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Ambulances
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8 years 1 month ago - 8 years 1 month ago #168335
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ford F100 ambulance in 1977
770611Sa Melbourne (Vic.) Essendon Airport: East-West DC3 VH-AGU; Ford F100 ambulance 2. (Roderick Smith)
F100 ambulances: colacambulance.com.au/F100%20Ambulance.htm .
Roderick
F100 ambulances: colacambulance.com.au/F100%20Ambulance.htm .
Roderick
Last edit: 8 years 1 month ago by Roderick Smith. Reason: Added a second photographic angle.
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7 years 8 months ago #173751
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ambulances
Old ambulance: www.flickr.com/photos/57437622@N04/6162028533, in a rally at Lakes Entrance (Vic.).
I have a photo of this one in reply 98956 in this thread.
Roderick.
I have a photo of this one in reply 98956 in this thread.
Roderick.
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7 years 8 months ago #173759
by jamo
Replied by jamo on topic Ambulances
The following user(s) said Thank You: Roderick Smith
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7 years 5 months ago #176294
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ambulances
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7 years 5 months ago #176296
by oldgmc
Old trucks will make you poor but not unhappy
Replied by oldgmc on topic Ambulances
Old trucks will make you poor but not unhappy
The following user(s) said Thank You: Roderick Smith
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7 years 5 months ago #176521
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ambulances, old & modern
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7 years 4 months ago #177707
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ambulances
Queensland ambulance veteran Mick Davis helping to bring the service into the future.
News Corp Australia Network Wed. November 30, 2016.
In many ways Mick Davis has been on the lookout for the safety of his fellow Queenslanders since he was a little boy.
“I started learning about first aid when I was 12 years old and in the Scouts in Rockhampton,” says Mick, who went on to become an influential veteran ambulance paramedic. “It’s just something I always had an interest in and could always see the value in.”
Throughout a distinguished career that saw him treat countless patients as an on-road paramedic, in the Air Ambulance service and as a station officer, Mick also worked hard to improve the quality of care as an educator, reformer and instructor.
Mick has watched ambulance operations in Queensland morph from separate local brigades that offered the best service they could into the amalgamated, highly professional statewide service in operation today.
And next month Central Queensland University will honour his years of service by awarding him with an honorary doctorate.
Nowadays Mick volunteers as the manager of the Queensland Ambulance Service & History to make sure people understand how far frontline paramedic clinical services have come. “The history of Queensland Ambulance is a great story,” says Mick, 71. “QAS is turning 125 next year, and part of that history is telling that story of how that evolution occurred and why it occurred, and why it was necessary. I tell that story to students and to public groups and to new graduates who have been inducted into Queensland Ambulance.”
Although the emergency vehicles, the drugs and the medical equipment have all advanced over time, CommBank’s Australian of the Day says the biggest strides in terms of public safety have been the improvements in clinical education, certification and the registration of paramedics in Australia, which is due to start in 2018.
“We still have people calling themselves paramedics who may be unqualified and may not know what they are doing,” he says. “Today you can be certain that a paramedic is a highly trained individual with the main goal of treating you the best possible way and bringing you safely to hospital.”
But Mick says the job of a paramedic doesn’t always start and end with the administration of lifesaving or stabilising medical treatment. “You’re proud of everything you do,” says Mick, “because the simple things might be having a cup of tea with an elderly woman who has lost her husband who is probably dead in the bedroom and you can’t do anything for him because he died during the night. They’re the simple things of life that happen that not many people have to consider. But they’re equally as important as treating people in a big emergency situation.”
CommBank has partnered with News Corp Australia to champion the Australian of the Day initiative which celebrates people in our neighbourhoods and communities who really make a difference to how we live and who we are. You can read all their stories at australianoftheday.com.au, where you can also nominate someone you know.
< www.heraldsun.com.au/lifestyle/aotd/quee...8b7345f05fa281a41462 >
with Mick inside the museum, and with a preserved ambulance.
Roderick
News Corp Australia Network Wed. November 30, 2016.
In many ways Mick Davis has been on the lookout for the safety of his fellow Queenslanders since he was a little boy.
“I started learning about first aid when I was 12 years old and in the Scouts in Rockhampton,” says Mick, who went on to become an influential veteran ambulance paramedic. “It’s just something I always had an interest in and could always see the value in.”
Throughout a distinguished career that saw him treat countless patients as an on-road paramedic, in the Air Ambulance service and as a station officer, Mick also worked hard to improve the quality of care as an educator, reformer and instructor.
Mick has watched ambulance operations in Queensland morph from separate local brigades that offered the best service they could into the amalgamated, highly professional statewide service in operation today.
And next month Central Queensland University will honour his years of service by awarding him with an honorary doctorate.
Nowadays Mick volunteers as the manager of the Queensland Ambulance Service & History to make sure people understand how far frontline paramedic clinical services have come. “The history of Queensland Ambulance is a great story,” says Mick, 71. “QAS is turning 125 next year, and part of that history is telling that story of how that evolution occurred and why it occurred, and why it was necessary. I tell that story to students and to public groups and to new graduates who have been inducted into Queensland Ambulance.”
Although the emergency vehicles, the drugs and the medical equipment have all advanced over time, CommBank’s Australian of the Day says the biggest strides in terms of public safety have been the improvements in clinical education, certification and the registration of paramedics in Australia, which is due to start in 2018.
“We still have people calling themselves paramedics who may be unqualified and may not know what they are doing,” he says. “Today you can be certain that a paramedic is a highly trained individual with the main goal of treating you the best possible way and bringing you safely to hospital.”
But Mick says the job of a paramedic doesn’t always start and end with the administration of lifesaving or stabilising medical treatment. “You’re proud of everything you do,” says Mick, “because the simple things might be having a cup of tea with an elderly woman who has lost her husband who is probably dead in the bedroom and you can’t do anything for him because he died during the night. They’re the simple things of life that happen that not many people have to consider. But they’re equally as important as treating people in a big emergency situation.”
CommBank has partnered with News Corp Australia to champion the Australian of the Day initiative which celebrates people in our neighbourhoods and communities who really make a difference to how we live and who we are. You can read all their stories at australianoftheday.com.au, where you can also nominate someone you know.
< www.heraldsun.com.au/lifestyle/aotd/quee...8b7345f05fa281a41462 >
with Mick inside the museum, and with a preserved ambulance.
Roderick
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7 years 3 months ago #178041
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Road & helicopter ambulances (Qld)
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7 years 3 months ago #178069
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic Ambulances
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7 years 3 months ago #178917
by Roderick Smith
Replied by Roderick Smith on topic SA ambulance
Port Broughton (SA) boat incident: a girl on a rubber dinghy, being towed behind a speedboat, came off, and went head-first into a pylon. Ambulance & helicopter rescue.
< www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-austra...ed7f4e26ecea8df62df9 >
170129Su Adelaide 'Advertiser' - Port Broughton boat incident. (Elizabeth Henson)
Roderick
< www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-austra...ed7f4e26ecea8df62df9 >
170129Su Adelaide 'Advertiser' - Port Broughton boat incident. (Elizabeth Henson)
Roderick
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