logo
I felt no pain, says man who accidentally cut neck with chainsaw

I felt no pain, says man who accidentally cut neck with chainsaw

BBC Newsa day ago

A man who suffered "catastrophic blood loss" when he accidentally cut his neck open with a chainsaw while gardening has recalled a series of fortunate events that led to his survival.Christopher York was in his garden in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, when the chainsaw he was using became jammed, while cutting left to right, before it then followed through a branch and then "span around".The 65-year-old said he then felt a "cold wetness" at his front and saw his blood-covered shirt.Christopher said a number of coincidences, including a specialist vascular surgeon who happened to be at the hospital he was rushed to and then operated on him, meant he lived, and has thanked NHS staff who helped him.
Recalling the accident on 12 May, Christopher said: "Instead of [the chainsaw] kicking back, it leapt forward and span around, so the blade was spinning just over my shoulder. "Then I felt a cold wetness at my front, my shirt was becoming covered in blood and it was coming down to my trousers."Medics told Christopher he had cut only a few millimetres from his windpipe, and advised that he had cut slightly deeper, he could have quickly bled out.Christopher added: "The nice thing was that it didn't actually hurt. It was entirely painless."I didn't know how serious it was, I just thought it was not much more than a paper cut at the time because I couldn't feel anything. "But then my legs began to buckle. Really at no stage did I feel I was in danger, but I was."
Christopher's wife Veronika Semeradtova-York, 44, says she usually gets a coffee after going to the gym, but said the coffee machine was not working and so happened to arrive home 30 minutes early and found her husband bleeding heavily.She and a friend, who also happened to go to the house to check on the pair at the time, phoned for an ambulance.Paramedics had Christopher inside of the ambulance within eight minutes of arriving, but feared he would not survive a journey to a major trauma centre in Nottingham or Sheffield.At the point paramedics arrived, Christopher had already lost about two litres of blood.However, Christopher said: "The ambulance driver remembered that a specialist vascular surgeon from Derby was visiting Chesterfield [Royal Hospital] on that day by complete coincidence."I remember thinking 'although I don't think this is serious, they seem to and so will I survive this?'"Christopher was taken to Chesterfield Royal Hospital, where staff would not normally treat major trauma.
"I had absolute faith in the NHS," he said. "I knew that whatever degree of treatment I needed, they would afford it and they did. They did what the NHS does and it was wonderful."Not only were they excellent medically, but they showed genuine care."God bless them all. The thanks of not only me, but my wife and our four children remain with them for eternity. We are a family because of them. There are no words for our gratitude."In addition to the specialist surgeon's intervention, Christopher said just one month before the accident, his wife had urged him to get a tetanus jab.According to the NHS, tetanus is a serious, life-threatening condition caused by bacteria getting into a wound."It turned out one of the big obstacles they had in theatre was removing all the leaves, grass, mud and twigs from the wounds," he said. "The tetanus jab protected me from that."Had my wife and friend not come, I would have died. "Had the ambulance station not been up the road, they might have been delayed and I could have died of blood loss. "Had the vascular surgeon not been there, they would have taken me to a hospital where the journey probably would have killed me. "All these things came together. My main question is 'why?'. If God did intervene, why me?"Lisa, a senior sister in the emergency department at Chesterfield Royal Hospital, said: "It went like clockwork, there was someone looking over him that day."He was very grateful to everyone in the hospital. Thanks to the staff that assembled that day, his wife has a husband and his children have a father."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Surge in people getting tested after Dermot Murnaghan cancer news
Surge in people getting tested after Dermot Murnaghan cancer news

Wales Online

time38 minutes ago

  • Wales Online

Surge in people getting tested after Dermot Murnaghan cancer news

Surge in people getting tested after Dermot Murnaghan cancer news There have been a number of recent high-profile cases of prostate cancer, and a number of well-known people have died after contracting the illness Sky News gears up to provide special coverage of the US Election with Dermot Murnaghan Thousands of men have ordered a cancer test after TV presenter Dermot Murnaghan announced he has cancer. Former Sky News presenter Murnaghan has announced he has stage four prostate cancer. The broadcaster, 67, who spent more than 15 years at the news channel before his departure in 2023, said he is 'responding positively' to treatment in a post to X on Monday. 'Some personal news… I've been diagnosed with Stage IV advanced prostate cancer', he said. ‌ 'I'm fortunate to have a simply outstanding medical team looking after me, who I can't thank enough – they are administering the best possible care with expertise, compassion and sensitivity. I'm responding positively to their excellent treatment, and feeling well.' ‌ Stage four prostate cancer can mean that the cancer has spread into different parts of the body including nearby body organs, such as the back passage or bladder, nearby lymph nodes and other parts of the body outside the pelvis, such as the bones, lungs or liver, according to the Cancer Research UK website. 'I'm blessed to be fortified by the monumental love and support of my wife, family and close friends', Murnaghan said. 'Needless to say my message to all men over 50, in high risk groups, or displaying symptoms, is get yourself tested and campaign for routine prostate screening by the NHS.' He also said that he is aiming to take part in Sir Chris Hoy's fundraising charity bike ride in September which will raise awareness and funds for cancer charities across the UK. The Olympian announced he had a terminal diagnosis for prostate cancer in October 2024. Article continues below NHS guidance says men over the age of 50 are at highest risk of developing prostate cancer, but Sir Chris wants to help men get screened earlier. About one in eight men will get prostate cancer in their lifetime, according to the charity Prostate Cancer UK, and the disease often has no symptoms in its earlier stages. A number of high-profile cases of prostate cancer have been reported in recent months, including Joe Biden. Eddie Jordan, Len Goodman and OJ Simpson all recently died with prostate cancer. Demand for the PSA Blood Test - which can detected prostate cancer - has shot up this week, doctors say. Dr Mathew Rogers, Digital Clinician at Medichecks, said: "In October 2024, our prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test hit record sales, with more than twice the usual number of men getting a Medichecks prostate cancer screen. The reason? A certain six-time Olympic gold medallist and national treasure may have had something to do with it. When Sir Chris Hoy revealed his diagnosis of prostate cancer, it pushed men to take their health into their own hands. His announcement raised awareness on a scale that only the power of the media could achieve. ‌ "Despite the vulnerable situation of having a very private and shocking diagnosis thrown into the spotlight, Hoy used the opportunity to start a national conversation, advocating for men's health and resonating with millions. "With the resilient and positive mindset so many cancer patients possess, Hoy inspired millions of men to take proactive steps towards looking after their health, such as booking PSA tests. The fact he didn't have symptoms highlighted the importance of early detection, and his celebrity status has even prompted the government to consider lowering the screening age for prostate cancer. "Now, Dermot Murnaghan, the 67-year-old announced on social media his diagnosis, saying he is 'responding positively' to treatment and 'feeling well'." Article continues below Medickceks said it had seen a rapid surge in people ordering the PSA check this week. Healthy cells in the prostate make a protein known as prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, a major protein present in semen. PSA can be detected using a blood test, and is commonly used to detect prostate cancer, as high levels can sometimes be a sign of cancer. While a high level of PSA can indicate cancer, there is no generally accepted 'normal' PSA level. The reading differs from person to person, and, as your prostate grows in size with age, the amount of PSA released also tends to increase with age.

JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda
JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda

The Guardian has long been celebrated for its typos. The other day, however, it ran a headline which appeared to have an entire word missing. It read: 'One in three across UK are overdue for cervical cancer screening.' One in three what? Mothers? Midwives? Marchionesses? Members of Bananarama? I scanned the article's intro to locate the mislaid noun. Unfortunately, though, I ended up even more confused. Because the answer turned out to be 'people'. 'A third of people across the UK,' reported someone with the unusual job title of health and inequalities correspondent, 'are overdue their cervical cancer screening, while in parts of England some are at greater risk of the disease than others due to a low uptake for the preventive vaccine.' Naturally, I was alarmed. Because 'a third of people across the UK' includes me. In all my 44 years on this Earth, I've never had a single screening for cervical cancer. Am I in danger? Should I ring my GP and demand a detailed inspection of my cervix as soon as possible? Then again, there is another way to interpret this story. Which is that the poor old Guardian is so desperate not to offend trans activists, it's got itself tied up in knots. Any sane newspaper, after all, would simply have used the word 'women'. But The Guardian daren't do that. Because then it would be besieged by horrified ideologues, irately reminding it that trans women are women but don't need cervical cancer screenings – while trans men are men but do need cervical cancer screenings. To use the word 'women', therefore, is hateful and trans-exclusionary. Sadly, there's just one drawback to The Guardian 's wonderfully inclusive approach. Which is that other readers will be baffled. They'll think: 'Does it mean a third of women? Or a sixth?' As JK Rowling put it on social media: 'This is what happens when you erase the word 'woman' from your reporting: you disseminate inaccuracies and falsehoods. If you prioritise an ideology over giving clear and accurate information, you aren't journalists, you're propagandists.' To be fair to The Guardian, however, it doesn't always get it wrong. Less than a month ago, it ran the headline: 'New AI Test can predict which men will benefit from prostate cancer drug.' So they are clear about the difference between men and women sometimes. When the cancer only affects men, anyway. Still, it would be nice if they and other progressive outlets could be consistent. In an important medical context, such nonsense is enough to give you a thumping headache.

‘We haven't learned anything': Readers despair over UK's Covid response in 2025
‘We haven't learned anything': Readers despair over UK's Covid response in 2025

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

‘We haven't learned anything': Readers despair over UK's Covid response in 2025

Big disasters often change how we see the world. The Lisbon earthquake in 1755 shook people's faith in religion. After the 1918 flu pandemic, there was growing interest in fresh air, better hygiene, and healthier living spaces – ideas that influenced architecture and public health policy at the time. Covid, though? So far, the public inquiry has focused more on WhatsApp messages and political drama than on the bigger lessons. But many Independent readers believe there were lessons, but we haven't necessarily learned from them. Before the pandemic, there were fears that people wouldn't cope with restrictions – that 'behavioural fatigue' would kick in and we'd all give up. That fear led to delays in lockdown and, in the end, cost tens of thousands of lives. But that view turned out to be wrong. Faced with a shared threat, most people acted with care and responsibility. Communities pulled together. Many went without seeing loved ones, missed work, lost income – all to protect others. Now, readers feel much of that collective effort has vanished. When we asked for your views, you told us that people no longer wear masks on public transport, and sick people are back in offices and schools. The things we learned – about clean air, proper sick pay, the importance of staying home when ill – are being forgotten, even though the virus hasn't gone away. Many of you told us that the return to 'normal' is anything but normal. You're frustrated by the lack of public messaging, the scrapping of protections, and the ongoing risks, especially from long Covid. Here's what you had to say: Covid is more like polio than flu Unfortunately, Covid is still here, still causing ill health and disability. Doing nothing is a false economy: in terms of impact, Covid is more like polio than flu – and we don't ignore polio. We don't need extreme measures, but good ventilation, FFP masks (especially in healthcare), HEPA filters in enclosed spaces like classrooms, wards, clinics and offices would all make a difference and aren't difficult. Reversing the removal of NHS vaccination from most groups, and ensuring access to vaccines and antivirals – the norm in other countries that are doing better – is essential. Multiple Covid infections, even if mild, increase the chance of complications, including cardiac, and damage the immune system, making it harder to shake off other infections. Long covid is now the most common illness in US children, and the UK is on the same trajectory, for the same reason. In children, Covid can cause metabolic dysfunction and lead to diabetes. This is all avoidable. Housemartin We know what to do – we're just not doing it We haven't learned anything. We need clean air in public spaces (especially schools and health settings); proper sick pay; to stop the ridiculous pressure to send infectious children into school; better public information about the benefits of masks and ventilation; use of high-quality masks where appropriate (certainly for people with symptoms, and routinely in healthcare settings and for travel); and vaccines available to anyone who wants one. Affordable tests should also be widely available. We know what to do to reduce the spread of Covid – we're just not doing any of it. Kittensarecute We didn't learn anything No, we didn't learn anything from the Covid pandemic. It was all done through panic. It wasn't handled right at all, money was wasted, and greedy firms faked the prices to make obscene profits. No medical authority had the faintest clue how to handle it. This must never happen again – separating families, causing misery and sheer panic. We have had pandemics before and will again. Lessons must be learned from that last fiasco and handled totally differently. People will catch it regardless of what they do; it cannot be avoided. Time for a total rethink from these so-called medical experts. Annieinthecastle Long Covid is the main danger The main danger with Covid is getting long Covid. The science says no one is immune to suffering from it, and it's likely a lifelong chronic condition that could end your ability to work. 3.2 million English people know that is what they are suffering from, and the number goes up every year. The only defence we really have against Covid now, since most of the vaccines have been withheld, is wearing an FFP2/3 respirator, which is hugely effective at stopping infection. These masks also stop hay fever and most other infections as well. People who have started wearing them haven't been sick in years. Paul Covid could be eradicated – but there's no will Covid-19 could be eradicated pretty easily in this country with ventilation, investment in proper HEPA infrastructure in all public buildings, a functioning vaccination programme, and – most importantly of all – those who can mask to wear FFP2 or FFP3 respirators when indoors anywhere. If the government could be bothered to protect our public health, it should lock down the country – properly – for a couple of weeks. With all that in place, it would disappear. There is no will or impetus among our leaders to protect us from this incredibly disabling illness. Bumblebee Covid is here to stay. There is growing consensus it probably escaped from a lab, and it will carry on rapidly mutating – picking off the vulnerable and elderly – saving governments a bit of cash, somewhat offset by the cost of Long Covid. I mask in shops but rarely see anyone else doing so. Sooner or later, a vicious strain will emerge, and we'll be back to square one. Galileo666 Learn from countries like Japan We should take the findings of other countries ahead of us into account – e.g. Japan on the spread of the virus – and improve ventilation of buildings, trains and buses... even doctors' waiting rooms in the winter! Jennifer Covid is an inconvenient fact Covid is an inconvenient fact that governments and the right-wing press prefer to suppress. Sadly, it's still very much around, and it's still killing the old, the very young and those with a compromised immune system. It's also leaving a trail of devastation in the shape of long-term damage caused by long Covid. And all of this relates just to people – there's also the impact on the economy. Drugs which would have enabled the immunocompromised to live normal lives (hundreds of thousands are still shielding) have been denied by the UK government to cut costs. Drugs like Paxlovid – literally a life-saver for any immunocompromised person unlucky enough to contract Covid – have been made near-impossible to access. The treatment of immunocompromised people by this government and previous ones is shameful. And to cap it all, there are still plenty of clowns around who somehow feel threatened by anyone taking the sensible precaution of wearing a mask, and feel the need to mock or display outright aggression. DavidM The conversation isn't over. To join in, all you need to do is register your details, then you can take part in the discussion. You can also sign up by clicking 'log in' on the top right-hand corner of the screen.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store