Event teaches young people to save stab victims

Innat (left) and Hanan (right) both said the event teaching them emergency first aid was helpful
- Published
A teenager who witnessed her friend being stabbed has praised a "reassuring" event teaching young people emergency first aid.
Paramedics from South Central Ambulance Service (SCAS) visited a youth event in Slough to help teenagers respond to stab wounds.
The event, organised in partnership with charity Together As One, involved showing young people how to stem catastrophic bleeding and give CPR.
Innat, 15, who witnessed a stabbing, said the event showed knife crime was a "really deep concern" in the area.
The event came after figures from the Office of National Statistics revealed, external there were 50,000 incidents of knife crime reported across the UK in 2024.

Paramedics showed young people at the event how to treat catastrophic bleedings and give CPR
SCAS paramedic manager Ian Sayer said more than 2,000 incidents happened in their area last year.
"Unfortunately it's something we are well versed in dealing with," he said.
"On average in our region we probably deal with about four to five incidents a day involving knives, stabbings, people injured by bladed articles deliberately.
"If someone's got a catastrophic bleed - it's the basics that can save that person. We can raise awareness and get people to step up and help."
'People think they'll be lucky'
Innat's friend has since recovered after being stabbed and she said these skills would have been useful.
"The fact I wasn't able to do anything, just stand there and watch and wait for police to arrive, it wasn't nice," she said.
"If more people are aware of how dangerous it can be, I think it will help majorly. People always think they're going to be lucky, but there are concerns out there and you need to be safe."
Hanan, 16, added: "It put it into perspective more. I haven't personally experienced it, I know things happen, but it depends on the situation you're in."

South Central Ambulance Service was called out to more than 2,000 reports of knife crime in the last year
Together As Once has operated in Slough for more than 20 years to reduce gang crime.
CEO Rob Deeks said: "The perception is knife crime is a big problem and unfortunately young people have lost their lives to knife crime in recent years here in Slough, so it does weigh heavily on people's minds.
"What's important is we work together as a town to keep young people safe. People on the front lines in this situation are so determined to do something."
Get in touch
Do you have a story BBC Berkshire should cover?
You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, external, X (Twitter), external, or Instagram, external.
Related topics
- Published19 February
- Published15 November 2024
- Published17 November 2023
- Published26 September 2024
- Published15 November 2021