A limited training programme for paramedics was then rolled out across the UK in 1979.
Credit: Scottish Ambulance Service Prior to this, ambulances were predominantly considered a means of transport to hospital which provided limited first aid. Mason worked and eventually trained other paramedics in Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Dundee before retiring in 2011. He remembers that back in the 1980s, some in the medical profession were unused to the role of a paramedic. Mason added: “It also took a wee while to build the trust and confidence of other medical and nursing practitioners facing this new breed of ambulance person. The vast majority were very helpful and encouraging.
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While 2020 was, by any stretch of the imagination a strange year, it did not stop members of Mallow Camera Club capturing some magical memories through the camera lens.
That was very much evident through the high standard of entries to the club s Image of the Year competition, the results of which were recently announced by the organising committee over Zoom.
The competition attracted 33 entries, with each entrant submitting one colour and one mono image across four grades, which were judged online by a trio of expert judges.
They were Helen Hanafin, a member of Dublin Camera Club and an Irish Photographic Federation (IPF) approved judge; multi-award winning Cork-based fine art photographer and educator Mike Brown and author/photographer David Gibbins of the Beeston Camera Club in Nottinghamshire.
The Mallow Camera Club (MCC) has again underscored its reputation as one of the top clubs of its kind in the country following its recent showing in a prestigious international competition.
The International Federation of Photographic Arts (FIAP) recently held its 15th annual World Cup , aimed at finding the top photographic clubs from across the globe.
The 2020 competition attracted entries from 213 clubs from more than 60 countries and was judged by a distinguished panel of experts from Romania, the Ukraine and Australia.
Mallow Camera Club s submission, which contained 20 photographs chosen by its selection committee some of which are reproduced here, finished in a highly impressive 15th overall position.