Four children were taken to hospital after lake rescue
@stanchers with current situation as emergency services say if there are more people to be found – it’s a search and recovery operation.
BBC reported:
Four children were taken to hospital after lake rescue. @stanchers with current situation as emergency services say if there are more people to be found – it’s a search and recovery operation.
Kath will have more updates on her show from 10. pic.twitter.com/BBKRNo24Ec
— BBC Radio WM (@bbcwm) December 12, 2022
Senior Journalist Josh Sandiford tweeted earlier this morning.
Back at Babbs Mill in Solihull this morning where rescue teams have worked through the night after four children were pulled from water and two others are feared missing – the scene is eerily quite this am as camera crews set up @birmingham_live @my_solihull pic.twitter.com/b9rqNgkKTm
— Josh Sandiford (@joshsandiford_) December 12, 2022
Four children have been taken to hospital in a critical condition after being rescued from an ice covered lake.
West Midlands Ambulance Service was called to Babbs Mill Park, Fordbridge Road, Kingshurst, Solihull at 2.36pm on Sunday afternoon.
Five ambulances, four paramedic officers, the Hazardous Area Response Team, were sent to the scene along with five enhanced care teams: the MERIT trauma doctor and critical care paramedic, West Midlands Care Team, The Air Ambulance Service Critical Care Car and three critical care paramedics from Midlands Air Ambulance. The first ambulance arrived within seven minutes of the call.
A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said: “After being rescued, the four children were immediately assessed and actively treated at the scene by ambulance staff. All four were taken on blue lights to hospital, each with an enhance care team travelling with the ambulance crew, with treatment ongoing.
“Two were taken to Birmingham Childrens Hospital and two to Heartlands Hospital. All four children were said to be in a critical condition on arrival.
“The Hazardous Area Response Team continued to work with colleagues from police and fire at the scene until around 6.30pm to ascertain if there was anyone else in the water. Ambulance resources have now stood down.”