Overkill? Absolutely. Entertainment? Hardly.
Of course the people behind the show can argue legitimately that is is a documentary and you can't accurately document events as they happen by censoring it. That is true but it was clear the man was desperately ill, his fiancee upset. There was no need to repeat the images in the way they were, the point was made and repeating them as they did cheapened the desperate efforts to save the man.
At one point I wondered "what if this poor man dies?" but of course then they wouldn't have screened it. Technically you could argue he did die, after all the show's narrator did talk about him being brought "back to life".
I felt really sorry for the people filmed, even though they must have consented to being filmed and the post-trauma interviews. But then again, who would say no to anyone accompanying the angels of mercy in such dire circumstances? After the event, the gratitude would be so immense few would deny the right to screen it.
As it was, Monday's episode ended with the usual catch-up where it was revealed the patient had suffered brain damage and partial loss of sight. His partner was just happy to have him alive.
But what did we learn from all this? That ambulance officers work hard to save lives, and are highly skilled and underfunded, the latter point emphasised with the post-show reminder of the organisation's funding sources along with details on how we could support them?
Those points could easily have been made in a more sensitive way that didn't rely on that unnecessarily overdone footage. This was not news, it wasn't documentary, it was akin to the worst kind of reality television programming, a genre that has a lot to answer for.
St John is an honorable organisation that has long served the community.
It is deserving of our full support but sadly, was let down by those who made this unfortunate episode.
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