Dad voices concern at how unconscious woman was treated in Blacks (From This is Hampshire)
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Dad voices concern at how unconscious woman was treated in Blacks
1:00pm Friday 1st March 2013 in News By Emily Roberts, Chief Reporter
Staff tend to the injured woman. Pic by Chris Derrick
A SHOPPER has complained that staff in a Basingstoke shop did not do enough to help a woman who was unconscious and bleeding after falling inside the store.
Chris Derrick has complained to Blacks following the incident last Saturday, when an elderly woman fell inside the Festival Place shop at about 2.20pm. Mr Derrick, a 42-year-old, from Brighton Hill, Basingstoke, said the woman was unconscious for several minutes, struggling to breathe and was bleeding from her head, nose and mouth. He claims the woman’s daughter was left to help her mother on her own as staff carried on with their work.
The father-of-four said: “I shouted at the staff to call the emergency services as this was serious and she was bleeding badly, but no one did anything but stare or carry on with making sales.”
Mr Derrick, who was with his four children before the incident, started to call 999 but was told by a member of staff in Blacks that the Festival Place first aid team was on its way. He added: “When the woman’s daughter asked for something to cushion her mother’s head, again, staff did absolutely nothing to assist. Instead, I collected some items of clothing from the rails and fashioned a crude pillow from them.”
Mr Derrick emailed Blacks’ customer services, complaining about the way staff responded to the incident. He said: “I have never witnessed such a lack of compassion, and feel so disgusted by what I saw that I cannot let this lie.”
However, a member of staff at the store and the centre director of Festival Place have both defended the way in which the incident was handled.
David, a supervisor at Blacks, who declined to give his surname, said: “The manager was very happy with the way the staff dealt with the incident.
“The centre staff (from Festival Place) said we did everything correctly as well. The family of the casualty were completely happy as well and that man was the only person there who had any issue.”
Steven Connolly, centre director at Festival Place, said Festival Place staff were called to the scene at 2.20pm, and upon arrival found that an ambulance had already been called by staff in Blacks. It arrived six minutes later.
He added: “If she was in an area away from members of the public, it wouldn’t be unusual for members of staff to carry on serving. From all the information I have, Blacks did everything that was expected of them.”
A statement from Blacks customer services said: “We acknowledge we have received the complaint from the customer and this has been passed on to the relevant team to investigate.”
Comments(13)
jbee37
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1:28pm Fri 1 Mar 13
Sam_Walker123456
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3:26pm Fri 1 Mar 13
robertspet8
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3:46pm Fri 1 Mar 13
Sam_Walker123456 wrote:We do not know that he panicked but we do know that he said, “When the woman’s daughter asked for something to cushion her mother’s head, again, staff did absolutely nothing to assist. Instead, I collected some items of clothing from the rails and fashioned a crude pillow from them.”
Sounds to me like Chris Derrick panicked while the staff stayed calm, ignored his hysterical shouts and got on with sorting things out to the satisfaction of everyone else.
So he clearly did not have any knowledge of basic first aid. When somebody is unconcious the most important thing is to keep the airways free by putting the person into the recovery position. By lifting the woman's head with a cushion it could have constrict the airways and prevented fluids from draining out of her mouth and nose causing her to choke.
Chris Derrick was clearly upset and only trying to help but his actions could have had tragic consequences.
Perhaps the lesson is that we should all learn or brush up on first aid.
I hope the woman makes a full recovery.
ELLIS17
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2:20pm Sat 2 Mar 13
BugBear
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4:06pm Sat 2 Mar 13
JJ38JJ
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8:14am Mon 4 Mar 13
jonone
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12:06pm Tue 5 Mar 13
laurence86
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12:41pm Tue 5 Mar 13
Sam_Walker123456
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5:08pm Tue 5 Mar 13
laurence86 wrote:The lady involved has not been identified by The Gazette or by Mr Derrick so there is no invasion of privacy and therefore no grounds for proceedings. Newspapers normally ask for permission of people to use photographs of them but in this instance the photograph does not show anything which will identify her to anybody but her close friends and family who will already be aware of this distressful incident. All it shows is a person, probably a woman, being attended to. So no invasion of privacy. And why do you think that she disapproves and would want to take proceedings anyway?
Your right Jonone, she should start proceedings against them even if it’s just to formally show disapproval
Regarding your earlier point, 'Badly done Gazette, please stick to reporting the facts not trumped up articles.' Where did The Gazette not report the facts and what is trumped up about the article? You are encouraging the lady to take action for something which did not happen but I would say that The Gazette has a case against you for libel!
Unsurprisingly you also do not know how newspapers work. The reporters do not write their own headlines, other people are employed to do that. They are trying to grab our attention and they use many tricks to do this. One trick is to have a headline which can be read more than one way - is he the woman's dad or just a dad? Another trick is to give some character to the person - in this instance if they said 'man' we would have been less likely to read the article. But the only thing they have which differs Mr Derrick from any other man is that he is a 'father of four', but I suppose this was too long and they used 'dad' instead. Personally I would have used 'Interferring busy body panics and accuses shop staff of ignoring unconcious woman.' That would grab the headlines. But I might have found myself in court for defamation of character.
red teacosy
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7:23pm Tue 5 Mar 13
Harryguild1960
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11:05pm Thu 7 Mar 13
LumpyPudding
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3:34pm Fri 8 Mar 13
Alfie The Dog says...
1:24pm Fri 1 Mar 13
Even the family of the casualty were 'completely happy'.
Some random passerby isn't happy.... well so what?
I doubt that he had any idea what was actually going on, the fact that not all the shop staff stopped serving customers is not an indication of a 'lack of compassion'.
This is a non story.