QAS Insight Autumn 2022

Page 29

Child caller helps spread positive message

Child caller helps spread positive message Six-year-old Winnie Johnson has used a frightening family experience to help teach her Year 1 class about what to do in an emergency, Madolyn Sushames writes. Winnie also had a little present for the crew – a picture and hand-drawn logbook so they can keep track of their incidents.

On Valentine’s Day (14 February) this year Winnie’s mum Leah started experiencing chest pains after picking her up from school.

“It’s not something we get to do very often, so it was great to be able to acknowledge her in front of her peers,” Amanda said.

“I told Winnie I was feeling terrible and went to the lounge and said she had to call a doctor, so she grabbed my phone and I asked her to call Triple Zero and ask for an ambulance and Winnie took it from there,” Leah said.

“It was also great for her to be able to share that experience and demonstrate calling Triple Zero (000) is not something to fear and that we are there to help them if needed.

“We don’t get a lot of insight into what happens with our patients after we transport them to the hospital so to see Leah well was great, as was seeing how happy Winnie was to see us again,” Amanda said.

“The kids were really engaged and asked lots of questions.

“It was lovely also when she presented us with a special drawing she had made.”

“It’s so beneficial for them as they may never have heard that information before.

Mum Leah has since recovered from hospital-acquired pneumonia.

“Now they can go home and talk to their parents about it and develop that skill so if they are ever faced with an emergency, they feel confident to call Triple Zero (000).”

She said she had never talked to her children about having to call an ambulance until she needed one herself and hoped sharing their story would encourage other families to have this important conversation.

“She spoke on the phone to the lovely ambulance lady and helped her with our address and what was happening with mummy. “It was pretty eventful for Winnie, she was pretty brave and I’m very, very proud of her.” Winnie not only organised help for Leah but made sure she and her younger siblings were cared for as well. Responding paramedic Amanda Te Momo said Winnie showed maturity well beyond her years to do that. “She stayed really calm on the phone, helped us get in through the lock on the gate, she gathered up some things to take to hospital, she was amazing, just 100 per cent calm the whole time,” Amanda said. Amanda and partner Jacob presented Winnie with a Bravery Award in front of her Year 1 class and used it as an opportunity to talk to the little students about what to do in an emergency.

Amanda’s biggest tip is for parents to ensure their kids know their address and phone number if they ever need to call for help. “You can act it out using a script on the Triple Zero Kids Challenge website (developed for Australian families) where the parent pretends to be the call taker and the kids answer the questions,” she said. “Talk to them about situations where they may need to phone Triple Zero and give examples of these. It’s also really important to show them how to dial Triple Zero if the phone has a passcode.”

“I think it’s vital for families maybe if they’re ever in that situation maybe that they know and understand what to do so I’m glad in a way that this happened to me because it could be saving someone else’s life one day,” Leah said.

Left to right

■ Winnie giving Amanda and Jacob the drawings she made them. ■ Paramedics Jacob and Amanda with Winnie. ■ Winnie showing her class her Bravery Award.

Autumn 2022

27


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Articles inside

Nambour hits a hundred

2min
page 49

FNQ farewells Lara and Ronald

4min
page 33

Toowoomba Airbase flags rich culture

3min
page 32

Abbey answers the call of new life

3min
page 31

From heart stopping to heart-warming: Paramedics reunite with cardiac arrest patient

2min
page 30

Child caller helps spread positive message

4min
page 29

EMD scales new heights for cause close to her heart

3min
page 28

Sarah makes May her special month

6min
pages 26-27

Welcome to our new HARU Doctors

6min
pages 24-25

QAS’ Man of Steel hangs up his cape

5min
pages 22-23

Taking the dirt change

7min
pages 20-21

Strong planning leads QAS through COVID-19 and weather extremes in early 2022

5min
pages 18-19

Influenza season and paramedic immunisers

2min
page 17

Mental Health Co-Responder evaluation project will guide better patient outcomes

3min
page 16

Gold Coast paramedic finds connection to country through rugby

7min
pages 14-15

QAS staff reflect on Ambulance Australia experience

9min
pages 10-12

QAS celebrates outstanding ASM recipients

4min
page 6

Child Protection - we all have a role to play

6min
pages 8-9

QAS Workforce Forums 2022: A tale of two cities

2min
page 5

HARU Report

3min
pages 38-39

OpCen Report

9min
pages 40-42
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