Driving merrily along the M8 in Scotland. I swerve around a large piece of wooden debris at 70 mph straddling the right and middle lanes. Checking the rearview mirror I see others doing the same. Thinking quickly, I toss the mobile phone to my wife and tell her to dials 999 (the UK’s 911)
Her end of the conversation sounds like this…
“Yes, hello. I’d like to report debris on the road, we’re on the M8 heading west towards Edinburgh and have just passed the… what? I’m sorry…. I don’t understand you. You want what from me?” (Then to me) “She wants to know if I want police, fire or ambulance?”
“Police,” I say, irritated that the operator cannot figure it out.
“Police.” (Short silence) “Yes, hello there is a pile of debris in the roadway… what? My name is xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx…” (Pause) “There is debris in the roadway… What? My mobile phone number? Do you not have it there on your screen?” (caller ID) “Then why do I need to repeat it? Aarrgh 079xx xxx xxx!” (long silence). My wife is Dutch and rarely gets angry on the phone.
“What’s going on?” I ask…
“She’s connecting me to the police.”
I’d hate to think how long this would take if it were a real emergency…
What was happening in her ear was a series of dispatch clicks and whirs and as she started again to speak, the operator needed to repeat to the other operator all of the information she had just given… “connecting mobile number 079xx xxx xxx, you are speaking to Mrs. Campbell.
“How can I help you?” she finally heard in her ear.
“Yes there is debris…” (same story with all detail). He asked for her address.
She looked at me and said, “they want my address?!?!?!?”
Having had enough for both of us, I screamed across into the phone, “just send a damned police car before someone is killed out here!” I then said to hang up.
And that is how emergency calls are handled across the UK.
I read where in Houston someone lost consciousness in his car and the police and ambulance drivers sounded their sirens in short bursts to get an audible fix via the 911 operator and ended up saving the guy’s life. Here he’d be dead because he could not tell the operator he needed an ambulance.
If you think I exaggerate, a hospital here has more serious problems. The UK Telegraph reported the following about the decision to wheel-clamp (Denver boot) ambulances parked outside the hospital… I could not make this up.
Managers at King’s College Hospital in SE London say the vehicles have been exceeding the time limit in ambulance bays. The privately-owned ambulances, which carry non-emergency patients, are charged a £50 release fee.
A spokesman for the respected teaching hospital said they have to ensure traffic can flow freely around the site.
A man who had to drive his neighbour to the hospital after he was told there was no transport available said he arrived to find “a row of clamped ambulances”.
John Garvin, from East Dulwich, south London told The Daily Mail: “I just couldn’t believe it. My neighbour was in massive distress and we had to walk past this row of ambulances.
“These are ambulances are clamped by people who must work for the hospital. It is absolutely absurd.”
The ambulances are owned by the private contractor Caring For You, and carry non-emergency patients who are unable to drive or access public transport.
A spokesman for the King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said the contractor had been issued with parking guidelines allowing them to park in a designated drop-off zone for an hour.
“Unfortunately, some drivers have not been following these guidelines,” he said. “This causes problems with access for other vehicles which are dropping off and collecting patients, and impedes access to the hospital for emergency vehicles.
“Despite frequently raising this issue with CFY, the problem has persisted. King’s therefore has reluctantly taken the decision to start clamping CFY vehicles when drivers do not follow the guidelines.”
Caring For You said it would be inappropriate to comment.
Dryly British to the end…
























































I know where you’re coming from here. I once saw someone by the side of the M11 under an over pass and called the police when I got home - they made me feel like I was wasting their time by making the call, got asled a miilion and one quesitons and then the police came to my house to intervview me. Like all I wanted to do was advise them that there was someone under a freaking bridge on the M11.
Last year my mum fell and knocked her head on the concrete - she was out cold and had a lump the size of a tennis ball on her head - the ambulance was quick to come but then they refused to take her to hospital in Exeter as she did not have major head trauma and she was ‘too old’ to be taken to the little hospital in Honiton.
This year she fell (my fault this time)and the doctor sent her to have an X ray of the lumbar spine when the pain was in the thoracic area. Unsurprisingly the X ray was negative (oh and by the way we had to wait 2 weeks - yes 2 weeks for the X ray to be done and I had to delay my return home to Canada) and they said everything was fine and she probably has pain because of a broken rib and or a fractured vertebra in the thorcic area. “But don’t we want to do another X ray of the right area and know for sure because if she has neither then there is something going on internally that we should perhaps investigate” I suggest to deaf ears. It sucks. There was more to this but I will spare you the rest of the rant !!!
Montreal health care is awful compared to the UK in terms of modern equipment and sufficient staffing but the attitude is a whole lot better. I am about to move back to the UK to be nearer to my mum but I am not looking forward it - lovely countryside and buildings and history we can mostly be proud of but living there on a day to day basis…. I think it’s going to drive me crazeeee !! :-)))