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Day one as a doctor and she saves fiancé's life



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Published Date: 11 July 2008
A MEDICAL student saved her first patient just hours after graduation when her fiancé started to choke during their celebratory dinner.
Claire Lomas was still wearing her ceremonial robes when Jamie Taylor began to turn blue at the restaurant table.

The couple, from Errol, Perthshire, had been out for a meal with friends and family to celebrate her success at the University of Dun
dee.

But during the main course, Mr Taylor swallowed a piece of chicken too quickly. The 25-year-old accountancy student started to panic – but his partner stepped in and performed the Heimlich manoeuvre to clear his airway.

Recalling the dinner at Spice restaurant in Broughty Ferry, Dundee, on Tuesday, he said yesterday that he was thankful to be her first patient.

He said: "I spluttered a little at first then I couldn't draw in a breath – I just thought, 'That's it, I'm dead'.

"I tapped Claire on the shoulder but couldn't speak so I just pointed at my throat as the panic set in. She could see the terror in my eyes.

"I was close to being unconscious, but then Claire jumped up and did the Heimlich manoeuvre seven or eight times and the chicken came flying out like a bullet.

"If Claire hadn't been there and something like that had happened in the house, I would have been a goner."

He added: "It lasted about five minutes. I felt the obstruction at the bottom of my throat. I coughed a lot but I just couldn't shift it.

"Spice waiters came over to give me a glass of water and my sister-in-law was trying to get an ambulance."

Ms Lomas, who will soon start work at Perth Royal Infirmary as a junior doctor – before transferring to Ninewells Hospital after four months – said that she feared for Mr Taylor's life during the incident.

The 28-year-old, who has a two-year-old son, Kyle, with Mr Taylor, said: "I learned the Heimlich at uni and practised it on the dummies – but I had never done it on a real person before.

"I really thought Jamie was going to die because he was turning blue and couldn't breathe for over two minutes. I just kept thinking, 'He's the father of my child, he can't die'.

"Then I went into medical mode and did what I had to do.

"I've never saved anyone's life before but it was a very fulfilling feeling."

Thanks to her actions, Mr Taylor did not require hospital treatment and their party continued to enjoy their meal – though Mr Taylor elected to skip dessert.

Mohammed Zeeshan, the restaurant owner, said: "I gave him something to drink and tried to make him comfortable. I just wanted to make sure he was OK."

BACKGROUND

SINCE the technique was introduced in 1974, the Heimlich manoeuvre – now known as abdominal thrusts – has saved more than 100,000 lives.

Those with a reason to be grateful include Cher, former US president Ronald Reagan, Elizabeth Taylor, and even a cocker spaniel.

The manouvre involves a rescuer standing behind a patient and using their hands to exert pressure on the bottom of the diaphragm.

This compresses the lungs and exerts pressure on any object lodged in the trachea, creating something akin to an artificial cough.

However, due to the forceful nature of the procedure, even when done correctly it can cause abdominal bruising and more severe injuries.

Helen Brady, co-ordinator of Heartstart Discovery, a charity that trains members of the public to deliver basic life support, said: "When someone is unable to breathe, their heart might stop, which is why it's so important to clear the breath-way."



The full article contains 621 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 July 2008 10:46 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 11/07/2008 01:36:39

Claire Lomas, 'Well-Done' indeed!

You said one Beautiful thing!

"He's the father of my child, he can't die"!!!!

We wish you and Jamie and wee Kyle, all the Happiness of the World for you Future!

You Deserve it!

All our Best Wishes,,

Suzanne and Charles.
2

CMcLaughlin,

Edinburgh 12/07/2008 11:00:05
From "How to be a life saver: What to do in a medical emergency," The Independent, 11 March 2008 http://tinyurl.com/yuaakg

"The most common misconception with choking is that everyone needs the Heimlich manoeuvre," says Clive James, senior training officer at St John Ambulance. "In most cases, if you can get the person who is choking to do a big cough, the obstruction will come out." If that doesn't work, he says, bend the casualty forward and slap them five times between the shoulder blades quite hard. "You need to bring the heel of your hand right down on the middle of their back. Then it's important to check the mouth." If you've cleared the blockage you'll know, because the first thing the person will do is take a big gasp of breath in.

But if the choking persists, "you need to do what we call the abdominal thrust – what's called the Heimlich manoeuvre in America," he says. "Stand behind the casualty, put both arms around them and put one clenched fist between the navel and the bottom of the breast bone. Then put the other hand over the top and grab your wrist, pull in and upwards sharply up to five times. If that still doesn't clear the blockage, then go back to doing the back slaps and alternate between five back slaps and five abdominal thrusts. If you've repeated that cycle three times to no effect then you should call an ambulance."

With children, the advice is very much the same, except that you have to remember to be more gentle and St John Ambulance advises that if you perform an abdominal thrust on anyone, adult or child, they should go to hospital for a check up.

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