a state of shock.
16:42It was a lovely old thatch cottage
16:44and it obviously is home.
16:46I think he didn't grasp the gravity of the situation
16:49and how fast it was going to spread.
16:50And he said, I hate to tell you
16:53but we aren't going to save much out of here.
16:56And I had to be brutally honest and say,
16:58I really need you to think of what you need for us to get out
17:02because I was going to send a breathing apparatus where it isn't.
17:04And for the life of me,
17:06I couldn't think of a thing that was that important
17:09and certainly not risking life for anyway.
17:13Then the roof of the cottage collapses into the first floor bedroom.
17:18And it was only a short time after that
17:20that unfortunately the fire started breaking through to the ground floor
17:22so we had to withdraw everyone for safety.
17:25The reality begins to hit Len.
17:28That's our life, our 60 years of married life
17:30and it's all going up.
17:33I just stood there and watched it burn.
17:37Seven fire engines, a water carrier
17:40and an aerial ladder platform were on scene
17:42as the crews battled to put out the flames.
17:44We did everything we could.
17:47We used foam, we used various jets
17:49but it was just too late.
17:51The fire would crew so rapidly
17:53we just couldn't get on top of it.
17:56I just stood in the driveway, I think,
17:58and watched because you're sort of a bit numb.
18:02The distraught workman watches from the end of the drive.
18:05And we were trying to console him
18:08because he was in bits.
18:10And I just literally concentrated on him
18:13and it just all sort of flowed over me, I'm afraid.
18:18The firefighters stop the fire spreading to neighbouring properties.
18:23As they pack up, Simon can be heard on the video
18:25trying to reassure Len.
18:28Well, you've got the main walls and everything else
18:30are all set, so you've got the footprint
18:31that's still all intact.
18:33The chimney breast will probably be all right
18:35because they're usually very, very well made anyway.
18:39Simon leaves one appliance at the property overnight.
18:42Quite after you get pockets of fire,
18:44which will relight.
18:45So crews spent the whole night
18:46going through that property with a thermal imaging camera
18:49and putting out hot spots and things
18:51just to make sure that it was completely out.
18:53It's amazing how, within a heartbeat,
18:57your life can change.
19:00But at least both Len and the contractor
19:03escaped with their lives.
19:05If we'd stayed a minute or two longer,
19:08we probably would have been overcome by smoke.
19:11It was the fastest spreading sash fire I'd ever seen.
19:15It really did take me back.
19:17I very quickly adopted the attitude
19:20that it was only possessions
19:21and that we could rebuild.
19:24Fires can happen in any property,
19:26but the fire service recommend
19:27taking additional precautions for a thatch.
19:31With any property, we would recommend
19:32that you have smoke alarms inside the property,
19:35especially for a thatch property.
19:37Make sure you have them in the loft space as well
19:39and make sure that these chimneys
19:41swept at least twice a year.
19:43The pretty thatch cottage was insured
19:46and the couple can rebuild.
19:48We would like to have something different
19:51that won't have all those same memories,
19:53but we will be able to use the garden again.
19:56We are looking forward to having the whole family round.
19:59We'll have a big party
20:00and I'm sure we'll have many, many more parties
20:05during our retirement.
20:16Such a lovely cottage.
20:17What a terrible shame.
20:19But best of luck to them with the rebuild.
20:21Now, back to a traumatic incident
20:24and a group of co-workers at a road work site
20:27battling to save their horrifically injured colleague.
20:36At the side of the A14 near Kettering,
20:39CCTV records the moment road worker Jamie
20:42suffers life-threatening injuries
20:44after a 10-tonne dumper truck
20:46reversed into him, crushing his legs and pelvis.
20:49The pain that I felt then was undescribable.
20:54I was convinced I was going to die.
20:56He's bleeding badly.
20:58Colleague Adam has called 999
21:00and is on the line to call handler Tracy,
21:02who's giving crucial first aid advice.
21:05Keep firm, steady pressure on the wound.
21:07Yeah, yeah.
21:08I'm going to stay on the line as long as I can,
21:10watching very closely and look for any changes.
21:13If you put your left away
21:14because it starts getting worse, tell me immediately.
21:16It's the main artery,
21:17so I knew this is serious
21:19because we've got to get some help to him really quickly
21:21and I've got to get the bleeding controlled to survive.
21:25Jamie's friend, fellow worker Jim,
21:27is applying pressure to the wound
21:28while other colleagues try to keep Jamie awake
21:31as he slips in and out of consciousness.
21:34We was all talking to him,
21:37you know, come on, Jamie,
21:38you know, talking to him,
21:39but the blood was literally just everywhere.
21:44Then, just seven minutes after the call was made,
21:47they spot the ambulance approaching through the roadworks.
21:50It was just relief because I could hear the sound, the sirens
22:01and I just thought, I'm going to be OK, I'm going to be OK.
22:04Community paramedic Ian Pratt is confronted with a distressing scene.
22:08He'd got a couple of his colleagues supporting his head.
22:13I think they'd got their first aid kit out as best they could.
22:17It's immediately apparent Jamie's injuries are life-threatening.
22:21His pelvis was shattered.
22:23I could see all his organs were open.
22:25He'd got catastrophic hemorrhage
22:26and I knew that's what we had to deal with, you know,
22:28first to try to stop that
22:30and then try to replace some of that blood that he's lost.
22:33Ian and his team apply trauma blast packs,
22:36special bandages created for the military, which stem bleeding.
22:40But Jamie needs specialist care.
22:43Ian calls in the air ambulance.
22:46Dr Adam Manson leads the team.
22:49We were airborne within five minutes from the 999 call
22:52and heading to the scene.
22:54At the site, the ambulance crew is doing everything they can to save Jamie,
22:59injecting fluids to try to replace the massive blood loss.
23:02We were putting bags of sodium chloride into his body.
23:07So we're diluting the blood
23:08and he's going to still have the capability of moving oxygen,
23:12but not as best as...
23:15Ian also administers a blood-clotting drug and gives Jamie oxygen.
23:20But the injured man is struggling to stay awake.
23:22I can feel myself losing the will to hold on.
23:27As, like, my sight faded away,
23:30it sounds like a cliché, but it is like a bright light.
23:33It's like someone's just shone a huge light into your eyes
23:36and you just can't see anything.
23:39Then, as hope fades, the air ambulance crew arrive.
23:43There was at least two to three litres of blood surrounding the scene.
23:50A normal patient with, say, around five litres of blood inside him,
23:55he was not responsive to voice.
23:58He was very pale.
23:59He had a very high heart rate.
24:01Adam has dealt with grave trauma before.
24:04The injuries that I saw made me think of some of my tours in Afghanistan
24:09than on the medical emergency response team helicopter.
24:12I would say it was 50-50 probably,
24:15and I think we visibly looked at each other,
24:17some of the experienced paramedics on scene,
24:19as to whether he would actually survive.
24:22The medics worked together,
24:24using their skills to deal with Jamie's wounds.
24:27We applied various ambulance dressings to the front
24:29and continued that pressure as we rolled him onto his side.
24:33We then applied a pelvic splint,
24:36and when we then rolled him onto his back,
24:38when that splint was tightened,
24:39it could then compress the bandages.
24:41That stops the bleeding.
24:43But Jamie's chances are slim.
24:46Blood pressure was still not picking up very well at all,
24:50and he still was clearly in dire straits.
24:53We had two options.
24:55We could either fly him directly some distance
24:59to the major trauma centre,
25:01but at that point we thought,
25:03actually, what he needs is blood.
25:05Jamie has raced by road to the nearest hospital in Kettering.
25:11His stunned workmates are left wondering
25:13whether they'll ever see him again.
25:17Everyone was in tears and emotion,
25:21and I actually said to the paramedic at the time,
25:24I said, you know,
25:24what's the chances, mate?
25:28And he went,
25:29it don't look too good, you know?
25:32It really doesn't look good.
25:35Jamie has given a massive transfusion
25:37to replace the blood he's lost,
25:39but the hospital isn't equipped
25:41to deal with such catastrophic injuries.
25:43I then spoke to the on-call consultant
25:46who was at the Coventry Major Trauma Centre.
25:48They agreed with the plan.
25:50They said, yep, get him here.
25:51It's his only real chance of needing the surgery
25:55and the stabilisation that he needs.
26:00Jamie is placed in an induced coma
26:02to stabilise his condition
26:04and flown to the trauma centre
26:06at Coventry's University Hospital.
26:09Doctors discover he has a shattered pelvis,
26:12ruptured colon and multiple severe leg breaks.
26:16He's in surgery for 11 hours
26:18and remains in a coma for nine days
26:20before being brought round.
26:25My entire right leg now has got titanium
26:28all the way through it.
26:29My hip's held together with titanium.
26:31I had to have a lot of my organs kind of jubbled about.
26:35Workmate Jim is one of the first
26:37to hear Jamie's pulled through.
26:40He's mother phoned me when he woke up.
26:44He's sitting up and he wants to see you, you know?
26:47And it was a shock.
26:48It really was a shock.
26:51To see him laying there busted up
26:52the way he was busted up.
26:55But he was still smiling, you know?
26:57It took five more months of hospital treatment
27:02before Jamie was back on his feet.
27:05He received compensation following the accident,
27:07but the severity of his injuries
27:09meant he's been unable to work
27:11for a number of years.
27:13He knows if it wasn't for his colleagues' quick thinking,
27:16he might not be here at all.
27:18The people at the air ambulance,
27:21they said that Adam and Jim,
27:23if it wasn't for them, I'd be dead.
27:25But Adam and Jim say,
27:26if it wasn't for the air ambulance, I'd be dead.
27:29And to me, without all of them, I would be dead.
27:33Jamie's friends had actually done an amazing job
27:35because not only had they calmly phoned 999
27:38to allow help to get to him,
27:39but they'd also started treating him as well.
27:41They went above and beyond
27:43what anyone would really ask for.
27:45I mean, if it was me in their shoes,
27:47I don't know if I'd reacted the same
27:49and I owe them my life for that.
28:02Jamie is so lucky to have survived that.
28:04Well done to everyone that helped.
28:07See you next time for more Close Calls.
28:09Close Calls.
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