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Kathleen Spiers & Holly Lennon

Glasgow pensioner left 'screaming in pain' during four-hour ambulance wait

An 87-year-old woman was left 'screaming in pain' while waiting for an ambulance for almost four hours.

Zhanna Marchenko fell down a set of stairs in the close at her home in Thornliebank, on March 20.

The pensioner, who suffers from dementia, was found by a neighbour around 8.20pm who phoned emergency services for help.

Her daughter, Zanna Marczenko, got home from work to find her mum lying on concrete and 'screaming in pain' whenever she moved.

Zanna, 57, feared her mother would pass away before her eyes and claims she called another two times, begging for an ambulance to come. Ambulance crews called her once - meaning there were four calls in total.

Nurse Zanna alleges operators, on each of the four calls, told her 'you just have to wait', before mercy crews finally arrived at 11.55pm.

Zhanna suffered a broken hip and remains in Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital to recover from an operation, while Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) chiefs have apologised and blamed "high emergency demand".

But Zanna said the "emotional and physical trauma'" of the almost four-hour wait is more traumatising for her mum than the fall itself.

She told the Daily Record: "The experience of waiting for an ambulance is so terrible that it's hard to describe.

Zhanna Marchenko in hospital being treated for a broken hip (Daily Record)

"Mum was lying on the cold hard concrete in the stairwell, next to the door to the outside.

"At the beginning, my mother cried and shook, but later my mother stopped crying and became totally silent, but she continued shaking, and that was the only sign she was still alive.

"I thought my mother would die there waiting for help and I would stand and look at it."

She added: "When we tried to lift my mother off the floor, she started screaming and crying.

"It was obvious that my mother had broken bones, and it was later confirmed in the hospital that she had suffered a broken hip. She was also terribly confused."

She added: "Waiting for the help we needed was more painful, both emotionally and physically, than the accident itself. It was just horrible."

Zanna complained to the Scottish Ambulance Service three days after her mum's fall on March 23 and received a response the following day.

An SAS spokeswoman told Zanna via email: "Call Handler Miss Milby confirms that our Ambulance Control Centre (ACC) received a 999 call for Mrs Marczenko at 8.24pm on March 20, 2022.

"The call was triaged as described above and from the information provided indicated that instead of an immediate ambulance being dispatched, we would undertake a further clinical telephone or video triage with one of the clinicians within our ACCs.

"We undertake these consultations with some patient conditions to better understand how we can help.

"In some instances, this can include us signposting callers or patients to alternative hospital or GP services and in a small number of cases this can allow us to upgrade an incident to one of our higher priority response levels if clinically appropriate.

"An Advanced Paramedic (AP) called back at 22:13 to carry out an in-depth clinical triage of Mrs Marczenko.

"Unfortunately, our AP got no reply initially but got through just before 22:30.

"The outcome of the triage was to upgrade the call to an emergency response.

"Unfortunately, due to sustained levels of high emergency demand, there were no available emergency ambulances to attend at that time.

"The first available emergency ambulance was dispatched at 23:41 however, was diverted to an Immediately Life Threatening (ILT) call.

"The second available emergency ambulance was dispatched at 23:48, arriving with Mrs Marczenko at 23:55, leaving scene at 00:45 and arriving at Queen Elizabeth University Hospital at 01:01.

"On March 20 into March 21, the Service was faced with exceptional increased sustained demand of emergency calls across the Greater Glasgow and Clyde areas and this unfortunately compounded the delay in the AP calling back and then dispatching an ambulance to Mrs Marczenko."

She added: "Please accept our sincere apologies for the delay in an ambulance attending that day.

"This must have been extremely difficult time for everyone involved.

"It is clear that the level of service provided falls short of what we strive to achieve.

"I recognise that this does not ease the feelings following the circumstances that you and Mrs Marczenko experienced.

"We always strive to offer the highest possible standards of care to our patients, and it is disappointing when people are let down.

"I hope Mrs Marczenko is recovering well.

"I would like to assure you that our Ambulance Control Centre Managers are continually monitoring the demand on our resources to ensure that we can meet the demand.

"Whilst we have escalation plans for times when demand increases there can sometimes be delays and it is always regrettable when this happens.

"We are accelerating recruitment and training of an additional 549 frontline staff by the end of March 2022, which will provide additional capacity to meet these challenging peaks in demand, to reduce delays for patients and the likelihood of an incident like this occurring in the future."

A member of the complaints team allegedly called Zanna to further apologise.

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde advised the Daily Record that the Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) were best placed to respond.

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