An ambulance shortage forced a terrified mum to drive her two-year-old daughter to hospital while battling to keep her alive.
Calli Milne was struggling to breathe and turning blue as her parents called an ambulance fearing she would die before getting to the hospital.
But Samantha and Stuart, 36, were told that there wasn't a crew available and asked if she could be driven to the hospital instead.
With the nearest accident and emergency an hour away by road, the panic-stricken parents had no option but to drive her themselves, reports the Daily Record.
Calli suffers from the breathing condition croup, which can develop into stridor – a condition that causes the voicebox to swell and restricts the airways.
When her condition gets really bad, Calli has to be given urgent steroids at hospital or she could die from lack of oxygen.
Mum-of-three Samantha told how she dialled 999 as Calli struggled for breath.
She said: “She was trying to speak but couldn’t get her words out. At one point she said, ‘Mum, mum, Calli can’t breathe, Calli can’t breathe’.
“That was the most horrendous part. Her face was the colour of beetroot trying to get a breath and her mouth and nose were going blue.
“When I phoned 999 it rang out for ages before it was even picked up.
“When I eventually did get through, the first question they asked was if she was breathing. I said, ‘Yes’ but that she was really struggling.”
Samantha told the phone operator what had happened and then the controller told her: “I haven’t got an ambulance for you, there is nothing available to give you. Do you have a relative who could drive you?”
The family live in Rhu, in Dunbartonshire, and the nearest A&E is an hour’s drive away, in Glasgow.
So, they had no choice but to get Calli into the car and drive.
Samantha said: “I had to hold her neck up because she couldn’t do it. I couldn’t even get her in the car seat. I was holding her as
Stuart drove.
“I don’t know how fast we were going but it was far from safe – we were absolutely flying along that back road. All we wanted was to get Calli some help but there could have been serious consequences.
“As we were driving, she vomited but she didn’t have the puff or energy to get her vomit up out her throat.
“I had to put my fingers in her mouth and scoop out the vomit to try to clear her airway. By then we knew if we drove to Glasgow Calli wasn’t going to make it.
“It was only another five minutes to the local Vale of Leven Hospital, so although they didn’t have an A&E department I knew they would have equipment that could keep her alive so we decided to go there even if they turned us away.
“My child was literally fighting for her life in front of us.”
When the couple arrived at the hospital in Alexandria, staff took Calli in straight away and administered steroids.
Within two hours, the little girl had recovered enough to be allowed home.
A spokeswoman for the Scottish Ambulance Service blamed a high volume of calls that evening for the “longer wait time for an ambulance for this patient”.
She said: ”Although we are limited in what we can say due to patient confidentiality, we advised the patient’s family that we were extremely busy and asked if they had any other means of travelling to A&E.
“At no point was an ambulance refused, and we advised the caller to ring back immediately if there was any change in the patient’s condition.”
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “The pandemic has been the biggest challenge the NHS has faced in its 73-year existence and has heaped pressure on our ambulance service and wider NHS.”