#1 | 09.02.2022Episode 1
In tonight's season premiere, we follow Shane & Shelly, who must help a patient in need of urgent care after an incident involving a car. It's classified as a code 1A, the most serious emergency.
#2 | 16.02.2022Episode 2
Tonight, a man claims to have jumped off Brisbane's Story Bridge and we see the effects this has on the professionals who are racing to piece together a puzzle to try and save a life.
#3 | 23.02.2022Episode 3
The low blood sugar levels of 23-year-old type one diabetic have led to a dangerous seizure. Another code 1A comes in for two-year-old Levi, suffering serious respiratory issues.
#4 | 02.03.2022Episode 4
When a head-on collision leaves one driver trapped in their car, Tash, a specialist Critical Care Paramedic, is faced with a difficult decision to try and save the woman's life.
#5 | 09.03.2022Episode 5
Paramedics Jeff and Tamara are called to help 92-year-old Ray, who is pinned under his mobility scooter after it tipped over, and then attend to a baby who is turning blue and struggling to breathe.
#6 | 16.03.2022Episode 6
A crash on a busy intersection sees a severely broken leg front and centre, but paramedics fear the patient may also have spinal cord injuries. Plus, a patient sufferis from potentially deadly sepsis.
#7 | 23.03.2022Episode 7
In Brisbane, a bystander calls in a crash in the heart of Brisbane CBD involving a motorcyclist and taxi. Paramedics arrive to find patient Hector facedown on the road, not moving.
#8 | 30.03.2022Episode 8
It's all systems go with Paramedics racing to the scene of a nasty motorbike and sidecar crash. A call comes in for a woman who has fallen off her balcony.
With honesty and transparency, the gripping fly-on-the-wall series will take an extraordinary look at the Queensland Ambulance frontline. Taking viewers on a journey from the high pressure Ambulance Triple Zero Operations Centre, to the heart and soul of the paramedics on the road who are forced to make split second decisions that can mean the difference between life and death. With a staggering 1,235,793 responses to incidents, the most of any state, Queensland is the perfect location to capture the raw reality of life as a paramedic.