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A young woman has a violent seizure; a carer has crashed her bicycle and an elderly lady has a bit of bother with some bees. In the cab crew members chat about Dudley accents, voodoo magic and the job security of funeral directors.
A pensioner has suffered a domestic assault; a toddler has a fit and a driver is trapped in his car after an accident. In the cab crew members talk about what they couldn't live without, the joy of cheese and holidays.
A teenager has an asthma attack on the day of a GCSE exam, and a dad literally gatecrashes his son's birthday party. In the cab crew members chat about nudist patients, fear of spiders and terrible singing.
A man is bleeding from the head after being attacked with a bottle, a young woman is having a panic attack and a toddler has a seizure. In the cab crew members talk about male waxing and snakes.
A woman has a series of seizures; an army veteran is suffering from PTSD and a toddler is struggling to breathe. In the cab crew members chat about favourite animals and weird places to go to the toilet.
In the opening episode paramedic Neil Weaver and technician Steve Gennoe are called to help 36-year-old Andy who's been attacked by a gang. Firearms officers are already on the scene. Andy was stabbed in the head and back. As Andy's condition deteriorates it's a race against time to get him to hospital.
Meanwhile paramedic Joe Wilson and technician Sam Grosvenor race to 24-year-old Brogan who's gone into anaphylactic shock at a restaurant. He has an allergy so severe that he's reacted to nuts in someone else's meal. Every second counts as Brogan's airway swells up and he struggles to breathe. If he's not treated he could die.
Finally 10-year-old Tyreece has gone over the handlebars of his bike and was knocked unconscious. He can't move and may have broken some bones. Paramedic Matt Rodwell and student paramedic Aaron Campbell are worried he could have sustained a serious head injury as Tyreece can barely speak and can't remember his birthday.
Featuring paramedics from the South Central Ambulance Service, Inside the Ambulance goes behind the scenes and onto the front line of the NHS. Using body-mounted cameras, it follows the crews every step of the way, giving a unique perspective of what it's like to respond to some of the two thousand calls that come in every day.
The 11th series of the UKTV Original, Inside The Ambulance now rides with the NHS heroes of the South Central Ambulance Service in Portsmouth and Oxford. Ambulances rigged with cameras and body-mounted camera on each paramedic capture everything that happens behind closed doors in a variety of emergency situations. Filmed largely before the coronavirus pandemic, this new series sees crews deal with everything from road accidents to dangerously ill new-born babies, all the time showing the skills, emotions and bravery than can only be seen from inside the ambulance.
Inside the Ambulance returns for a 10th series, taking viewers on to the front line of the NHS with West Midlands Ambulance Service. Filmed in Dudley and Stoke-on-Trent, cameras mounted on crew members and throughout their ambulances capture every moment of what goes on behind closed doors as they tackle around 4000 calls each day, from life-threatening emergencies to cuts and bruises.
Inside The Ambulance returns for a brand new series of medical emergencies following ambulance crews from West Midlands Ambulance Service. Filmed in Dudley and Stoke-on-Trent, cameras mounted on crew members and throughout their ambulances capture every moment of what goes on behind closed doors as they tackle around 4,000 calls each day, from life and death decisions to cuts and bruises.
On the shift once more with the West Midlands Ambulance Service capturing every moment of their work Inside the Ambulance. The series picks up with familiar faces in Dudley and re-visits new ones in Stoke, the biggest and newest ambulance hub in the West Midlands, as the paramedics and technicians give an intimate and adrenalin-fuelled response to some of the 4000 emergency calls that come in each day.
Crews from West Midlands Ambulance Service with a new team from Stoke-On- Trent face more heart-pounding action and medical emergencies – as well as lighter moments - as they tackle over 4,000 calls each day. Cameras mounted on crew members and the ambulances capture every moment of what goes on behind closed doors.
On Inside the Ambulance: At Christmas, it's the first time cameras have been with crews from West Midlands Ambulance Service as they work around the clock at Christmas and New Year - one of their busiest and most challenging times.
Filmed with cameras at all angles, including on the crewmembers, the series captures the action behind closed doors as they tackle 4,000 emergency calls each day.
The gripping and emotional series returns for a brand new series. Crews from West Midlands Ambulance Service face more heart-pounding action and medical emergencies – as well as lighter moments - as they tackle over 4,000 calls each day. Cameras mounted on crew members and throughout their ambulances capture every moment of what goes on behind closed doors.
The UKTV Original documentary returns for a third series and follows the heart-pounding action and human stories of frontline paramedics from one of Britain's busiest ambulance services.
Using cameras mounted inside a West Midlands Ambulance Service vehicle, as well as on the team members themselves, the series gives a unique perspective of the nation's first response emergency workers. The series also captures how the hard-working paramedics cope with the life and death situations they deal with on a daily basis, as well the friendships they forge during the lighter moments of working with the great British public.