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Holiday hero saves her tour guide’s life

25 September 2009

During an eventful South African holiday, Chris Venville – who had just completed a first aid course – had to treat herself following a dog attack and ended up saving her tour guide’s life.

The 59-year-old school secretary, who has been in charge of first aid at Aberaeron Comprehensive School in Wales for 18 years, went on a Red Cross first aid refresher course just two days before the holiday in mid-August.

First aid hero on South African holiday

On the third day of their dream trip, Chris and husband Nigel were staying with relatives when she was bitten in the face by a family dog.

Emergency help

She recalled: “One of them snapped at me, and caught my cheek and lip. While all around me were panicking – apart from my husband – I stayed calm, staunched the bleeding with a clean tea towel and took steps to prevent myself going into shock while arrangements were being made to get me to hospital for stitches – 26 in total!”

The following day, shaken but determined to carry on, Chris and Nigel joined their tour as planned – and immediately bonded with their tour guide Jan (61), who paid extra attention to Chris because of her injury.

First aid hero and husband on South African holiday

However, just days later – as the group left a museum – the first aider was again called upon to act. She recalled: “One of the attendants suddenly shouted: ‘Come! Come!’. We raced over and saw Jan on the floor, choking on his own vomit. Nobody knew what to do, except me. I put him in the recovery position and made sure he could breathe.”

Stroke symptoms

“While we waited for an ambulance, he began to regain consciousness but remained very confused. I used the FAST assessment, which indicated he may have suffered a stroke. Soon afterwards, his level of consciousness deteriorated again.”

When the ambulance crew finally arrived, they found that Jan wasn’t carrying a medical card so he was taken to a public hospital where staff were desperately overstretched.

Luckily, Chris had brought along a large first aid kit and did all she could to take care of Jan over the next traumatic few hours. Eventually, a member of staff from Jan’s travel company arrived – along with another ambulance – and he was moved to a nearby private hospital.

‘Proud and grateful’

Jan later had an operation to remove a blood clot from his brain and is now making progress. Once home, Chris’s injury healed well although, as she said: “When I returned to school my colleagues thought I’d been for botox and it hadn’t quite worked!”

She added: “I feel proud and grateful that I was able to help – Jan owes his life to the skills I learnt from the Red Cross. I am so grateful for the training I’ve received over the past 20 years.”

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