When a dip at Bondi Goes horribly wrong! | Bondi Rescue

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Your favourite lifeguards are back!
Bondi Rescue’s seven-time Logie winning lifeguards return to TEN 8pm Mondays!

Taking the viewers on their journey through mass rescues, resuscitations, shark sightings, and all number of the weird and wonderful experiences Bondi dishes up.

Bondi Rescue has attracted huge international interest and is distributed worldwide – US, UK, Sweden, Norway, Germany, Denmark and New Zealand – just to name a few. There is no doubt, Bondi Rescue embodies the Australian larrikin spirit, while celebrating the sheer sportsmanship and professionalism of the lifeguards — those unsung heroes of our best asset – the beach.

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43 Responses

  1. @BrockEdwards7 I have been a flight nurse for many years. I am sure he had some form of electrical activity, pulseless. A truly asystolic heart will not respond to electricity. Great teamwork, which makes all the difference. And not freaking out.

  2. @3FsJones I’m guessing because of the fact that that’s where the nerves that give you feeling in the rest of your body go through and the ones that control your movement, so if you broke your neck and it moved too much it could damage or even sever those nerves meaning you could end up instanstly dead or paralised for life!

  3. @Katmarie100 Spot on, Kat. That’s exactly why you immobilise the neck – a few inches above the neck is the brain stem, and the spinal cord goes through the neck, through the vertebrae, and right down the back. If you happen to trap the nerves of the spinal cord, or sever it anywhere along the route, you can cause immediate loss of sensation, full paralysis, and as you say, death. Severing the cord above the chest, i.e within T1 or higher, will cause immediate respiratory collapse.

  4. @neurocidesakiwi No, it’s not just you, I was thinking the same thing. Any time there is a fight breaking out they should just send an aussie in to calm everyone down.

  5. If the same metal fatigue crash that happened to chalks 101 in bonds I need to make sure o take photos so I can contribute to the investigation

    1. Honestly its just an innocent reaction. People want to stay because they want to know that the victim is ok. We’re rooting for them and want them to win whatever battle they are fighting. I witnessed a young boy pulled from a small lagoon today and watched from where i was sitting as they did CPR for 45 minutes. People watched, but not to be rude. It was because we wanted him to be ok. If we left, we would never know, and I know it technically has nothing to do with us, but as a species we naturally look out for the survival of each other. I couldn’t bring myself to pack up my stuff and go because I felt like I needed to be there so that he would be ok. If at any point he showed signs of life, then I probably would have left quite easily. I know it sounds ridiculous but when you’re actually in the situation, suddenly all the “oh if i was in that situation i would blah blah” goes completely out of the window.

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