Optus outage prevents triple-0 call for Melbourne man suffering heart attack

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A Melbourne man who suffered a heart attack during the Optus outage is considered lucky to be alive after his colleague was unable to contact triple-0.

Chris, 68, who has requested not to use his full name, was at work on Wednesday, November 8, when he told colleague Fiona Mitchell he was not feeling well.

“He kept saying he wanted to go home,” Ms Mitchell said.

Ms Mitchell told Chris, who works in logistics, she would take him to hospital, which was only a short drive away.

But while they were travelling, his health quickly deteriorated.

“He undid his seatbelt and collapsed on the nature strip,” Ms Mitchell said.

Ms Mitchell knew there was an Optus outage but remembered hearing that triple-0 calls should still have worked.

A woman smiling at the camera

Fiona Mitchell says she was waving down cars to call triple-0 during the outage.(Supplied: Fiona Mitchell)

“That’s why I felt confident to drive to the hospital because I thought the call would go through,” she said.

“But I called triple-0 — and nothing.”

While Chris was on the nature strip on Eastfield Road in Croydon, Ms Mitchell started to wave down passing cars, holding out her hand in the shape of an “0” in the hope someone would urgently stop.

Ms Mitchell said a few people pulled over and were able to contact triple-0 while an off-duty paramedic sat with Chris until an ambulance arrived.

After Chris received initial treatment, the paramedics told Ms Mitchell her colleague was having a heart attack.

“It was a lot to take in,” Ms Mitchell said.

‘So lucky’ to survive

Chris’s partner Robyn also had an Optus phone, so she did not know what was happening until another one of his colleagues arrived at her front door.

“By the time we got up to the cardiac ward, Chris was already in intensive care and having a stent put in,” Robyn said.

“It’s all about quick action. We were just so lucky.”

A photo of a man and woman smiling at the camera

Chris and Robyn are thankful for the help they received.(Supplied: Robyn)

Chris has since been discharged from hospital and is recovering at home with a new resolve to “go about things a bit more slowly”.

Chris, Robyn, and Ms Mitchell were all grateful to those who stopped to help, along with the medical staff at Box Hill Hospital, but they could not help but think about what could have happened.

“We were lucky we were on a busy road,” Ms Mitchell said.

“If it had been in a quiet street, or anywhere else, it would have been a different outcome.

“But we should’ve never had this situation [where triple-0 was down] in the first place.”

Case ‘escalated’ by Optus

Ms Mitchell contacted Optus and said they asked about Chris’s welfare and “escalated” her case, but she has not heard anything since.



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