RFDS (2021) s03e01 Episode Script

Sieve & Sort

Did you catch up with Henry in the end?
He said he apologised to you.
He also said that he told
you that he'd cut you off
if you went through with the trip.
Why didn't you tell me that?
I thought if you thought
that he hated you,
then what chance would we
ever have of working out?
Is the doctor coming?
You're looking at him.
You know who you are?
Dr Deadly.
- So, how far along are you?
- Ten weeks.
So, you'd be fine to
stop flying for a year?
No, it would change everything.
Completely handbrake our careers.
Yep.
This is a surprise party, isn't it?
I just feel like
I don't know.
You're Leonie Smith, and we
just want to celebrate you.
Surprise!
When I hugged you, if I overstepped
Don't be ridiculous.
I shouldn't have cut
you off, 'cause I
Ow!
Whoa, I think my waters have broken.
We need to get the baby out now.
Whatever happens, I trust you, OK?
Last push, give it
everything you've got.
- You OK?
- We are now.
We have decided that Peter
Emerson's nursing registration
will be suspended for a
minimum period of six months
and mandatory skill and
professional standards retraining
to be undertaken
before it is reinstated.
It's probably a good time for me
to sort a few things out anyway.
So, I'll see you round then, hey?
Yeah.
See you round.
(PHONE RINGS)
RFDS, Dr Harrod speaking.
(THEME MUSIC)
Are you out far?
Oh, about 100ks.
I love how you just say
that's like, like nothing.
Yeah.
Deep breath in.
OK, I'll just feel up in here.
(BREATHES DEEPLY)
(CHUCKLES)
That's it. Are you ready?
There's a spider on that one.
- Careful.
- Ooh.
So, you've had some
back pain on the left?
Yeah, and the headaches,
all the same stuff that Mum used
to get with her polycystic kidneys.
Have you said anything to Pete?
Mate, I get a paper cut, he
tells me to go to emergency.
Sorry, is that weird for you?
How about we book in to the
nephrologist for a re-scan
and see how it's all going?
So, how have your periods been lately?
Eugh, all over the
shop, same as Mum's were.
Eliza!
Some help here!
Take my hand. You right?
Barry?
What happened?
- He said it's his stomach.
- It's killing me.
(GRUNTS, GROANS)
OK, let's have a look.
- (SCREAMS)
- Oh.
It's quite distended.
Let's get a monitor on you.
Taylor?
- Can you call the boys?
- Yep.
He's pretty tachypneic.
Mesenteric ischemia?
What's that?
It's when the blood supply
to your gut is cut off.
Have you eaten anything dodgy
in the past few days, Barry?
Just tins of stuff
Stew.
- Were the tins OK?
- Botulism?
I think the altitude's making it worse.
It's Boyle's law, gases expanding.
Matty, can you release the
pressure with the nasogastric?
Sea level cabin please, Graham.
Roger that.
BP up, 140 on 90.
Can you see any bowel obstructions?
I just can't see past
these gas filled
(BARRY FARTS)
Oops.
There's that stew, hey?
Are you feeling better?
Yeah.
Sorry about that.
Oh, don't worry, we've dealt
with much worse, believe me.
Can someone crack a window?
Oh, no.
Oh, yes.
It was like someone ran over
a bullfrog on a dirt bike.
What, you could hear it over the engine?
It just about showed up on the radar.
Oh, stop!
Poor Baz.
How was he?
He felt so bad he said
he would fundraise back
double the cost of the flight.
It was an expensive shart.
Oh, don't!
Just a sec.
Oy, is the big fella coming?
He and Wayne are the
only ones that can play.
I'm right here.
Yeah, you bring experience.
Sorry, I'm on the
first half of nap duty.
- What?
- See ya.
Well, is he?
He was coming when I left this morning.
Oh, I bet he was.
- You really need a boyfriend.
- You need a boyfriend.
Hey, I heard Barry was OK?
Oh, just a mild case of mortification.
(CHUCKLES)
Before you play, can
we have a quick chat
about your results?
Oh, they're worse than
you said, aren't they?
No-no, your kidneys are stable.
Well, your creatinine was elevated,
but so was your HCG.
What's that?
Well, typically,
it's a pregnancy hormone.
Oh, you've got to be
Oy! You calling him?
I'll call him now!
On a bus.
Outside of Kingsley.
The plane got a flat.
I was tempted to nick the
clinic troopie, but I felt bad.
Yeah, no, no, no. No, start without me.
I'll be there as soon as I can.
Alright, bye. Bye.
Oh, my God.
How many weeks am I?
Early, about six, I'd say.
Are you gonna tell Cameron?
Oy!
Where's your fella?
He said he was coming.
(WHISTLES)
Sorry, powerline's down on the highway.
Oy, high-vis off, athleisure wear on.
- Hey. (CHUCKLES)
- Hiya.
- Oh.
- Aw.
No.
Mum, Mum, it is.
If she makes the state
athletic squad tomorrow,
they go do the US college tour.
You have to.
I'll call you later.
- What took you so long?
- Alright, stop's over.
Gotta get moving.
- After you.
- Cheers.
I feel sick.
- Well, stop looking at your phone.
- I'm not looking at my phone.
I told you it's
it's nerves.
I'm gonna spew.
Here you go, here you go, just in case.
- Oh, thanks.
- That's alright.
Are you alright?
Yeah, I think it's probably just
a little bit of motion sickness.
OK.
Any chance we can stop
again at the next rest stop?
We just had one.
I know,
but my sister's feeling sick.
Next break's in an hour.
You want her to spew on the bus?
There's sick bags in
the seat pocket, alright?
So, what, we're going to hold
a spew bag for another hour?
That's your problem.
My problem is getting
everyone else there on time.
If I keep stopping every 15
minutes, we'll never get there.
Mate, in the interests of
me not getting spewed on
and you not having to clean it
up, can you throw one in for free?
- Two minutes.
- Alright, cheers.
Thanks so much, grumpy old
What did you just say to me?
I said thank you.
And what did you say
after that, smart-arse?
Alright, take it easy.
- I can't take it easy!
- Fellas, fellas.
If we're half an hour
late, I lose my job!
Mate.
- Mate!
- (TENSE MUSIC)
(ENGINE REVS)
Oh!
(GROANS)
Mate, are you alright?
Oh, Jesus.
Poppy?
Mate, are you OK?
What's your name?
Um, Joe.
Joe, are you hurt anywhere?
I'm I'm I'm fine.
Where, where's my sister?
Where's Poppy?
Poppy?
Hey, Joe.
Joe, look at me.
Are you sure you're OK?
Are you right to go call for help?
I'm not, not leaving Poppy.
Yeah, listen, I'm a nurse with the RFDS.
I will find your sister,
but she's gonna need
someone to call for help.
Do you think you could do that?
Alright.
Ah, Jesus!
So, head back to that rest
stop until you get reception.
Call 000.
Tell them there's a
mass casualty about
We're about 100ks from Kingsley.
I don't have my phone.
Take mine.
Um, passcode is 1928.
Call the names I've
written on the back there.
Everyone, just try and stay calm.
We're gonna get you out.
Is there anyone with
Is there anyone with first
aid or medical training?
- Yeah, mate, first aid.
- Yeah, right, stay with me.
Is he
Yeah.
But first, we need to
get this windscreen out.
- (MUMBLES)
- Mate.
Just, no, no, don't, don't, mate!
No, no, no!
- Oh.
- Mate.
We're gonna get you out, alright.
Again, one, two, three.
I'm-I'm really sweaty. (CHUCKLES)
So am I.
I mean, the sensible thing to do
would be to take a shower I suppose.
Well, that's only reasonable.
I'm a reasonable guy.
(PHONE RINGS)
You know for a hot phone,
that thing really has a knack of
cooling things off, doesn't it?
Ah
as it happens
it's not the hot phone.
Oh.
That's lucky.
Whoo! (LAUGHS)
We've got a very, very sexy emergency.
But how does she have school sores?
She doesn't go to school.
You don't actually
get them from a school.
Yeah, thanks, Doc. I meant,
who did she get them from?
Like could you have brought
them home from a patient, maybe?
Or toy library, baby bounce.
Could've been anywhere.
Yeah, but you've seen how many
anti-bacterial wipes I use?
Yeah.
A little bit of antibiotic cream,
you'll be fine, won't you, Bubba?
Hey?
(PHONE RINGS)
I'll be damned.
Well, answer it.
You've been bitching about
him not calling for months.
Nah, it'll just be an arse dial.
Answer it.
Long time.
JOE (ON PHONE): Is, uh
Is this, uh, Wayne?
Sorry, who's this?
Yeah, just on the side
of the road, there's good.
You're OK, mate, you're OK.
Hey, do you know how to build a fire?
Alright, get everyone who can walk
and talk around it to keep warm.
What's your name?
Hey, stay with me.
- Stay with me. Stay with me.
- Owen.
Gotta call the company.
Hey, no, no, no, don't
worry about that, mate.
You're alright.
Um
Stay right there.
I'll be right back, OK?
- You're right, mate.
- Ah!
Hey, I'm, I'm Pete.
I'm a nurse.
Just-just try and stay still, mate.
OK.
Alright, mate, I've got to put your
foot back in to restore blood flow.
Who do you support?
Port or Crows?
(SCREAMS)
Chuck us that, um, that laptop.
Great, that's going to work here.
(PHONE RINGS)
It is the work phone.
Leonie, is everything alright?
Central Region Fire and Rescue,
Leading Station Officer Jarvis speaking?
Did you say Pete?
Yeah, OK, well, let me know
if any assets come up anywhere.
OK, I'll call you back.
Ambo, volunteers and police
are arriving from Kingsley now.
- Any other planes?
- No.
Nigel's overnighting in
Sydney, so, only pilot's Graham,
but I'm working on it.
- Who's controlling?
- Ryan.
I'll run Scene Command.
We'll take over medical
when we get there.
They've only got one MTP,
plus our blood shipper.
They're scrambling.
So, only eight units of blood?
No, we're going to need more
and a haematologist on standby.
- Leonie, can you make that call?
- Copy that.
We'll conserve as much as we can.
Gray?
How close can we land?
Arbordale Roadhouse is closest.
Oy? Is Pete OK?
Yeah, as far we know.
I want to come in with you.
With all the patients,
you're going to need mental
health support, right?
Couldn't hurt.
We've got room for six if
two buckle in on stretchers.
Yeah, OK.
Let's get moving, everyone.
Hey, hey
can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
(GROANS)
Hey, hey, you alright?
As we sieve and sort,
remember resp rates 10 to 29,
pulses under 120.
Anything outside of
that, I need to know.
Wayne, prep intranasal
fent, TXA, IV morph,
and can you lead P1s when we get there?
Matty, you're on IV and IO access
and can you help Wayne with the P1s.
Chaya, you're on P2s.
I will focus on triage.
We need the two most critical patients
ready to depart as soon as possible.
This will be overwhelming
but let's not let the scale of it
make us forget that this is going
to be one of the scariest days
of these people's lives.
- (GASPS)
- Are you right, mate?
Are you right?
I can't breathe.
When did you talk to him last?
Not since he left.
Maybe a year.
Who's this?
Oh, the nurse on the scene.
He's Adelaide RFDS
but used to be with us.
It's Pete.
Pete Pete?
Mm.
OK, stay with me, mate.
Owen, stay with me.
Is that everyone out?
- Yeah, I think so.
- You're alright.
- Come on, mate, come on, breathe.
- (SIREN WAILS)
Owen, breathe. Fight, Owen.
Keep breathing. Owen, stay with me.
Breathe.
Breathe, breathe, breathe.
Hey, mate.
- I'm Caleb, are you the nurse?
- Yeah. Pete.
Um, we've got two critical,
several P2s and P3s,
about 20 passengers all up.
Who else is coming?
Well, local ambos and Fire
and Rescue are right behind me.
And then we've got RFDS
coming out of Broken Hill.
- They're landing at Arbordale.
- Yeah, alright.
OK, well, tell them we need
to make safe. How many planes?
- Just one so far.
- OK.
Hey, mate, I've got to
do a chest decompression.
You got a needle or something?
- I've got an angiocath.
- Yeah, that's even better.
Come on, Owen. Breathe, mate.
Breathe, breathe, breathe.
Breathe, Owen. Good, mate, good, good.
- Bloody hell.
- (SIREN WAILS)
Hi, Dr Harrod, RFDS Medical Command.
Caleb, Acting Scene Commander.
What's the sit rep?
We've got two criticals,
several P2s and P3s at the staging area.
- Right.
- 20 passengers in total.
The nurse is up front
with the critical driver.
- Is that Pete?
- Yeah.
This is Ryan with Fire and Rescue.
He'll take over Scene Command.
I'll go up front and make safe.
Oh, Doc, nurse wanted you to
check on the lady over there.
OK. Wayne, Matty, go find Pete.
Hi, I'm Dr Harrod.
- Hey.
- Hey.
- You alright?
- Yeah.
Yep, this is Owen.
We've got a flail chest
with tension pneumo.
I've needled him. He's
going to need a drain.
Is there someone, have we
got someone making safe?
Yeah, yeah. This is Ryan
with Fire and Rescue.
He's the Scene Commander.
- Hey.
- Hey.
Uh, I've taken the key out.
I don't know about the battery and fuel.
Mate, we've got this.
- You go help with the P2s.
- You sure?
Yeah.
Alright.
You can stop bagging.
She's gone.
Alright, when you get a
second, can you get her
a blanket?
Hey.
Hey.
Is, um Is she
No.
- Are you alright?
- Yeah.
Joe!
(COUGHS)
Joe!
Ah
Poppy.
Joe!
Where's my brother?
Poppy.
My leg's stuck.
Eliza? We've got an entrapment.
Hi, Poppy.
I'm Eliza. I'm a doctor with the RFDS.
This is nurse Pete
and you've already met
Ryan from Fire and Rescue.
Hey, Poppy.
- Let's get you out of here, yeah?
- (SCREAMS)
Alright, have you hit your head or
had any trouble breathing, Poppy?
Ah, no, but just my
leg, it's killing me.
I bet it is.
Alright, I'll get access.
Just a short scratch, Poppy, alright.
She's tachy. BP's 80 systolic.
What do you think?
It's too risky to cut
against the ground.
Our best option's to lift the bus.
Guys, we need high pressure airbags,
side stabilisers and all
the wood chocks you've got.
Can we stay here until you do?
Yeah, just be ready to come
out as soon as I say so, OK?
Hang in there, Poppy. We'll
have you up in a second, OK?
OK, let's get some painkillers into you.
Now, do you have any major allergies?
Are you on any medications?
Are there any issues medically
with you or your family, Poppy?
Ah, yeah, um,
my mum and brother
have like a blood thing.
IGA something.
An Immunoglobulin A deficiency?
Yeah, yeah, that's it.
My, um, my brother
Joe had a bad reaction
when he was a kid in hospital.
He nearly died.
I've never been tested.
So, let's get a unit of blood in
now and another one ready to go.
When they lift the bus,
the bleeding's going to get a lot worse.
If she has an IGA deficiency,
we can't use FFP to stop the bleeding.
Can we give bloods
with the IGA deficiency?
We have to take that risk, but no FFP.
The chances of anaphylaxis are too high.
The bloods will keep her alive for now.
What if they can't get the bus up?
Let's hope for the best
and prepare for the worst.
- I'll get a tourniquet on.
- Yep.
Owen, I'm not going to lie to you, mate.
It's going to hurt like hell
but it's going to get
you breathing again.
Alright, scalpel.
Oh!
Alright, mate, doing well, doing well.
Here we go.
Ah!
(SCREAMS, CRIES)
Joe?
Poppy?
Is there a Joe or a Poppy here?
Um
Uh, they haven't been recorded yet.
- Are they
- My kids.
They're my kids.
- How are we looking?
- In there.
Let's go, come on.
Poppy? Joe?
Just wait a minute.
Tay, Tay, what are
what are you doing here?
- This is
- Anna.
My kids were on the bus.
- Their names are Poppy and Joe.
- Mum?
Poppy?
Oh, thank God, I'm here.
Agapi Mou, OK? Can I go in?
No-no, I'm sorry but
until we can get it lifted,
we can only have emergency
crew inside the bus, OK?
I'm sorry.
Well, why aren't you bringing her out?
Well we are, it's just
that her, her leg is pinned
beneath the bus right now.
Oh, my God.
Poppy tells me that you and
your son have an IGA deficiency,
is that correct?
Yeah-yeah.
- And Poppy hasn't been tested?
- No. Why?
Mum, where's Joey? Is he with you?
No.
He might be at the staging area.
He's not, not that I saw.
No, he called me on someone's
phone and then he stopped talking.
Ah, well, reception
might have dropped out.
No, it was still connected.
He just
I don't know, he just sounded confused
and then he went quiet.
Well, which way did he go?
I'll go and look for him.
Oh, geez, he was heading
towards that rest stop.
Mum, go get Joey!
No, I'm not leaving you, honey.
I'm fine, just please go get Joe.
Eliza?
- Are you OK, if I
- Yeah.
You go, take a scoop and a pack.
And tell Chaya to come here.
- Yep.
- OK, come on, come on.
(GROANS)
Is my leg going to be OK?
Let's get this bus up.
We'll figure all that out, alright?
Hey, what can I do?
Chaya, this is Poppy.
She has her leg trapped.
Can you get her on an end-tidal please?
Hi, Poppy.
I'm Chaya.
I like your necklace.
Will I still be able to run on it?
We're going to do everything we can.
Joey!
Joe!
- Still no answer.
- Keep trying.
Let's make some room, please.
Smooth movements, fellas.
What happens if they can't lift the bus?
They've got lots of
strong machinery, OK.
We're going to get you out.
RYAN (ON RADIO): OK, minutes away.
Everyone out and clear from the bus.
OK, copy that.
We'll be back before you know it.
- Clearing the bus.
- It's go time.
- Ryan?
- Yeah.
As soon as the pressure is off her leg,
she's at risk of major haemorrhage,
so, you tell me the
second we can get back in.
Yep, will do.
Alright, you good?
You good?
Alright, we're set?
Alright, ready to lift. Everyone clear?
Clear, clear.
Airbags.
When they lift it, how long do we have?
We need to get in as soon as possible.
Easy.
(SCREAMS)
Poppy, we're just here OK?
(SCREAMS)
Stop, stop, stop. Stop, stop, stop.
- Wait.
- What?
What's the hold up?
Ah, the ground's sliding.
We might need another 10.
I don't have that long.
I'm going back in.
It's alright, Poppy.
We're still here.
It hurts so much.
IV is oozing, blood's not clotting.
We either give FFP and risk anaphylaxis
or we remove the limb.
Shouldn't we try lifting it again?
We don't have time.
It's FFP or amputation.
But FFP could kill her.
(PHONE RINGS)
Over here.
Joey?
Joe!
Joe!
Joe?
Can you hear me? Joe?
Oh, my God.
Joey?
Honey?
Honey, it's Mum.
Come on, darling, open your eyes.
I'm here. Come on, honey.
Sorry.
What? What is it?
You there, Wayne?
Pete, go ahead.
We've got a potential
extradural haemorrhage,
south of the bus crash.
He's going to need tubing.
Is there any chance?
I'm good here, you go.
Pete, on my way. Kit.
Poppy, sweetheart?
Are you getting me out?
We are
but it's proving too
difficult to move the bus.
We've done everything we can
and you're losing too much blood.
The only way to free you
is to remove your lower leg.
No, no, no.
I know it sounds awful,
but it's the only way to keep you alive.
No, I'd rather die.
I'm a runner. It's all I care about.
You can't take my leg.
I know it feels like
the end of the world,
but the real end of the world
will be if we don't do it.
No, I'd rather die than lose my leg.
Any job, any sport, you can
do that without a limb, OK?
You just You have to
stay alive first, yeah?
Poppy, you with us?
It's the ketamine.
Scalpel.
Are you going to be able to do this?
Yeah.
Pete?
Wayne? Wayne.
Hey, uh, CSF at the nose.
Cushing response.
Big lump on the parietal.
One eye's deviated down and out
with large pupil and resps,
no, they're still low.
Is this the lad that called me?
- How'd he get out here?
- I sent him to get reception.
And you didn't notice any head injury?
No.
Right, let's crash intubate
for a definitive airway.
Get him down now.
Can you open some gauze for me please?
WAYNE (ON RADIO): Eliza,
it's Wayne. Do you copy?
OK, Wayne, go ahead.
Travelling back now
with a 19-year-old male,
possible extradural hematoma.
ETA five.
We've crash intubated him,
bagged, but we need a ventilator.
- We've only got two, yeah?
- WAYNE (ON RADIO): Yeah, why?
We've got a lower limb
amputation with the teenage girl.
- Oh, my God, is that Poppy?
- She's lost a lot of blood, but
she's sedated. She should be alright.
She does need surgery though.
Gray, do you copy?
Copy.
How far away is the second plane?
About an hour.
Can we fit all three if we
get the two men on stretchers
and Poppy on a vac-mat on the floor?
I'd have to check with
Head of Flying Ops.
Then do it.
Wayne?
I'll get the ventilator and
meet you in the central area.
Alright, copy that.
Is Poppy gonna be alright?
- They they're looking after her.
- Ah!
Tay? Tay, you right?
Wayne, you got this?
Yeah, yeah, yep, yep.
Tay, you alright?
Are you right?
Yeah. I'm alright.
- You sure?
- Oh!
OK, right, um, let's swap
out. You two go up front.
Tay, do you reckon you're
OK to take the side?
Sorry.
OK, lifting on three.
One, two, three.
Let's go.
We're nearly there, honey.
We're nearly there,
darling. Hang on. Hang on.
Thanks, Matty.
- Alright, just here.
- OK, down on three.
One, two.
Thank you.
Oh, my God.
Poppy?
She's stable, just sedated.
I'm so sorry.
With the possible IGA deficiency,
giving FFP would have
been too dangerous.
There was nothing we
could do to save her leg.
Eliza, necklace.
OK, let's get these three to the plane.
Wayne, Matty, Caleb,
you take the bus driver in
the police car to the strip.
I'll go with Poppy
and Joe in the troopie.
- Ah.
- Tay, Tay?
Oh, my God, what happened?
- Are you alright?
- I'm OK.
No-no, she tripped.
The stretcher kind of
landed on top of her.
Let me take a look.
Oh.
I need the ultrasound.
Yeah.
- Has her PKD flared up again?
- It's fine.
Obvious free fluid
and I think the architecture
of the right kidney is damaged,
but it's hard to tell
with all the cysts.
Matty, how much blood do we have?
There's only one unit left.
She's techy, systolic's 82.
We can't wait. She needs blood now.
- OK, let's run it please.
- Yep.
We need to get her to hospital urgently.
Taylor?
Mm?
You're going to need surgery.
What about the baby?
What?
What? What, what baby?
It'll be alright.
We'll know more when we get to hospital.
She's going to have to come with us.
What are you doing out here then?
How about we discuss this later, huh?
GRAHAM (ON RADIO): Eliza,
Graham here. Do you copy?
Gray, it's Wayne. Go ahead.
HOFO gave the go ahead to take three.
WAYNE (ON RADIO): Well,
now, we've got four.
So, someone's going
to have to stay behind.
So, we leave the driver, right?
Drain's working, airway's patent?
No, he's got a flail and a haemo-pneumo.
He needs to go.
Can we road Taylor?
She needs more blood
and we're running out.
Joe's heartrate's 48,
hypertensive and GCS
5 despite no sedation.
Could he survive?
Not without immediate neurosurgery.
So, take the kids.
They're both critical.
There's critical and then there's
Yeah, but you said he has a chance.
With immediate surgery.
Then we're-we're wasting time.
Look, even if he survives,
chances are it won't be good.
He's young and fit. We have to try.
Poppy, Taylor and the driver will go.
I just, I I I
think it's the wrong call.
Well, it's not your call to make.
It's mine, for better or worse.
Let's get these three on the plane.
I'll stay here on the ground with Joe
until the back-up plane arrives.
Alright.
So, you're taking the driver?
It's a triage call.
What-what's going on?
Why aren't you leaving?
The issue is that we can't fit more
than three patients on the plane.
Is there another one coming?
There is, in an hour.
So, first we're going to take Poppy,
this young woman and the driver.
What?
What about Joe?
Anna, your son's head
injuries are catastrophic.
We're seeing signs that his brain
is swollen to the point where
Then he-he should go on
the plane, shouldn't he?
We are going to stay
with him on the ground
until the back-up plane arrives.
No-no, you can't just leave him here.
Anna, everyone is going to do everything
they possibly can for your son.
No!
No, you can't just leave him here!
Eliza, we need to move.
- Pete, are you
- Yeah, I'll go with Taylor.
Matty, you stay here.
- Chaya, I need you to
- No no, wait.
Wait, wait.
Alright, let's get the
driver in the troopie
and the girls in the ambulance please.
- Wait.
- A little help here please.
No, you, you can't,
you can't leave please.
Hey, hang on please.
- Please take my son.
- Hey, Anna.
We're right here, OK.
- We're not going anywhere.
- Please take my son.
- OK, you've got
- Come on.
Anna, you've got to let go.
- Come on, he's, he's right
- Anna.
He's right there.
- Please take my son.
- Anna, Anna, Anna, Anna.
- Listen, listen, listen, listen.
- Please just take him.
I know it's scary. I know it's scary.
- You've got to let them do their job.
- Get off me!
You can't just leave him here to die.
- Come on, come on, take him.
- Anna, we're not leaving him.
- Take, take him.
- We're staying with him, OK?
Take my son.
Please take my son.
They're doing everything they can.
No, they're not doing
everything they can.
They're not.
No! No, no, no, take him!
Matty, let's temporise him
with another round of hypertonic saline
and keep the CO2 on the low side.
How long do you think that'll work for?
I don't know.
This blood's not cutting it.
BP's still too low.
I think we need to try the FFP.
And the anaphylaxis
with the IGA deficiency?
- At this point we've got no choice.
- Yep.
I'll draw up a bag of dirty adrenaline
to counter any anaphylactic
shock and hope for the best.
Giving another 250mils
of hypertonic saline.
Come on.
Look, that's them.
Hey, backup's here, OK?
Oh, God. Thank God, thank God.
Hang in there, honey.
(MACHINE BEEPS RAPIDLY)
What is that? What?
He's bradycardic.
No pulse.
Starting compressions.
Hang in there, honey.
FFP's up.
OK, adrenaline fusion ready to go.
How long will she take to react?
Oh, it'd be pretty quick.
What's going on? Is he breathing?
They're just helping
get his heart going, OK.
Oh, come on, baby, come on.
Another dose, please.
Come on, honey.
Adrenaline in. Come
on, my baby, come on.
Just hang on.
Just hang on, honey.
The plane's here, OK?
Baby, come on
there you go.
Come on, baby, the
plane's coming. Come on.
Honey, the plane's nearly here.
Baby, come on.
You're doing it.
You're doing so good, honey.
Pupils fixed.
Please, please, please.
Please help him.
- OK, cycle the BP.
- Yep.
OK, BP's better.
We're up to 80 systolic.
Does that Does that mean we're good?
Eliza, I think he's
It's not for Joe.
It's for Anna.
Please help him.
Come on, honey, the plane's here.
Come on.
Time of death, 9:36pm.
Where's Joe?
(MELANCHOLIC MUSIC)
Hey. Taylor in surgery?
Yeah.
Yeah, it doesn't look like
her kidney's going to make it.
Who knows about the baby.
I'll check in on her tomorrow.
You alright?
Yeah.
Right, well, see you when we see you.
Yeah, see you when I see you.
Ah, yeah, yeah, I just
had a little bingle.
I think I might have broken my arm.
(INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC)
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