Woman had to strap her grandfather, 89, to a WOODEN PLANK and drive him to hospital after being told there were ‘no ambulances’ available
- Melvyn Ryan, 89, from Cwmbran, fell and broke his hip early on Friday morning
- He was found by his granddaughter, Nicole Lea, after his lifeline alarm went off
- When Ms Lea rang 999 she was told ‘no ambulances’ were available to come
- Instead she had to strap him to a wooden plank and take him to hospital in a van
A woman says she was forced to strap her grandfather to a plank of wood and drive him to hospital in the back of a van as there were no ambulances available after he fell and broke his hip.
Devoted granddaughter Nicole Lea found 89-year-old Melvyn Ryan lying on the floor of his home in Cwmbran, South Wales, early on Friday morning.
The 27-year-old said she had been alerted by a call from the emergency lifeline button round the pensioner’s neck.
After arriving she found her granddad had also suffered a broken shoulder and was bleeding from a cut to his head.
But the firefighter, who lives in Pontypool, was left aghast after ringing 999 only to be told there were no ambulances available and none would come to help.
Nicole Lea, pictured here with her grandfather Melvyn Ryan, was left aghast after being told no ambulances would come to help him after he fell and broke his hip
Ms Lea had to strap her grandfather, pictured here after being admitted, to a plank of wood and take him to hospital in the back of a van
Instead the call handler reportedly told Nicole to ring an out-of-hours GP and book a taxi to transport the pensioner to hospital, before hanging up in order to ‘answer other calls’.
‘I couldn’t really believe what I was being told,’ said Ms Lea, who’s been Melvyn’s principal carer since he lost his wife Maureen to Covid in 2020.
‘I was expecting a long wait for paramedics but never thought I’d literally be told, “We have nothing to send, you’ll have to find alternative transport”.
‘I was left with granddad on the floor in agony and me wondering how I was going to save his life.
‘I ended up, with my partner and mum’s help, getting him onto a plank of wood and into the back of the van we bought to transport our dogs.
‘To make matters worse, when we did get him to hospital the staff there told me that had we followed the advice we’d been given over the phone, he could’ve died.
‘They told us that had we sat him up in a taxi the break in his hip would’ve likely ruptured an artery and been catastrophic for him.’
She added that she felt saddened and disappointed by what had happened.
‘I knew the NHS was in trouble and wait times were long,’ said Nicole, ‘I also knew that it’s understaffed and its workers are underpaid.
‘But what I didn’t know when I called 999 was that they’d just turn around and say they weren’t sending help. Neither did I know they’d hang up on me, expecting me to figure out how to get him to safety.
Pictured: Ms Lea with Melvyn and her late grandmother Maureen before she passed away from Covid in 2020
‘It’s only because of teamwork, brainstorming and quick thinking that the three of us managed to get grandad – an army veteran – to the Grange University Hospital (in nearby Llanfrechfa) within a couple of hours.’
Nicole’s partner Elliot Hill added, ‘Once we got to the hospital though everyone was great – couldn’t have done more for Melvyn. They rushed to my van and got him straight inside on a trolley.
‘He was also X-rayed within an hour or so. So our complaint is not with frontline staff at all, it’s with the management.’
Lee Brooks, Executive Director of Operations at the Welsh Ambulance Service, said: ‘We are sorry to hear about Mr Ryan’s experience, it is certainly below the level of service that we aim to offer. We appreciate why this would be upsetting for both Mr Ryan and his family, as it is for us and our people as well.
‘The pressures facing the broader NHS have been well documented in the media, including how those pressures are impacting our ambulance services. These have continued to grow in recent weeks and last night we declared a business continuity incident and continue today to try and mitigate these pressures as best we can.
‘Current levels of demand, handover delays at hospitals and staff sickness levels have limited our capacity to respond in a safe and timely manner.
‘Our business continuity plans are drawn up to enable us to attend to the sickest patients first, while patients whose condition is less serious may sadly have to wait longer for our help, or be advised to make their own way to hospital.
‘We invite Mr Ryan and his family to get in touch with our Putting Things Right team so that we can investigate the situation and better understand their experience.’