Helderberg Hospital hosted a Trauma Day event, which focused on the importance of saving and protecting lives during emergencies, on Monday (17 October). Various role-players, including the Western Cape Blood Service, Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and the City of Cape Town’s Fire and Rescue Services, attended and demonstrated their procedures when it comes to saving and protecting lives. In this photo are all the role-players with firefighters, who demonstrated how their equipment works and how they save lives.Photo: Rick Marais


“A person’s body is subject to three collision impacts during a motor vehicle accident. The initial impact occurs when the vehicle crashes into another vehicle or object. The second impact occurs when your body reacts to the crash by slamming into the nearest surface, be it a door or windscreen. The third impact occurs when your organs are smashed against your skeletal organs. So one person experiences three collision impacts in one accident and that is why crashes are so dangerous.”

This is how Cheslynn Benn, a firefighter of the City of Cape Town’s Fire and Rescue Services, described an occupant’s physical response to an accident during a special demonstration at the World Trauma Day event hosted at Helderberg Hospital this past Monday (17 October).

Lucas Munzhelele, the operational manager of the Emergency Centre at the Somerset West medical facility, organised the event commemorated globally on 17 October every year, with an emphasis on saving lives and how to properly attend to emergency cases.

“Myself en Dr Michelle Allen invited stakeholders and we wanted to present how the emergency system works. We also had a talk about our new Hospital and Emergency Centre Tracking Information System (Hectis) which is used to monitor important statistics pertaining to emergency centre operations including when a spate in patients occurs,” said Munzhelele.

He further explained that the day was also about educating the community on what an emergency is, what do in case of an emergency and the process at Helderberg Hospital. In attendance were representatives of the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and Fire an Rescues Services that are called in serious, unexpected and often dangerous situations requiring immediate response. To raise awareness on the importance of blood and organ donation, the Western Cape Blood Service (WCBS) was ready to provide all the insight guests needed. WCBS staff will return to the hospital for a blood drive at month-end.

The interactive demonstration by firefighters included a display to show how all of the lifesaving equipment including the mechanical jaws of life, sheers and rams work. “When we use these types of equipment we move metal and not the patient (who has to remain as still as possible). We also strive to get a patient to the hospital within an hour known as the golden hour because after a hour your chances of survival are getting less and less,” explained Benn. 

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