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  • 4 days ago
Close Calls On Camera S10E14 (21st July 2022)
Transcript
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. The day they had a close call.
00:47Today on Close Calls.
00:49A farmer finds his 14-year-old son lying severely injured in a field.
00:54He's been run over by a tractor and trailer.
00:58We weren't sure if he was alive to start with,
00:59but as we got closer we could see that he was conscious.
01:03Land and air ambulances with onboard medics rush to the scene
01:07and discover the boy's pelvis has been crushed.
01:10All the major blood vessels run through the pelvic region.
01:13You can lose the entire of your blood volume into your pelvic region,
01:17so this can be fatal.
01:19Also today, a frantic father-to-be flags down a passing police car in the street.
01:27I got out of the car and went over and I very quickly realised
01:31that this lady was in labour.
01:35The pregnant woman won't make it to hospital in time.
01:38More officers arrive.
01:40It's going to be a pavement berth.
01:42She gave one big push.
01:45The officer said,
01:46I can see the head, I can see the head.
01:58Bromyard, Herefordshire.
02:00A farmer's young son lies in a rutted field surrounded by medics.
02:04He's been knocked down by a tractor
02:06after accidentally hitting the gears as he got out.
02:09I can sort of remember seeing the wheel going over my back
02:12and passing through me
02:13and I sort of just, in my head, realised that the hydraulics box was down.
02:17Resulting in the metal trailer running over him too,
02:20travelling across his lower body,
02:22shattering his pelvis and leaving him unable to move.
02:26I did think that was pretty much it.
02:28Farmer Richard and his wife Emma live on the Herefordshire farm
02:40where he grew up.
02:41They've been married for 19 years.
02:44We met at a local shoot.
02:47I was lucky enough to be shooting.
02:49Emma was beating
02:50and then obviously got to meet each other in the evening.
02:54Everything sort of went on from there.
02:56I'm from a farming family.
02:58I'm married into a farming family.
03:00So farming's in my blood.
03:02Emma's a former jockey.
03:04She's also qualified in biomechanics
03:06and she runs Pilates classes.
03:09Richard combines operating
03:10and established agricultural parts business
03:13with helping his father on the farm.
03:15His dad's 84 and still runs the farm 24-7.
03:20Also part of the team is farm worker Craig
03:22who's been with the family 40 years.
03:24The couple's children, Harriet, now 18
03:27and Henry, now 16, mucking too,
03:30particularly at lambing time.
03:33Being taught by my grandad
03:34and he's sort of shown me the ropes.
03:36As you get older, you get more responsibility.
03:38We always had to be up at a certain time
03:41out feeding the animals.
03:42You forgot to feed them each day.
03:44You can't just have a day off.
03:46The experiences that you get living on a farm
03:48are priceless, really.
03:50But farming can be a hazardous profession,
03:53something teenager Henry experiences
03:55to the horror of his entire family.
04:02It's approaching Easter on the farm
04:04and everyone is busy with the lambing season.
04:07It was a normal lambing day.
04:10Henry was busy in the lambing shed.
04:13Richard was on the farm.
04:15Craig and my father were out feeding
04:17some other stock in the fields.
04:20Emma and daughter Harriet are walking the dogs.
04:24Henry's taking ewes and their lambs to the fields
04:27to make more room for newborns in the lambing shed.
04:30He's using an old tractor he learned to drive a year ago.
04:33It has a hydraulic box on the back to carry the animals.
04:37Took them up into the field
04:38just over the other side of the farm.
04:41I was heading back towards the farmhouse
04:43to go and get the next lot.
04:45But first he needs to close the gate
04:47to keep the sheep in.
04:48While I was doing that,
04:49I was leaving the engine running,
04:50which he shouldn't really do.
04:51For very good reason.
04:55As he gets down from the tractor,
04:56Henry accidentally knocks the gear stick
04:58into forward drive.
05:00The tractor lurches forward
05:02and knocks him to the ground.
05:04There's no time to react.
05:07The one and a half ton vehicle runs straight over him.
05:11I can sort of remember seeing the wheel going over my back
05:13and I sort of just realised that the hydraulics box was down.
05:16I knew that was just going to scrape me on the floor.
05:19It does.
05:20The heavy metal box at the rear drags across his pelvis,
05:24pulling his thigh bone from its socket.
05:25The still-moving tractor begins to circle around the field,
05:31coming back towards him.
05:33He's right in its path.
05:36I did think that was pretty much it.
05:38Desperate, he tries to escape.
05:40I just couldn't stand up
05:41and my legs were obviously in panic mode and just shaking.
05:45Then the tyres strike something on the ground,
05:48altering the tractor's path,
05:50diverting it away from Henry.
05:51The vehicle comes to a stop at the side of the field.
05:56Relieved but in severe pain, Henry lies helpless.
06:00I remember screaming for help.
06:02I couldn't do anything else.
06:04In the top field,
06:06farm worker Craig momentarily turns off his JCB
06:09and hears Henry's screams.
06:12He rushes to find Richard.
06:14We both jumped into the pick-up,
06:18raced into the field where we thought Henry was.
06:21We could see the tractor had sort of piled into the hedge.
06:24We were looking for Henry.
06:25It felt like a lifetime.
06:28But it's actually less than a minute before they spot him.
06:31We weren't sure if he was alive to start with,
06:33but as we got closer,
06:34we could see that he was conscious.
06:37Dad's just very, very shocked,
06:38and he was saying,
06:39please keep conscious,
06:40because I was sort of fading out from the pain.
06:42Richard calls 999 and an ambulance is dispatched.
06:47Craig goes to find Emma and Harriet.
06:49And all he said to me was,
06:51there's been an accident.
06:53Henry's had an accident.
06:56Emma sends Harriet back to the house with the dogs
06:58and jumps on the pick-up.
07:00I haven't really got any idea what's going on.
07:03I knew Henry'd hurt his legs,
07:05but didn't know where he was, what had happened.
07:09In the field,
07:09Richard and Emma tried to assess their son's injuries.
07:13We could see that the tractor had run over his chest,
07:16and you could see that he'd also got
07:18some pretty severe pelvic injuries,
07:21and his one leg was longer than the other at that moment in time,
07:25so we knew there was some pretty serious internal damage.
07:29Obviously, as his mother,
07:30I'm very worried.
07:31I just knew we had to take control of the situation.
07:35Craig goes back to the house for blankets
07:37and collects Harriet.
07:39I first just saw him laying on the ground,
07:42shouting, his head hurts.
07:45My mum trying to calm him down.
07:47I eventually actually had to sit up against his back
07:51to stop him, like, moving his spine.
07:54Emma records the scene on her phone.
07:56I do remember mum and the hats laying blankets over me,
08:01you know, hats sitting on my back,
08:03but I think it was just like,
08:05I was just, I could barely speak,
08:07it was just that much, that's so painful.
08:09A local first responder is the first to reach them.
08:12Which was such a relief,
08:14because he then had communication to the ambulance,
08:17which was on its way,
08:19to exactly warn them what was ahead of them
08:22so that they could prepare.
08:23The severity of Henry's injuries
08:25mean he needs to reach hospital as fast as possible.
08:29An air ambulance is scrambled.
08:31Karen Baker is one of the paramedics on board.
08:34With the call coming through as a young person
08:37involved in an incident regarding the tractor,
08:40it would straight away make us more apprehensive about the case.
08:44One of their team arrives ahead of them by car.
08:46He was incredible
08:48and used to dealing with pharma accidents,
08:50and he was able to advise the air ambulance coming in.
08:54Then we then had two ambulances,
08:56we had a policeman because of Henry's age,
08:59and it all became this whole buzz of activity.
09:05Emma films the air ambulance as it arrives at the farm.
09:09We landed about 20, 30 yards away.
09:12There was an ambulance that had managed to get quite close to scene.
09:15And you start to see the size of the tractor,
09:17start thinking about the potential injuries that might have happened.
09:20When we saw the air ambulance,
09:22yes, it's a good feeling, I suppose,
09:23because you know that help is here.
09:26Henry was conscious, he was alert,
09:28he was in pain,
09:29but he was talking to us.
09:34Later,
09:35medics suspect a serious pelvic injury
09:37and concern grows for Henry's survival.
09:40All the major blood vessels run through the pelvic region,
09:43and if these blood vessels get ruptured,
09:46this can be fatal.
09:55Elephant and Castle, South London.
09:58Police officers surround a woman lying on the pavement.
10:02And I just remember shoving all our coats,
10:04all our fleeces, our bags underneath it.
10:07The woman's husband is at her side.
10:09I was just holding her hand and saying
10:11that please don't worry.
10:14We had the London Ambulance Service on loudspeaker.
10:17They're on their way,
10:19but there's a baby coming,
10:20and neither he nor his mum can wait any longer.
10:24I'm sorry, but I can't avoid to push anymore.
10:27London-based Martina and Marco both originally hailed from northern Italy.
10:42She's an architect and garden designer,
10:44and he's a project manager for a construction company.
10:49Marco is an engineer,
10:50and you can actually see that in his day-to-day life.
10:55It's very, very straightforward, but also very sweet.
11:00Martina, I think she is very gentle and fragile,
11:04but also she has a lot of strength.
11:08They grew up in the same small village 60 miles north of Venice
11:13and have known each other since nursery school.
11:16But their friendship developed a little later.
11:20We started to understand that we had similar ideas.
11:23We bonded so much that we realised that we wanted to be a couple.
11:28But struggling to find work at home, Martina headed to London.
11:32And I was very, very lucky.
11:34I found a job in the first place I asked for a job.
11:39Marco immediately requested a transfer within his own company,
11:43although it was nine months
11:44before the couple were able to be fully together again.
11:48The separation had a profound effect on Marco.
11:51I realised that I wanted to stay with her for the rest of my life.
11:58He made a New Year's visit to London to pop the question.
12:02There's not too much to plan, just to take the ring.
12:05There was a family ring.
12:07The pair were spending New Year's Eve at Kew Gardens.
12:11And there was this beautiful, like, a tunnel with lights.
12:15And I said, Martina, I have something to ask you,
12:18would you marry me?
12:20And I said, are you joking?
12:22And he said, no, I'm not joking.
12:23And he showed me the ring.
12:25She said yes, and three months later, Marco got his transfer.
12:28They married that summer, found an apartment,
12:33and the following year, their son, Giacomo, was born.
12:36The next Christmas, we announced our family.
12:38I was pregnant again.
12:40Giacomo's birth had been induced,
12:42and Martina was hoping for a different experience this time.
12:46Because with the epidural, I couldn't feel anything.
12:49And with induction, I couldn't really enjoy labour.
12:53But second time round, the birth of the couple's new baby
12:59was more unpredictable than they could ever have imagined.
13:08It's August, and Martina's pregnancy is going well.
13:12The couple are looking forward to the new arrival.
13:15Baby was in position since, I think, 28 weeks.
13:19And they're grateful for the support of Martina's mum,
13:23who's arrived for a month to help look after Giacomo.
13:26She was doing all the cooking,
13:28and we had a bit more free time.
13:32A week before he was born,
13:34I started to feel some contractions.
13:37Not very strong, very light.
13:40But they continue to come and go.
13:43Martina's midwife sends her for a scan
13:46and to see her consultant.
13:47This tummy circumference wasn't right,
13:52so he said to me,
13:53the baby's fine,
13:55but just to make sure,
13:57we're going to book you an induction for tomorrow.
14:01And I started crying, really,
14:03because it wasn't really what I wanted.
14:07She calls Marco, who heads straight home.
14:10The contractions continue.
14:11And then suddenly, at five,
14:16they were really, really strong.
14:20Martina calls the hospital,
14:21who advise her to make her way in.
14:24Marco hurries to collect Giacomo from nursery.
14:27But while he was away,
14:30I had to call him in pain,
14:33and I said to him,
14:34just book the taxi straight away.
14:36I was very surprised.
14:38I was like, OK, OK, I'm doing it.
14:39And I immediately booked the run.
14:43Martina's mum,
14:44who's been food shopping,
14:45arrives home.
14:47One look at her daughter's enough.
14:49She grabs Martina's bag,
14:50and they head for the lift.
14:51My mum had to help me,
14:55because I wasn't able to do it on my own.
14:57Marco arrives home with Giacomo,
14:59and his mum-in-law takes the boy inside,
15:01leaving the couple on the pavement
15:03to wait for the taxi.
15:05A passerby spots them,
15:06and realises what's happening.
15:09She said to me,
15:10oh, you're in labour.
15:12A taxi pulls up,
15:13but a group of girls,
15:14unaware of the situation,
15:16jump in.
15:17Martina tells Marco to call an ambulance.
15:19This lady was staying with me,
15:23and holding my hand.
15:25I just realised,
15:26well, this is it.
15:27She's brought a couple of bed mats
15:29with her to sit on in the taxi.
15:31She put them on the floor,
15:33so at least I wasn't sitting on the pavement.
15:38Then the woman spots a police car approaching.
15:41She said,
15:42stop it, stop it.
15:44So I ran towards the intersection of the road,
15:47and waved to them to stop.
15:50At the wheel is Constable Mia Kerr.
15:53It's her seventh year
15:54with Southwark Borough's response unit.
15:57Every day is unpredictable.
15:59You never know what you're going to.
16:01She pulls over and parks up.
16:03In the passenger seat is PC Tom Palmer.
16:06See, it's not unusual to be flagged down,
16:08but I remember thinking,
16:10because he looked particularly panicked,
16:12something's happening here.
16:13I got out of the car and went over,
16:15and I very, very quickly realised
16:18that this lady was in labour.
16:22Marco explains an ambulance is on the way,
16:24but Mia suspects it's going to be too late.
16:28Mia kind of took the lead.
16:29I remember her saying,
16:30we need something to proper up,
16:32make her comfortable.
16:33And I just remember shoving all our coats,
16:35all our fleeces,
16:37our bags underneath her,
16:38just to make her as comfortable as possible.
16:39I put it straight up on my radio.
16:43More and more office have arrived.
16:47I really felt the urge to push.
16:50Marco was over the phone with the 999,
16:54and he was saying to me,
16:55oh, they're saying,
16:56you don't have to push,
16:57you don't have to push.
16:58And I said, well, I can't.
17:01I have to push.
17:02I'm sorry, but I can't avoid to push anymore.
17:06Marco begins to document the scene on camera.
17:08Tom is behind Martina, supporting her head.
17:12Martina seemed amazingly composed.
17:15She looked like she was really focused
17:17and determined to deliver this baby.
17:20A few of my colleagues had got custody blankets
17:22from Worth Custody,
17:23and they were holding the custody blankets over Martina
17:26just to give her a bit of privacy.
17:29On either side of her,
17:30Marco and Mia are doing their best.
17:33We had the London Ambulance Service
17:35on the other end of the phone on loudspeaker.
17:38I was just holding her hand
17:40and saying that, please, don't worry.
17:43It was nice to have him next to me.
17:46And I actually thought, well,
17:47I didn't want the epidural
17:48and I didn't want the induction,
17:50so this is the best thing
17:52that could have happened to me.
17:53But Marco is frightened for Martina
17:56and their unborn child.
17:59Giacomo born with the cordon around his neck
18:03and I was very scared that this could happen again
18:07without professional help.
18:09Then he was almost in tears, I think.
18:12He gave one and then on one push, one big push,
18:17the officer said, I can see the head, I can see the head.
18:21After I pushed, I think, twice or maybe three times,
18:25the baby was out.
18:27But Marco's fear proves justified.
18:30Luckily, one of the police officers knows what to do.
18:33My colleague very quickly realised
18:36the umbilical cord was round the baby's neck
18:38and took it off.
18:41Everyone holds their breath,
18:42desperate for signs of life.
18:45I was like, oh my God, please, start crying.
18:47It was a magical moment when we heard baby crying.
18:51The police wrap the baby, already named Davida,
18:54in sling bandages from their first aid kits
18:57to keep him warm.
18:59And we were, like, crying for joy.
19:02But the 999 call handler, still on speaker,
19:05tells them they must find something to clamp the cord.
19:08The police woman that was helping me,
19:11she had an amazing idea
19:13and she took the elastic of her mask
19:16and she used that to tie the cord,
19:20which was amazing.
19:21We still have that piece of cord.
19:24A photograph taken a few moments later
19:27shows the ambulance arriving.
19:30I remember one paramedic
19:31and he came straight away to check on me
19:33and he was very relaxed.
19:36So I said, if he is relaxed,
19:38I'm fine.
19:40The paramedic asked me if I wanted to cut the cord
19:43and, of course, I wanted.
19:45That scene is captured on camera too.
19:48It was just, yeah, a nice moment,
19:50but, to be honest,
19:51nothing compared to the rest of it.
19:54Martina is helped into the ambulance.
19:57And I remember the two police women,
19:59and they came in the ambulance with me.
20:01I managed to hold the baby.
20:05Waiting upstairs in the flat,
20:06Martina's mum is delighted when they call with the news.
20:10She phoned again people in Italy to say,
20:12yeah, everything is fine.
20:14Davida is born.
20:16Martina and baby Davida are checked over
20:18at King's College Hospital Maternity Ward,
20:20and both are allowed home next morning,
20:22much to the delight of big brother Giacomo.
20:26And he was very interested in the new thing
20:29that mummy brought home,
20:30and he was very happy to see me,
20:33and also happy to see the baby.
20:36The following week, Martina and Marco
20:38invite the police officers to their home
20:40to say thank you.
20:42It was very nice having them around
20:45and share the whole experience.
20:47We bought the baby, of course,
20:50a police teddy bear.
20:53Everyone took pictures with Davida, holding him.
20:56And they gave us photos and cards of the new baby.
20:59I've still got the card on my mantelpiece at home.
21:02When Marco goes to register
21:04after the new arrival,
21:05he explains exactly where Davida was born.
21:08And they wrote exactly on the pavement.
21:13Martina realises she and baby Davida
21:15were very lucky the day he came into the world.
21:19A lot of things could have gone wrong.
21:22It was an extraordinary moment,
21:24and we could make it through
21:25only with the help of a lot of people
21:29of this kind of community.
21:31Yeah, it was perfect.
21:32The right people at the right time.
21:34In the right place.
21:44That's a lovely story, isn't it?
21:46And one the family will be telling for years to come,
21:48and it's all there on his birth certificate.
21:52They're out to another mum and dad,
21:53and they're worried sick about their teenage son
21:55who needs all the medical help he can get.
22:0514-year-old Henry has been run over by a tractor and trailer
22:09on his family's farm in Herefordshire.
22:11My pelvis was just crushed and I just couldn't stand up.
22:13Hearing his screams, a farm worker alerted his dad, Richard.
22:17We could see that the tractor had run over his chest,
22:21and you could see that he'd also got some pretty severe pelvic injuries.
22:25A first responder, an ambulance crew, police and air ambulance paramedics
22:30are at the scene.
22:31They suspect Henry may have internal bleeding.
22:35All the major blood vessels run through the pelvic region,
22:39and if these blood vessels get ruptured by a broken pelvis,
22:42you can lose the entire of your blood volume into your pelvic region,
22:46so this can be fatal.
22:47Henry needs a specialist children's hospital
22:50equipped to deal with the seriousness of his injuries,
22:53but time is critical.
22:55The nearest is Birmingham, a 20-minute flight away.
23:00Henry's mum, Emma, photographs the scene
23:02as he's placed on a scoop stretcher,
23:05minimising the amount of movement necessary.
23:08He's also wrapped in a pelvic binder to help stop the bleeding.
23:12So this is done as a team.
23:14Henry was fully compliant with everything we asked him to do.
23:17A team of seven, including his father,
23:20carry him to the air ambulance.
23:26Mum, Emma, is allowed to go with Henry in the helicopter.
23:30His sister Harriet watches as they take off.
23:33Seeing the air ambulance fly off,
23:35I was definitely more hopeful that Henry would get the right treatment
23:38and make a recovery.
23:40A full trauma team are waiting at Birmingham.
23:44Mum was great the whole time,
23:45and we not only hand over Henry's care,
23:48but also her care and her welfare to the staff in the hospital.
23:51They were wanting to go and scan him
23:53so that they could actually see what was going on internally,
23:56and then it was just an ongoing test, test, test, test
24:00to see what we were actually dealing with.
24:02Scans confirm Henry has a fractured pelvis
24:05and a dislocated hip.
24:07In surgery, his leg, which had been pulled from its socket,
24:10is put back in and then into traction.
24:14A week later, he's allowed home.
24:17I was very happy, overwhelmed with happiness.
24:19The NHS was amazing.
24:22We had a hospital bed delivered to our house.
24:25We had all the toilet facilities and wheelchairs, everything,
24:31because Henry was going to have to be in bed downstairs
24:33for quite a few months.
24:35Henry was in terrible, terrible pain and discomfort.
24:40He was in a wheelchair,
24:42and that was quite hard to get around this old house,
24:45lots of narrow doorways.
24:47I couldn't, you know, get out of bed
24:49and move to my wheelchair by myself.
24:51It affects me mentally,
24:52but I've had a lot of support from my family
24:54and a lot of support from my friends over social media,
24:57contacting people, sending me letters and cards.
25:01But Henry's mental and physical problems aren't over.
25:05Recurring nightmares of trying to escape the runaway tractor
25:08take their toll.
25:09It all started to escalate with post-traumatic stress,
25:13and Henry's had to have a lot of therapy.
25:15But gradually, he begins to recover physically.
25:19I managed to get out of crutches,
25:21and I played some sport on the beach and stuff on the holiday.
25:24When it got to, like, August,
25:26I was just getting really severe back pain and hip pain,
25:29and something just wasn't right.
25:31It's a setback.
25:33Blood vessels in his leg haven't reconnected fully around his hip,
25:36causing the bone to die at the top of his femur.
25:39Henry needs a hip replacement,
25:42but it can't be done whilst he's still growing.
25:45He's referred to Birmingham Royal Orthopaedic Hospital,
25:48specialists in hip resurfacing,
25:51but has to wait until his 16th birthday for the procedure.
25:54I was in crutches and I was in home,
25:56so I couldn't go outside.
25:58Everyone else was going outside,
25:59working on the farm,
26:00and I was just stuck inside.
26:02He needs something to keep him busy.
26:04He signs up for a 54-mile walk over 30 days
26:07to raise money for the Midlands Air Ambulance Service.
26:11I just said, you know, I'm going to do it.
26:13Just make, raise some money,
26:14and give back the care they gave to me
26:16and, you know, the life that they saved.
26:19And I'm just sat there going,
26:20how is he going to do that, you know,
26:23because he couldn't even walk around the house.
26:27Undeterred, Henry begins the challenge.
26:30He continued on a daily basis
26:31to walk more and more and more
26:33and showed unbelievable determination.
26:36Well done, Henry!
26:38Some days there would be snow,
26:40some days ice, rain,
26:42but whatever the weather,
26:43he'd go out and do his daily mileage.
26:46OK, Henry, how are you feeling?
26:49He's supported by family,
26:51school friends and teachers.
26:53Henry has shown a completely different side to him
26:57I didn't know existed.
27:00He raises £10,000,
27:02surpassing the £250 he'd hoped for,
27:06and he's invited to the Air Ambulance Base.
27:08It's been great to hear that Henry's gone on
27:11to start making a good recovery,
27:12so hopefully, you know,
27:13all will turn out well in the end for him.
27:16A month after his 16th birthday,
27:19Henry finally gets his hip operation
27:21and he's put forward for a Pride of Birmingham Award
27:24by the Air Ambulance Charity.
27:26It was amazing to be a recipient of that
27:29and it was great just to say thank you to them
27:32for saving my life, really.
27:35The whole family was extremely proud,
27:37such a huge achievement.
27:39And they all appreciate how lucky he was to survive.
27:42He could have bled to death on scene
27:45with nobody around him.
27:47If the ambulance weren't there on that day,
27:49it would have been a very different outcome
27:50and I'm very thankful for that.
28:03That was a very serious accident.
28:06And what a determined young man,
28:08raising all that money
28:09for the people who came to help him.
28:11Well done, Henry.
28:12See you next time for more Close Calls.
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