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Top honour for SECAmb paramedic
18 June 2012
A long-serving South East Coast Ambulance
Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) paramedic is one of just five
ambulance personnel across the UK to be presented with a Queen’s
Ambulance Service Medal in this year’s Queen’s Birthday
Honours.
Dave Fletcher, who served as a paramedic
for more than 36 years is, among the first to receive the medal,
with this being the first year it has been awarded.
Dave was nominated for his commitment and
pioneering work on resuscitation at SECAmb which led to the
introduction of a new resuscitation technique, Protocol C, across
the Trust. The compressions-only CPR, supported by early
defibrillation, has hugely improved outcomes for patients across
SECAmb’s region of Sussex, Surrey and Kent.
Dave worked closely with throughout his career with
Consultant Cardiologist Professor Douglas Chamberlain to improve
out-of-hospital resuscitation survival rates across SECAmb’s region
and from early on in his career acquired a reputation as one of
best pre-hospital clinicians.
Dave said: “To
hear that that my name had been announced in the Queen’s Birthday
Honours List during the Jubilee year was an absolute delight. I’d
like to take this opportunity to pass on my sincere thanks to
everyone I’ve worked with at SECAmb and pay tribute to Professor
Chamberlain who has been a real inspiration to me.
“The real award and privilege for me of
course, is to read report after report of the lives SECAmb staff
have saved. SECAmb teams have saved and changed the lives of so
many people. One can ask of no more from any career!”
SECAmb Chief Executive Paul Sutton said: “Dave
is very deserving of this award and a perfect recipient to be
chosen the first time ambulance personnel have been recognised in
this way. I would like to express both my personal congratulations
and that of the Trust for his commitment and dedication over many
years.”
