Live Rescue: Treating Seizure Victims – Top 5 Moments | A&E

Check out the Top 5 seizure victim rescues.

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34 thoughts on “Live Rescue: Treating Seizure Victims – Top 5 Moments | A&E

  1. This was actually cool to see, as someone with epilepsy who’s usually the one in the ambulance it’s cool to be the observer. I’ve never seen someone as aggressive as the guy at the restaurant, from what I’ve been told I start a little irate and get goofy.

  2. When they are required by law to take you to the hospital in an emergency vehicle, are you then also forced to pay for it?
    Does the emergency transportation itself also cost the patient money?
    What happens when someone can't pay at all? Do you go into lifelong debt?
    What if, on the scene of the incident, you say you have zero money on your account?
    Personally, I'd probably rather lose a finger or something, than go into deep debt, so if you lost a finger in an accident, could you refuse compounded care?

  3. Anyone that had a seizure that can tell me how confused you get afterwards? I understand that kid felt overwhelmed by seign so many people out of nowhere asking him questions, but how did he not realize that they were there to help him? Literally saving his life by not letting him drive.

  4. I wish those in insuline pumps worked perfectly🤘🤘♥️♥️♥️

  5. Okay I thought my postictal state was odd…I revert back to a child mentality, 4-8 depending, but I don't cuss people out. It sucks that young man has to deal with that, not everyone understands. Seriously the embarrassment that comes after you're "present" in your own head again is awkward at best. Just glad everyone here was okay.

  6. I feel so bad when they decline going to the hospital even when they know they should, just because it’s so expensive in America.

  7. I don't blame the people who don't want to go to the hospital. The $200,000 hospital bill sounds like it would cause a whole new array of health issues

  8. Sean is such an awesome guy I’m so glad he was able to start turning his life around and get a career so rewarding as tattooing. He probably has cool stories about life

  9. I feel bad for the teen who had aggressive mental state after his seizure, its really not fun to control anything you do after a seizure, from my experience of the many seizures I've had sense I was 14(now22) it does not look good or fun to deal with aggressive state after a seizure out of the tiny few times I've had them, if you look at it from the parents point of view in which I've been, the parents possibly to focused on trying to get their son to go calm as possible and leave without interacting with him or anything near him he's getting mad at to cause more rage to come come out to say sorry to anyone for their son the area was already tense and was probably causing him to act out more in his state that FD dispatch team could have kept it more calm for him feel like they made it stressful by trying to find out info from him so fast

  10. An aid car ride is expensive. A few years ago I was injured at the fire training academy, which was in my station's first due. My own crew showed up and transported me (which they found funny) 11 miles to the hospital. I received a bill from my own fire department for $1900 for transport. My FD had workers comp pay the bill once I brought it to their attention. After that, if someone didn't need an ambulance, and there was a competent person to drive them (after assessment and any first aid), I encouraged them to make their own way to the hospital, especially people who might have trouble with a $2000 ride. We were EMTs anyway so people weren't going to die if we didn't take them. Interestingly, if someone was serious enough to need an actual Medic, and was transported by Medic One (which is county run and not through the fire district), the ride is free. I guess the moral of the story is: if you're going to get hurt in King County, hope that it's either so minor you can transport yourself or so serious you get advanced medic care.

  11. Someone i know who suffers from seizures gets angry and curses like that young boy did when she wakes up and then when the confusion wears off afterwards she has no recollection of ever cursing

  12. I've had a few seizures in my twenties (I'm 30 now) and they happened at the worst places and in huge crowds. I was on stage VIP for a concert and it happened. I was so embarrassed. What was worse was I missed the whole show, couldn't tell EMTS my name my age anything I was so confused. It was horrible. My heart ❤ goes out to all these people both patient and EMT/Firefighter/police ect.

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