As the nhs braces itself for the new year period its often its busiest time a pioneering scheme in wales is aiming to take the pressure off hospitals and doctors surgeries. Five members of the Welsh Ambulance service have graduated to become the uks first prescribing paramedics and the team can be deployed across the nhs. Our Health Editor hugh pym has been on the road with some of them. It enhances the role greatly and it makes our role a lot more flexible. Patients dont always phone 999 because they think they have a life threatening emergency. So we probably see on average 19 or 20 patients a day and deal with them and the gp will have time for those more complex patients. We can speak to them and say rather than put them in the back of the ambulance and take them, how about we get one of our cars to attend . Mike is one of a new breed of prescribing paramedics, one of the first five. Theirjob, where possible, is to keep people out of hospital. Here, he is called to a Diabetic Patient with an infected wound. So you are an insulin dependent diabetic, yeah . He checks her medication and is able to adjust her pain relief so she can stay at home. A less qualified Ambulance Team might have had to take her to a e. 0k . It was sore last night. Georgina is helping take the strain off gps. Her shift on this occasion is in a surgery, seeing a range of different patients. With her new qualifications, she can write them prescriptions. Previously, i would decide what they need and i would have to go and wait, knock on the doctors door, wait for them to finish with their patient. Whereas now its my decision, im an autonomous, independent prescriber. Very impressed with the paramedics. Its like seeing a doctor. Exactly like seeing a doctor. They are qualified people, use them. Here at this Ambulance Control Centre in south east wales, around 700 calls come in every day. Some will be life threatening cases, but the challenge is to identify those patients who can be treated closer to home and who wont need to be taken to hospital. You see that call in pontypridd. Elton, another of the prescribing paramedics is deployed here to make help staff make the most efficient use of resources. He says with huge demands on the system, this new approach was essential. Years ago, anyone calling 999 we would take them to one of the Emergency Departments in the hospital, but now we have overwhelmed the service, so in response to that we have had to change the way we approach these patients and signpost them more appropriately. Caring for an ageing population with long term conditions and complex health needs is an immense challenge for the nhs. Empowering staff like these is one response. More will be trained in the drive to cope with the rising demand on the service. Hugh pym, bbc news, in south wales. Now on bbc news, witness history. Hello, and welcome to a special edition of witness history with me, razia iqbal. We have been looking back on the many extraordinary moments from history that we have brought you in 2019, so here are five of our favourite stories to share once more. Coming up, the children sent away by their parents to save them from the nazis, the Ballet Company that defied racism, the first african in the arctic, and the man at Mission Control when Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon. But first, a moment which in many ways said the cause for the second half of the 20th century, the birth of the peoples republic of china. On the 1st of october, 1949, mao zedong declared china a communist state. One young recruit in the Peoples Liberation army took part in the parade in beijing which marked that momentous day. Translation i was in the infantry, marching in a prominent position. I was so excited and proud tojoin the parade. I didnt sleep well, i kept thinking about my steps. If my commander ordered, look right, would i be able to do it . In 1949, i was 19. Only some of us could be selected tojoin a military parade to celebrate the birth of the peoples republic of china. We had a months practice for the parade at a compound in southern beijing. We learned how to goosestep in unison, marching together as if we were one man, looking to the right towards the audience. On the day, i saw chairman mao and the other leaders of the country in tiananmen square, i was so excited and overwhelmed. I felt so optimistic because chairman mao said that the army belongs to the people. It was different from the nationalists kuomintang. October the ist was the day that the peoples republic of china, the worlds most populous country, was proclaimed a communist state. Until the day, the Peoples Liberation army led by mao zedong had fought a bitter civil war against the nationalists. Now they were victorious, and mao took over the reins of government. Translation at that time i thought our country would become a communist country where everybody could be fed and everyone would have a job. In the old society, this was unimaginable. I saw hunger and death at every corner in pre revolutionary beijing, but no one cared about it. Ever since childhood, my life was tough. When i was six, my father died, and my mother and i had to go on the streets and beg for a living. It was hard trying to survive. Everyone was poor. People gave us free buns and bread which help keep us alive for a while. After trying lots of different ways to keep food on the table, my mother had to marry again to survive. I went to a local factory to learn how to make and fix bikes, but i still couldnt in enough to buy basics like bread and butter, so i learned how to ride rickshaws in beijing to earn more money. After the peaceful liberation of beijing in early 1949, an undercover communist party member approached me. He explained that the communist army was different from the nationalists, kuomintang. It worked for the people and helped the poor. It made me feel like they were family. That is when i decided to become a communist soldier in beijing. I often told my children and grandchildren that i was so proud to join the army. But even now i deeply regret that i was not allowed to join the communist party. I think its because i was illiterate. I never had the chance to go to school and get an education, but when i was in the army, i performed really well and won many medals. Here is my proof. I was a beggar in the old days, but my life was transformed into a better one. I wont forget what the communist party did for me. But theres a long way to go to reach the final goal of building a communist society. A soldier of the Peoples Liberation army on the birth of communist china. Next, one of the earliest instances of mass child migration, just before the second world war, in 1939, Dame Stephanie shirleys mother put her on a train in vienna bound for london, not knowing if they would ever meet again. She was one of thousands of the mostlyjewish unaccompanied children whose parents sent them to the uk for safety during the rise of the nazis in europe. Archive 200 boys and girls where they hand to england, land of the free. Wave a hand. The children are between the ages of five and 17, the advance guard of the child refugees from birmingham to be provided with a temporary home here while arrangements are made forthem to immigrate. Everybody said, arent you lucky . Arent you lucky . And indeed we were. Sometimes, when ive been asked my date of birth, ive said 1939. Because to me my life started then. The kindertransport was an amazing rescue mission set up by christian and jewish activists who brought nearly 10,000, mainlyjewish, children out of nazi europe. I was five years old and i was one of those children. My family was a sort of secularjewish family. We had moved over quite a bit of europe, starting in dortmund, where my father was a judge and had been fired in 1933 and finished up in vienna, which was my mothers home city. I think it was clear that jews in Central Europe faced catastrophe. There was an announcement that there had been a concession by the nazis to allow children up to the age of 16 to leave without their parents, so we knew something was afoot and that we were going to england. I can remember the scene at the station of many, many families, mostly weeping, some in a sort of whaling. I believe most parents did not expect to see their children again. My mother didnt cry, nor did we. I was with my sister, renata, who was ten years old. I clutched her you know, because i was scared. We had an overnight crossing to harwich, and then another train to Liverpool Street station. When we got off the train, the platform was silent, youve got 1,000 children, tired and smelly after two and a half days, just absolutely exhausted, and there was no chatter, no noise. Children were called, and off we went with our new parents. We were among the last to be claimed. We were fostered by a lovely english couple in the midlands of england who had seen a photograph in a local paper of my sister and i with just a few lines underneath, saying two sisters, well brought up, seeking a home, can you help . They couldnt speak a word of german, i couldnt speak a word of english. I was traumatised, they were nervous, it was pretty grim my feelings were just of being disturbed, of being with strange people, of not understanding what was going on, and when was i going to see my mother again . We were reunited after about 12 months or so, and we lived with our natural parents when i was in my teens, but as i think happens quite often with separated families, i never really bonded with them again, and that i really mourn. The act of sending your children away is a fantastic act of love. It didnt seem like it at the time, but it is the most loving thing a parent can do. The former child refugee, Dame Stephanie shirley. Now to america, and a pioneering Dance Company that defied the prejudice that kept black people out of ballet. The Dance Theatre of harlem was the first classical Ballet Company for black dancers. It was founded by Arthur Mitchell in a converted garage in harlem in 1969. Virginia johnson was one of the first to join. It wasnt until i was graduating from the Washington School of ballet that the director came to me, and she said, you know, youre going to have a career, youre a really wonderful dancer, but youre never going to be a ballerina because of the colour of your skin. It was following the assassination of Martin Luther king in 1968 that Arthur Mitchell decided to set up a Dance Company for black people in harlem. Arthur mitchell was a principal dancer with the new york city ballet, and the first African American to achieve that level in a major american Ballet Company. He looked around at this neighbourhood and said, these kids dont have a future. Education is terrible, the schools are failing, nobody cares about them, they dont have a way of breaking the cycle of poverty. But if i teach them ballet, im going to give them Something Else to draw from within themselves. We started with 30 children and two dancers, and everyone said i was crazy because i was using a european form, classical ballet, but i think that is the strongest technical foundation. After you have that technique, you can do anything you want. Classical ballet is impossibly difficult and requires focus, it requires self discipline, and it requires perseverance. In two months i had 400 kids, in eight months i had 800 kids, in 4 months i had 800 kids, so it shows there was a want and a need and a desire for this. I got to new york in the fall of 1968, and somebody told me that Arthur Mitchell was teaching a class in harlem on saturdays and i could go up and get a little ballet back in my life. Ijoined the Dance Theatre of harlem in the spring of 1969, and right from the start it was magic. He was maniacal. If we were going to do ballet, we were going to be the best ballet dancers the world had ever seen. It was extremely difficult and painful, those first years, nothing that we did was right. He was driving us, he was pushing us every minute. So there were black people who didnt want us to do the white mans art form, and white people who thought we could never understand it or have the talent or the bodies. And we were really fortunate, for our first new york performances, the big critic from the New York Times said this is the most exciting thing in ballet, so he gave us the little nod, and people were saying, ok, lets see if they are any good. Ten years after that, i would see young people walking into the studio with a sense of ownership. Of course i can be a ballet dancer and that was the most beautiful thing in the world to me, that they had no question, whereas i had nothing but question. We have been performing all over the place, celebrating the 50th anniversary. It is notjust about being perfect on balance in a tutu. That is just a sliver of what ballet can say. Virginia johnson is now the Dance Theatre of harlems artistic director. Remember, you can watch us every month on the bbc news channel, or catch up on all our films along with more than 1000 radio programmes in our online archive. Now to a story of courage and adventure. As a 16 year old, tete ran as far away from west africa as he could, finally reaching greenland in 1965 to fulfil a childhood dream of living in the arctic. I started a journey of discovery, only to find that i was being discovered. I was one of them. I became kind of the african eskimo. I was born in 1941 in togo, west africa. I grew up as an ordinary african boy. But one day i was in a tree and there was a snake, ifell, and i was badly injured. After my convalescence, i went to the missionary, bookshop, and i saw a book, eskimos from greenland to alaska, and i learnt that it is so cold in greenland that there are no snakes. Oh, where is that paradise . i was obsessed with eskimos. People said, yeah, you are completely mad i ran away from togo. I was 16 and a half. It took me eight years to get to greenland. I was the first black man they had ever seen. As soon as they saw me, all talking stopped. And the children were so afraid, some started weeping, but i was always welcomed by eskimos, who became my friends. I had to learn everything from them. I had to learn the language. Slowly by slowly, i became accustomed to the climate. I was happy. I really wanted to live forever in greenland. But my countrymen have never seen the polar light before, the polar night before, and i said to myself, after the slavery and colonisation, why cant i write for my people to see the eskimos through, through our eyes . So i decided to go back. It took me five years to write it. But my deepest wish would be to end my life in greenland. It is my country. Yes. Tete michel wrote an Award Winning account of his adventures which has been translated into eight languages. Our final witness describes probably one of the most important moments in living memory. Injuly1969, apollo 11 became the first space flight to successfully land people on the moon. Flight controllerjerry griffin was at Mission Control in houston as the world watched in awe. Mission control was made up of a bunch of young people. I was 3a and i was one of the older guys in the room. I think we all felt that nobody has ever done this, so lets just do it. There was a routine from launch, i would say, to the point of going into lunar orbit. The final phases of the descent of apollo 11 were kind of fraught. We had two computer alarms saying that the computer was being overworked. They took a quick look to make sure all the guidance was correct. Quickly gave them a go. So it was dicey, and then they started running short of fuel, and we were concerned. You heard 60 seconds, 30. It was in Neil Armstrongs hands at that point. Neil was a very, very good pilot. He could already see that the computer was taking him into a boulderfield, so he had to manoeuvre to try to find a smooth place. And the fuel gauge was headed down, and we were watching it. And it was nerve racking. I never will forget when buzz aldrin said we were picking up dust, he did that a little less than 100 feet above the surface, and that is when i thought, we will make it. When they first touched down, it was a great relief. I remember being proud we did it neil told me one time, its like an automobile, when it is on empty, there is a little bit left in the tank. Neil went down the ladder, the Television Picture was pretty grainy, but we could basically tell what he was doing. I think everybody was just awestruck, and there was very little being said in that room. He first actually got down to the footpath, and he was standing there, i think he was collecting his thoughts, and i think he wanted to make sure that he was calm enough and not too excited, which he never was. Then he took the one small step. I remember thinking, you knew he would come up with something profound. Buzz came after him. When they planted the flag and talked to the president , i heard these two guys standing on the moon wow, it worked. It kind of amazes me, 50 years later today, you realise what we did . Flight controller Gerry Griffin remembering the moment that changed the way we look at the world and the universe. That is all for this month here at the royal academy, we will be back next month with more first hand accounts of extraordinary moments in history. From me and the rest of the team, goodbye. Hello. Its been a mostly dry and very mild weekend, and as we head through the final few days of 2019, that theme is set to largely continue. A bit of rain in the north west, many places dry. This is how we ended the day on sunday beautiful sunsets across many parts of the country. And its a big area of High Pressure thats bringing us this dry, settled weather sitting across continental europe. We have got a weather front working in from the north, so thats going to bring some patchy rain initially to the north west of scotland as this frontal system sinks slowly further south through the day. Well see a few spots of light rain pushing across Northern Ireland during the afternoon in towards galloway. Scottish borders could see a few spots too. But clearer, fresher conditions working in from the north. Much of england and wales staying dry throughout the day after a bit of a murky start for some of us. There will be some sunshine breaking through during the afternoon. Highs around 11 or 12 degrees in the south. Only around 7 or 8 further north. Now, for new years eve on tuesday, it is looking like another dry day. Quite a murky start to the day for central and southern england and wales where weve got a bit of low cloud, mist and fog. That should tend to break up. More sunshine, though, further north across the country. Fairly light winds and a little bit cooler. Many places stuck in single figures, i think, for tuesday. But a decent looking day for new years eve. If youve got plans to head out during the evening and see any of the fireworks, then were not expecting any particularly strong winds or any rainfall. There could just be some Poor Visibility for one or two places. But not particularly cold, temperatures between around about 4 to 9 degrees for most of us as we head close to midnight. So, new years eve then to summarise for you is looking largely dry and settled. But there could well be some mist and some fog patches around too, but nothing to spoil the fireworks. Heading on into new years day now, and that area of High Pressure still in charge. Weve got a largely dry picture in fact. More isobars on the map across the northern half of the uk so i think itll be a little bit breezy across perhaps northern and western parts of scotland into Northern Ireland as well, but england and wales looking dry with light winds too. So, a fine day to come, i think, for new years day, barely cloudy. This cloud thinning and breaking later on, so some sunny spells developing and itll still feel reasonably mild for the time of year, although those temperatures not quite as mild as they have been over recent days. So around about 7 to 10 degrees for most of us on new years day. A fine day if youre getting out for a walk to bring in the first day of 2020. So, early 2020 then, well, its looking mainly dry, some rain in the far north west, mist and fog around at times and things will turn a little bit colder than it has been too. Bye for now. Good morning. Welcome to breakfast with dan walker and louise minchin. Our headlines today too late to leave Emergency Services in parts of southern australia say its no longer safe for some to evacuate and predict a day of extreme danger. The search for father of four and firefighter anthony knott. Hes now been missing for 10 days as Police Release new cctv. Retail in crisis more than 60 high street shops a day closed this year a sharp increase on the year before. But is there still hope for our high streets . Ill take a look. Halfway through the premier League Season and liverpool are 13 points clear at the top