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28-Oct-2020

Shocking rise in suicides revealed in award-winning TV documentary

Ambulance crews in London have responded to almost 40 suicides or suicide attempts a day this year.
The shocking figures come as tonight’s episode of the hit BBC TV show ‘Ambulance’ features a mum who calls 999 after finding her 36-year-old son hanging.
Call handler Carly tells Ursula how to give her son chest compressions as ambulance crews are sent to their home.
When advanced paramedic Kevin arrives he realises they cannot save Daniel. Instead he comforts Ursula as she says goodbye to her son.
Kevin said: “I have certainly seen an increase in suicide over the past 20 years. The majority of them tend to be male.
“You feel an empathy for the family members for what they are going through and the heartache they are going to suffer.
“We haven’t found all the answers in dealing with mental health.”
The same night, a 999 call comes in from a suicidal woman. The call handler keeps her on the phone until help arrives.
Figures from London Ambulance Service show crews attended an average of 37 suicides or attempted suicides a day this year compared to an average of 22 a day the year before. Five years ago the number was 17.*
In north London, paramedic Rachel and her crewmate Stuart reflect on how difficult it is for crews to respond to suicides.
They are on their way to a patient who has cancer. It prompts Stuart to open up about his own battle with testicular cancer when he was just 20 years old.
Now 33, Stuart said: “I left it for eight months before seeing a doctor and even then I didn’t tell them I had found a lump on my testicles. I said I had belly pain or I had back pain.
“I got three wrong diagnoses including appendicitis and IBS because I didn’t tell them about the lump on my testicles.”
By the time Stuart did open up to doctors, the cancer had spread and he had tumours on his lymph nodes round his liver.
After treating a toddler who had fallen from a bunkbed, Stuart talks candidly about how treatment left him unable to have a baby naturally but goes on to reveal some happy news.
Two-year-old Adam is just one of several fallers that crews attend – falls are the biggest cause of accidental death in Britain.
London Ambulance Service Chief Executive Garrett Emmerson said:
“Tonight viewers will see some of the very distressing calls we get and the devastating impact on the patient’s family but also the impact on our crews and call handlers.
“I’m so proud of the care and compassion shown to every single one of our patients.
“This year more than ever we need to recognise the terrible toll poor mental health can have and ensure our patients - and our own people - can access the support and care they need.”