Friday, March 21, 2025
7.5 C
Gedling

Police officers praised for saving life of man found ‘seriously ill’ in back of Calverton taxi

The man had stopped breathing and the officers began to administer CPR as they waited for paramedics to take over.

Bookmark

Get breaking news and a daily update sent to your WhatsApp by signing up HERE

Police officers have been praised for helping to save the life of a man after he fell ‘seriously ill’ in the back of a taxi in Calverton.

The officers arrived in Bonner Lane at 8.30pm on Wednesday, March 5 and found the man, aged in his 50s, slumped and unresponsive in the back seat.

After the man stopped breathing, the officers began to administer CPR as they waited for paramedics to take over.

Suspecting he was suffering from a drug overdose, they then administered a dose of Naloxone – a nasal spray designed to temporarily reverse the effects of opioid drugs.

- Advertisement -
The officers arrived in Bonner Lane in Calverton and found the man, aged in his 50s, slumped and unresponsive in the back seat.

Than man was later taken to hospital.

Nottinghamshire Police introduced 400 Naloxone kits in November 2024 and has been training frontline officers in its use.

The drug was successfully deployed for the first time a few days after it was introduced and has now been used to help save another life.

Assistant Chief Constable Sukesh Verma, said: “Without the timely intervention and quick thinking of these officers, this man may have passed away.

“The officers in this case remained calm and professional during a very difficult incident and used their experience and training to ensure patient got the immediate help he needed.

- Advertisement -

“All involved officers should be extremely proud of their actions and will all be recognised appropriately.”

Naloxone works by temporarily reversing the effects of opioid/opiate drugs by reversing the depression of the central nervous and respiratory systems – potentially helping to prevent a casualty from dying and buying them crucial time until paramedics arrive. 

Spotted something? Got a story? Email our newsdesk news@gedlingeye.co.uk

Read more from Gedling Eye

Get your daily news briefing every evening…

Sign up for our daily news email and receive Gedling borough news direct to your email inbox in the early evening, to read at your leisure on your desktop, tablet or mobile wherever you are.

We don’t spam and you'll only receive one email a day

Join the discussion

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

ADVERTISEMENT

Most read