HSE Health Matters Spring 2022

Page 27

Boy hailed a hero for raising alarm after father’s cliff fall Praise has been flooding in for a 10-year-old from Donegal whose quick-thinking saved his father after a fall from a cliff. Owen Cunningham being presented with his award by the HSE’s National Ambulance Service (NAS) outside of his school, Scoil Chartha Naofa, Kilcar, Co Donegal.

O

wen Cunningham raised the alarm after his father Seamus sustained injuries when he fell off a cliff on November 16th 2021, while working on farm fencing. Realising the danger his father was in and not having a mobile phone with him, Owen ran home and raised the alarm before cycling back to his injured father and waited for help to arrive. Seamus was treated for his injuries by National Ambulance Service (NAS) staff including a Paramedic and Advanced Paramedic from Killybegs Ambulance Station and subsequently airlifted from the scene by the Coast Guard R118 helicopter. Those who attended the incident were impressed with Owen’s calm and brave response and wanted to acknowledge this with a certificate of bravery, which was presented to him at Kilcar National School earlier today. The event was attended by NAS staff, including the Advanced Paramedic and Paramedics who attended the call, Coast Guard volunteers who assisted in the rescue, along with the Coastguard R118 crew who also attended the incident. “On the morning of November 16th last, we received an emergency call in the Donegal area. A man had sustained a serious fall. National Ambulance Service paramedics attended and provided care on scene. We were supported by the Coast Guard Helicopter and the man was subsequently transferred to hospital. The alarm was originally raised by a child who was there when the incident occurred and local crews were incredibly impressed by his calm approach throughout the incident,” explained Robert Morton, NAS Director. “All of us at the HSE’s National Ambulance Service are delighted to present Owen with his bravery certificate today. And who knows, he may be a paramedic when he grows up?” Praising his son’s bravery, Owen’s father Seamus, added, “I’m very proud of Owen… the outcome could have been much worse. He is a very brave boy. It took a lot of guts for him to do what he did. He stayed with me the whole time.”

Owen and his family with members of NAS and members of the Coast Guard.

Owen with members of the HSE’s National Ambulance Service (NAS).

HEALTH MATTERS SPRING 2022 | 25

025_HSE Health Matters_Bravery.indd 25

16/03/2022 11:32


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

A Message from our CEO

2min
page 3

Get yourself summer ready

3min
pages 81-83

Living Well helping patients manage long-term conditions

1min
page 80

Menopause and Me webinar a huge success

3min
page 79

Healthy Ireland report

3min
page 76

Musicians on call

2min
page 77

EU4Health programme

3min
page 74

New recruitment operating model for HSE

4min
page 75

Change practices

4min
pages 69-70

Introduction to Human

3min
page 72

Reduce your risk of injury at your workstation

3min
page 73

Trust and confidence in the HSE

3min
page 68

Spark Ignite competition supports innovation on frontline

2min
page 63

Sexual wellbeing campaign hits TV screens

3min
page 66

Nursing home expert panel

4min
page 67

Teen pregnancy study reports major decline in numbers

3min
page 65

CxIO team brings insights of clinical work to IT team

4min
pages 61-62

Online health appointments using video

1min
page 59

Be cyber security aware

2min
page 58

Data privacy is everyone’s responsibility

3min
page 57

Support and understanding for the bereaved

4min
page 56

Ground-breaking COVID research

3min
page 54

Keeping track of the COVID-19 vaccine

2min
page 53

Sporting memories boost for people with dementia

4min
page 52

Urology clinic cuts visits from four to one

3min
page 49

Digital initiative to prevent future cardiac arrests

3min
page 50

Dementia advisers in every county

2min
page 51

Medicines initiative supporting patients

5min
pages 47-48

Health Passport gets new app

2min
page 44

ICF in Limerick opens eyes to new patient-centred model of care

6min
pages 45-46

Childhood vaccines

3min
page 42

Specialist mental health service marks 20 years

3min
page 43

National Service Plan

8min
pages 39-41

Perinatal mental healthcare explored at conference

2min
page 35

Nurse-led care in oncology haematology clinic

3min
page 37

New sanctuary of care

2min
page 36

Demo rooms at new children’s hospital

2min
page 34

CHI video on managing allergies

2min
page 32

Awards for public health teams

5min
pages 29-30

New National Clinical Guidelines to help people give up smoking

3min
page 25

Pathfinder keeping elderly out of hospital

4min
page 31

Boy hailed a hero after father’s cliff fall

2min
page 26

St Luke’s long service awards

3min
page 27

Caoimhe tells us her quit story

6min
pages 23-24

Our COVID experience - staff look back at last two years

26min
pages 3-8

Inside the children’s vaccination

6min
pages 9-10

Return to Nursing

2min
page 21

Kerry Integrated Care

2min
page 18

Martin bows out of nursing career

6min
pages 19-20

Day in the life of a community nurse

3min
page 22

Message from our editor

2min
page 2

Reflections from a team of vaccinators

4min
pages 11-12
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
HSE Health Matters Spring 2022 by Ashville Media Group - Issuu