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HEALTH

Swedish doctor saves heart attack patient’s life with defibrillator drone

A doctor used a defibrillator delivered by drone to resuscitate a 71-year-old man who had a heart attack in western Sweden.

Swedish doctor saves heart attack patient's life with defibrillator drone
Press image of one of the drones used in the Västra Götaland region. Photo: Andreas Claesson/Everdrone AB/TT

Emergency services dispatched the drone followed by an ambulance when Sven, a retiree who asked for his last name to be withheld, collapsed in early December while shovelling snow outside his home in the town of Trollhättan.

“Everything from the first 112 call to the drone getting the signal to start and go took about 15-30 seconds and then the whole process took about three and a half minutes,” Sven told AFP.

By lucky coincidence a doctor, Mustafa Ali, was driving past. He stopped and began performing CPR as Sven’s wife called emergency services, and was there on the spot when the drone arrived with the defibrillator to help restart Sven’s heart.

Ali said the drone “really helped” in saving the man’s life, as it was used in combination with quick CPR and medicines administered in the ambulance, which arrived minutes later.

“I think it’s a really good tool. Especially when it comes to patients that are far away from the nearest hospital,” Ali told AFP.

The defibrillator, which gives electric shocks to the heart of a patient in cardiac arrest, was lowered to the ground via a winch, meaning the drone didn’t need to land to deliver the device.

The use of medical drones is part of trial run by Everdrone in the area around Gothenburg, and is being developed in collaboration with the Center for Resuscitation Science at medical university Karolinska Institutet, emergency service operation SOS Alarm and regional health authority Västra Gotaland.

Everdrone stated its network can currently reach 200,000 residents in Sweden and “is expected to expand to more locations in Europe during 2022”.

In future the unmanned aircraft could be fitted with other medical equipment.

“You could imagine these drones delivering trauma kits in various situations… going to hard to reach islands or other places where it’s hard to go at all,” Mats Sällström, CEO of Everdrone, told AFP.

“We started with the defibrillator because it’s such a time-critical event” where a drone can really make a difference, he added.

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STRIKES

Swedish healthcare strike: What nurses and midwives’ overtime ban means for you

A nationwide healthcare strike involving tens of thousands of Swedish nurses and midwives got under way on Thursday afternoon, after negotiations about salaries and rotas broke down.

Swedish healthcare strike: What nurses and midwives' overtime ban means for you

The industrial action, launched by the Swedish Association of Health Professionals, kicked off at 4pm on Thursday.

The union represents nurses, midwives, biomedical scientists and radiographers.

Up to 63,000 union members are affected by the strike, which means that they are to refuse to work overtime or extra shifts, and that employers may not hire new staff as long as the action is ongoing.

EXPLAINED:

Managers are exempt from the strike.

“We haven’t had any unreasonable expectations. We want to be able to have the energy to work full time, we want sustainable schedules and four weeks of continuous vacation in summer. We want higher wages so that it’s equal,” union chair Sineva Ribeiro said earlier this month.

“During the pandemic we were called superheroes and went to work on our days off to save lives. We were applauded then, but today we have to choose between falling ill ourselves or reducing our hours to part time to be able to cope. At the end of the day, patients take the hit,” she added.

She said the workers they represent in total worked 3 million hours in overtime last year.

But negotiations with SKR (the umbrella organisation for Swedish regions) and employer organisation Sobona have failed to bring the parties closer together. Late on Wednesday the union and SKR and Sobona again rejected each other’s proposals and counter proposals.

Healthcare services are generally urging patients to turn up to scheduled appointments (although as healthcare is managed on a regional basis in Sweden, it may make sense to check with your healthcare provider), but warn that surgeries may have to be cancelled.

“There’s a risk that we will have to reduce our capacity for planned surgeries and you will be informed if your surgery is affected,” Region Sörmland writes on its website.

“We prioritise emergencies and healthcare that cannot wait without risking life or long-term health,” Region Halland’s healthcare director Martin Engström writes in a statement.

Region Kronoberg and Blekinge meanwhile warn of longer waiting times for test results.

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