Man, 89, with broken hip taken to hospital strapped to a plank in Wales

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The family of an 89-year-old man with a broken hip and shoulder and a cut head who had to be taken to hospital strapped to a plank in the back of a van because there were no ambulances have said he could have died had they not found a makeshift way of getting him to safety.

Melvyn Ryan’s granddaughter, Nicole Lea, found him lying on the floor of his home in Cwmbran, south Wales, in the early hours but when she dialled 999 a call handler told her no ambulances were available and advised her to book a taxi before ringing off.

“I couldn’t really believe what I was being told,” said Lea, a 27-year-old firefighter and Ryan’s main carer since his wife, Maureen, died of 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 Grandad 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 on to 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 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.”

She said she felt saddened and disappointed. “I knew the NHS was in trouble and wait times were long,” said Lea. “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 and expect me to figure out how to get him to safety.”

Ryan was taken to Grange university hospital in the early hours of Friday. “It’s only because of teamwork, brainstorming and quick thinking that the three of us managed to get Grandad to hospital within a couple of hours,” Lea said.

Lea’s partner, Elliot Hill, said: “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. Our complaint is not with frontline staff at all, it’s with the management.”

Lee Brooks, the 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.

“Current levels of demand, handover delays at hospitals, and staff sickness levels, has limited our capacity to respond in a safe and timely manner.”

The service invited the family to discuss its claims about the call handler’s actions and advice.

Dr Iona Collins, the chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) Cymru, said: “Mr Ryan has had what sounds like the most appalling of experiences.

“How must the ambulance service feel when they are getting calls like this? Obvious its an emergency and they need help and they are unable to help. This is the stuff of nightmares.”

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