OK fair enough. I had assumed that as there were paramedics on the scene that he had some sort of injury.
Did you provide him with a satisfactory solution concerning his 'how to get to work' dilemma ?
I would have offered to lend him my car.
Did you provide him with a satisfactory solution concerning his 'how to get to work' dilemma ?
You know, I did... Apart from the distinct lack of windscreen and extensively remodelled roofline, his metro was perfectly driveable (once the tractor driver had lowered it back down to the road) do I suggested goggles...
Big issue appears to be the Oakleys. Surely given an eye injury the chances are they were also trashed and actually worthless?
Agreed, however assuming it's not left on the trail and hasn't been stolen you'd still like to be consulted - many times frames can be recovered and re-lensed. Barring that, assuming they were smashed to bits, you'd expect someone to make a note of it. That said, in this case I'd be fairly happy that I could still walk and talk so i doubt I'd be asking.
Knowing Andy as I do, those throwing mud at him would do well to read his original post and see what he wrote. Wanting to piece together more details of what happened is a big part of this. The poor bloke has had a complete blackout and seeing his kit again might give him a couple of clues as to what exactly happened. Another part of it is the lack of process surrounding his kit. I think if he were told 'this happened to it, by this person, then' he would be fine - the lack of information shows a lack of due process. Which is wrong.
Andy isn't a petty man in any way at all. He is one of the most freely-giving of his time and efforts, particularly in cycling and does more than 99% of us to promote the sport(s). He is just trying to piece together what happened during an accident he has no memory of.
Tootall +1, give him the benefit of the doubt on this one
Get well soon andy
thegreatape - Member
Get well soon OP.Slight hijack, but does anyone know what would happen if you stopped to help at an RTC, let someone sit in your car, who then complained of back pain, so the fire brigade cut the roof off?
Sounds ridiculous now I've typed that out, but I have heard stories of it happening (possibly an urban myth though) and that the poor bugger was left with an unexpected cabriolet that no one (incl. his insurers) would pay for.
I've personally cut the roof off 2 cars for that very reason. 😉 so think if you really want them to sit in your car whilst you wait for emergency services to arrive.
I've personally cut the roof off 2 cars for that very reason. so think if you really want them to sit in your car whilst you wait for emergency services to arrive.
Yup, best you leave them out in the middle of the road in the freezing cold and rain, innit 😉
My sister used to A/E at the hospital closest to Cadwell park, famous for bike racing. She said you could always tell when riders were properly injured as they would let you cut their leathers off without a peep. Either that or they were sponsored.
When the old man took a header of a a cliff, A/E in Bristol returned his clothes as the shreds they were removed as, every piece!. No more fitting way for a Man United top to go. 😆
To the OP, I hope your recovery is complete and speedy.
Matt
Clean break in my arm/shoulder and ribs yet I still managed to stop them cutting off my £70 Kona Primo shorts 😆
Get well soon, your clothes are ****ing nothing fella. They had to get to you asap and due to them probably being covered in blood (bio-hazard) they would have gone in a incineration bin. (Probably).
Healing vibes 🙂
Twice I have needed clothes removed.
First time I got held down by TJ and given laughing gas. Soon wiggled out of my jacket.
Second time I just dealt with it. I have a high pain threshold. Plus I liked my clOthes.
However if I had been out of it I wouldn't have cared less should the staff have felt it necessary to cut. They are there to fix me after being a nobber on a bike. Thats the priority.
In an ideal world it would all go like clockwork perfect but sometime
It doesn't.
Ps this is in a happy tone by the way. As an Oakley owner including normal specs too I can appreciate the concern.
TBH re the eye socket. I doubt the Oakleys are worth anything.
TBH I'd happily trade injuries (not grazes/bruises) for a snapped frame and cut/damaged clothing. Pisses me off that the bike gets off scott-free instead 😆
"Second time I just dealt with it. I have a high pain threshold. Plus I liked my clOthes. "
ha ha lol, you know nothing of pain.
you dont have a high pain threshold, trust me let the doctors explain to you, you just have a high opinion of your pain threshold.
when you are seriously injured, you just lie there.
Twice I have needed clothes removed.First time I got held down by TJ and given laughing gas.
Please tell me that was for a medical emergency!!!!
Anyway...
Get well soon Andy, sounds like you've had a really nasty one there. Can't imagine what you're going through and hope you get at least an answer about your kit.
Healing vibes being sent your way
Sancho - I was with TBC - I assure you most people would have been screaming in agony from the injury. He wasn't - so much so the seriousness of the injury was missed by several folk even after he had been xrayed
I read the post with disbelief.
Here is someone who falls off a bicycle and receives the best medical care in the world from dedicated professionals, probably saving him from disfigurement and possibly even death from complications AT NO COST to himself yet he is moaning about a few bits of nylon clothing?
[i]*shakes head in amazement and sadness at the selfishness of some people* [/i]
That sounds like a nasty one OP. I hope you get better soon. However my sympathy in you finding your missing items was severely demonised with "i sincerely hope you never end up a patient at one of our so-called "leading trauma hospitals"". That's poor.
My sympathies Im afraid are not with you on this.
You were told they have been destroyed, so why come on this forum moaning about your treatment by the hospital.
By the sound of your injuries and your follow up treatment you have had some of the best treatment available in the world for free and you are moaning.
as for piecing together what happened before the accident, you fell off your bike, so its pretty simple to fathom out.
what might be a good idea would be to take the staff that put you back together a little thank you card or flowers or chocolates.
Family of a guy who killed himself by jumping off a high building near me were given all his clothes back in a big a&e bag.
Turned out most of one foot was still in one of the shoes so they have been known to pass stuff on that's fairly contaminated.
OP - I think you've fixated on the clothes in the absence of any other explanation to what happened.
You won't work out from a load of cut up cycling kit what happened and in what order.
I think, emotionally, you need to try and move on from the kit issue and focus on your recovery.
Given the injuries you list you'll be off the bike for a while - just save what you;d have spent on bike maintenance and associated cycling costs for the time you're not riding and use that to fund replacement kit.
its an emergency service not a cloackroom.. they didnt ask to have to remove your blood sooden sweaty stuff.. be glad its gone.
I'd probably be a little peeved that all my stuff had been lost or shredded and binned, but not because the hospital staff had done it, but because my actions had caused it to be necessary. Though that would be countered by the fact that had they not done the shredding it might be a lot more than 12 weeks off the bike.
Check with your contents insurance if you are covered, if not you'll have to replace with less expensive or maybe even 2nd hand kit. This thread is I hope the result of you feeling a bit sorry for yourself after the accident and once you are back on the bike you'll realise what a great job everyone did and how silly this thread is. Get well soon.
Firstly glad to hear that your injuries will only keep you out of action for a 12 weeks, and I hope everything goes smoothly during your rehab.
As for the clothes, give it up as an unfortunate incident and move on. It is just 'stuff' and no matter how expensive it was 'stuff' can be replaced eventually, please show a little gratitude and don't go hunting for compensation from the same people that took care of you when you needed it.
Jeez people need to wind there neck in and get off there high horse.
The op is not moaning. He's just wondering about process and here seems a reasonable place to ask bearing in mind we have members who work in the industry.
Value is irrelevant. If was wearing a £10k watch would peoples reaction be different?
He's already said he received great treatment and wants to piece together what happened.
To the OP, hope you heal well and good luck finding out what happened. I can understand wanting to find out what happened, to your kit and otherwise - being so out of it must be quite scary.
I'll echo experiences above about hospitals being generally good with kit. After a bad one at fort bill and ending up taped to a bed in a neck brace, they asked if I wanted them to try pull my dainese off or just cut it off...just told them to cut it off - it's done its job by then!
Also the comments about folk being concerned with trivial things after an accident, I get that too. Cracked my head open at GT on a rock, bleeding all over the shop. Some kindly folk helped me off the hill and gave me a lift down from the carpark in their truck - and all I remember is just being concerned i'd bled a little down the side of it! I can see why that might have seemed odd, when they were obviously concerned for a knackered person with a leaking head.
+1
i'd be very grateful indeed that i still have control over my extremities in the OP's situation, and thankful for the care i'd received. bad luck if some stuff's gone awol but it is NOT the end of the world.
get well soon.
Ah! A few years ago I was admitted to hospital after taking a wee'turn' when out running one night. From A&E to the ward my running shoes and smock waterproof (with my car keys and fob) went missing. I hesitated before I put in a claim but I did in the end, especially when the replacement remote fob cost £85 alone. The hospital paid out without a murmer. After a wee bit of investigation it turned out that kit going missing was a common occurrence. I recckoned it was down to carelessness.
[i]I recckoned it was down to carelessness.[/i]
a very generous interpretation 😉
From a personal point of views, if someone's seriously injured, which it appears you were, the clothes are cut off and left on the floor where I've dumped them. If you've got a bag with you, that will come in the Ambulance to Hospital with us, failing that it's up to your mates or the Police to collect your kit and do something with it.
Frankly I'm not bothered about kit that I've cut off patients as there's usually a slightly more pressing thing to be dealing with like their general health and wellbeing!
Carelessness? Maybe they should employ a third member for the ambulance crews as a Valet/P.A/Organiser?
Then add a Customer Services Manager in A&E along with lockers?
He's already said he received great treatment and wants to piece together what happened.
Really?
From the OP:
Yes, I also know that me and my back injury would have been the priority, not my kit, but I'm not happy with the way I've been treated in several respects and the loss of kit is only part of the problem.
Anyway. Not going to comment on that.
Re: the Oakleys - Oakley customer service is legendary for a reason, I'd give them a call they may be able to offer something off a replacement pair or something.
Everyone knows that if you post some thing like this on STW then your going to get extremes of reponses. I personally read it as saying bloody NHS have lost my valuable kit, and had the audacity to cut it off me, and now I want it back.
I know there are quite a few NHS staff who come on here and would be able to suggests who to ask about where to get the kit back from etc (which they have done), and theres no harm asking their opinion.
It could have been worded slightly differently though, ie I fell of my bike, the NHS did a wonderful job of fixing me, however I still need to recover my belongings, who should I ask ?
Far as I can see though there wont be much worth having back? Shirt would have been cut off, rucksack was cut, probably the glasses are in a ditch some where all smashed up.
Concentrate on getting well, items of clothing and Oakleys do not matter in life.
Next time why not buy some cheap sun glasses, and save the difference in price between them and Oakleys to make a donation to the hospital?
Regarding poor treatment at the hospital, get in touch with the PALS service. Please dont go for compo though so that you can buy some more Oakleys, just approach it from a constructive angle so that others do not suffer poor treatment too.
PS which hospital was it?
I totally see where you are coming from, regarding wanting your stuff back. Shreded or not.
My Dad had a massive motorcycle crash when we were at IOM GP, Long Long sotry short, all his leathers were cut of and blood stained, his helmet was ****ed and again blood stained.
but the Noble hospital, simply bagged it all up and gave it to me. When my dad finally came round several days later, and several months later when he was more with it. He wanted to see his helemet and leathers, as he felt it would help remember what happened etc etc. Exactly the same as you are saying.
So really cut or not cut, it is not their desicion to throw anything away. It will be somewhere, it just finding the right person to find it.
Hope you fully recover.
What if its a weekend, staff change over or they are mega-busy? Surely you triage everything i.e everything goes out of the window except care for the patient?
It's not an unreasonable request though is it - the OP is in a state of confusion and has lost 24hrs of his life. His post doesn't read like a "how do I turn a profit from this, who do I sue?" type, more a case of just trying to find out what happened.
On the other hand I can see how the emergency services could easily misplace bags or belongings in such a situation especially when you factor in shift changes, the patient is being taken from ward to theatre to ward etc.
Years ago a mate came off badly at CyB when his forks failed. His Oakleys took the brunt of the impact although the lenses stayed intact and he was badly knocked about. He sent the glasses to Oakley with a letter thanking them for saving his eyesight and Oakley sent him a new pair FOC.
Many years ago as a hot headed teenager I was out climbing with a member of the local mountain rescue. He got a shout to join in the carrying down of an injured person and as I was there I went along to help. We got there to find a large American lady in totally inappropriate kit that had taken a tumble and broken her leg. I don't know if you have ever been carried down a rocky mountainside in a stretcher with a broken limb but it is not the smoothest of rides but the whole way this silly woman was swearing and shouting out that she was going to sue everyone of us for the terrible treatment. I was all up for dropping her down the nearest gully and going off to the pub but the team were professionalism personified.
Why tell this - patients/victims sometimes get their priorities and expectations all wrong and the emergency services are amazing at people skills and have amazingly thick skins.
Have you thought about writing to the Daily Mail? Sounds like a shoe in for a 'the country is going to hell in a hand basket' editorial piece.
Im mostly with the OP on this one
I think hes OK with having his kit cut off and understands why
Its the glasses hes annoyed about
My own experience was of being involved in a fire at a flat
All well, living room destroyed, heavy smoke damage to bedrooms
Fire brigade ace, police efficient
Of course we were not allowed back in for 24h to find the place trashed - which was fine - but that some things had mysteriously vanished, small stuff like a Victorinox knife and some other bits
Nothing massively expensive, but would have survived the smoke and bloody annoying to find them gone
Yup Im grateful to be alive and the emergency services were excellent but was just pissed off that this was thrown back at me when I raised some of our stuff had walked
Best of luck OP
Heal quick
Heal up quick OP. can understand why you'd want your stuff back too.
Understandable why you want your stuff back. It may spark a recollection and improve understanding. Not all of it may have been trashed, so why waste it?
Thing is, your kit is nowhere on the priority list for those who attended to you. It is a potential risk. Sliding a top over your head, pulling shorts down places stress on joints and broken bits. Orbital and spinal fractures don't need moving about for the sake of a bit of kit. Had you been blinded or paralysed by moving bone fragments, brought on by undressing, would you now be worrying about the kit? They aren't much fussed about other kit that may be lying about either. Getting you to A&E takes precedence. Sometimes you just have to accept losses in life. Sacrificing kit over health is quite an easy one to accept. Take it easy, get well soon and check your house insurance.
Yes, I also know that me and my back injury would have been the priority, not my kit, but I'm not happy with the way I've been treated in several respects and the loss of kit is only part of the problem.
mmm... presumably its the one you can quantify and point the finger at whereas everything else is about your expectation of how you should be treated you presume there is a policy on patient property? And there probably is, which if you can be bothered the trust will provide if you make a Freedom of Information request.
I'm sure you can see why many people reading your post will think you come across as an ungrateful ejit - who is lucky to be alive never mind walking again and has got his priorities mixed up. I'm not really sure how you think some blood stained, cut-up bike gear and mangled oakleys (assuming you were still wearing them when you crashed - you say you can't remember the couple of hours running up to it!) are going to help you piece together what went wrong. That said, I would have expected A&E, and the Ambulance Service to normally keep all the stuff that is cut off as potential evidence for the coroner?
I can't say i'd expect to have got my kit back once it was blood soaked and cut up. I would have expected my rucksack and glasses - but beyond asking A&E what might have happened to it - I wouldn't care.
My only personal experience is that I got a bag of my brothers property to take away from ICU (not blood soaked or cut up) but would have much rather taken him home (not bike related)!
AT NO COST to himself
you have had some of the best treatment available in the world for free
I suggest you two read up on how National Insurance works.
Presumably there will be a process at the hospital for logging / dealing with personal belongings. When my dad was admitted to hospital last year we had a written log detailing things like his wedding ring. It looks like that process hasn't been followed in this case. Sure, it's a minor issue in the grand scheme of things, but it's not an unreasonable request to get a straight answer to "hey, where's my stuff?"
Get well soon, Andy.
Cougar dont be silly, we know how NI works, its just another tax that goes in to a pot and is spent by the government on whatever it see's fit.
in effect another percentage on your income tax.
But the OP got treatment free withouth having to pay for it. as in say for example he crashed whilst riding in France and had to pay for everything, and if he didnt speak French then he would have struggled as they wuldnt have provided a translator.
but that's a bit off topic.
From what the OP said, he got an answer along the lines of its been destroyed.
[i]got treatment free without having to pay for it[/i]
'free at point of delivery', not 'free'.
Value is irrelevant. If was wearing a £10k watch would peoples reaction be different?
He's already said he received great treatment and wants to piece together what happened.
No, my reaction would be the same. He didn't say he'd received great treatment, IIRC he'd said there were a host of other things he wasn't happy about too....
not my kit, but I'm not happy with the way I've been treated in several respects and the loss of kit is only part of the problem.
I still don't see how seeing ripped clothes helps you piece anything together, you hit your head and have lost memories, you probably won't remember it and unless you're looking to either put blame on something or someone it makes no difference whatsoever to the end result or the future as far as I can see?
Hope you get well soon but .....
I should imagine they were more worried about not paralysing you, and ensuring you could walk and see in the future, so may not have been worried about your glasses.
When the Tories have finished the privatisation of the NHS, and you have to pay 20K+ for treatment (ala USA) people might start appreciating the value of the 'free' treatment in the UK, and stop worrying about the petty stuff that in the long run really doesn't matter.