Casualty 24/7 Season 6
The doors of Barnsley Accident and Emergency department are open every day. An exclusive look into what is really going on in the hearts and minds of the medical emergency teams and how they deal with the critically ill.
Watch NowWith 30 Day Free Trial!
Casualty 24/7
2018The doors of Barnsley Accident and Emergency department are open every day. An exclusive look into what is really going on in the hearts and minds of the medical emergency teams and how they deal with the critically ill.
Watch Trailer
Casualty 24/7 Season 6 Full Episode Guide
Advanced clinical practitioner Chantelle orders an urgent CT scan to asssess whether 79-year-old John has sustained any brain damage after falling at home and cracking his head. To complicate matters, John has a large cancerous growth on his cheek that has also been caught during the fall.
There are no available beds in Barnsley Hospital’s A&E department, while lead nurse Kelly is struggling with a backlog of ambulances waiting with patients needing treatment. In Resus, 86-year-old Grahame has been rushed in with severe chest pains and blood in his mucus and after assessing him, Dr Staunton needs a conversation with him – in private.
A former miner is brought in as he is struggling to breathe, while Sister Jane is battling a seemingly never-ending stream of emergency patients in the hub. Eighty-four-year-old Anthony has a suspected broken shoulder but, as he is also the carer of his vulnerable wife, Clinical Practitioner Chantelle needs to balance what is best for her patient with his caring duties at home.
It’s another busy day for the casualty team with patient numbers unusually high. Sister Rachel is running the shift, and she’s under pressure with a shortage of cubicles – to make matters worse, IT systems start to fail across the hospital
A 17-year-old arrives after falling from his bike and suffering a fit. Consultant Liz needs to find out if a broken neck is the cause of his arm numbness. In the hub, Sister Jane is struggling to manage the high volume of patients, not just those arriving by ambulance, but walk-ins too. One such walk-in is Johnathan, a 41-year-old recovering addict, who has infected ulcers on both legs.
It’s another gruelling shift for the team at Barnsley Hospital’s casualty department. Juggling a backlog of walk-in patients and a constant stream of new ambulance emergencies, they’re struggling to keep waiting times down. In the hospital car park, paramedics rush to help 67-year-old Pauline who’s fallen out of her car after getting her foot tangled in her handbag strap.
Every bed in the department is occupied, but there are still 20 patients waiting for the next one to be vacated. Lead Nurse Steph is already struggling to manage the mounting number of patients when the emergency alarm sounds and all available staff must head to resus to help a fitting patient.
When a key member of staff calls in sick at the last minute, Sister Rachael’s dream of a smooth shift disappears. Instead, she has to manage a department overflowing with patients, and struggle with staff shortages, meaning longer waiting times, and no available beds.
At Barnsley Hospital, Sister Jane helps a man who has been arrested for being drunk and disorderly – despite being verbally abused by him. Meanwhile, volunteer Jane steps in and supports the team by caring for a young man who is showing signs of drug misuse.
Sister Vicky battles a doctor shortage and a high influx of walk-in patients – a perfect storm that means she needs to call on her years of experience to keep the shift on track. Seventy-year-old Fred is blue-lighted in having suffered a serious fall at home, but with a shortage of doctors in the department, he’s taken straight for an urgent x-ray after which he’s transferred to the care of Dr Tom Hawthorne.
Barnsley Hospital’s casualty department is in the middle of one of the worst storms in decades. Nurse Chloe treats 88-year-old Enid, who has been knocked over by high-speed winds and has a severe open head wound. She needs to assess Enid quickly in case she’s suffered a head trauma. Meanwhile, consultant doctor Mason and registrar doctor Staunton meet 44-year-old Darren. He has been rushed in suffering from severe chest pains and a rapid heartbeat.
Cameras follow Barnsley Hospital’s Casualty department as they work together to help the ill and injured of South Yorkshire. There’s a bedside view of heart attacks, road traffic collisions and allergic reactions and we see the team as they treat multiple injuries caused by objects ranging from chainsaws to tractors and everything in between.
Return of the documentary following the work of emergency teams in the A&E department of Barnsley Hospital. A two-year-old with dangerously low blood sugar is rushed in. Caring for her is Paediatric Sister Kate Ellis, who reveals what it feels like when a child is brought in. Junior doctor Jake Mullen assesses 44-year-old Kay, who arrives at the hospital with flu-like symptoms. He runs the risk of contracting a highly contagious strain of flu while treating her.