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Lifeboat and helicopter in mid-Solent medical emergency

Lifeboats News Release

Cowes RNLI lifeboat and the Lee-on-Solent Coastguard helicopter were last afternoon Saturday called out to a yacht carrying a 43-year-old man who had suffered a debilitating seizure.

Showing crew members attending to sick yachtsman

RNLI/George Chastney

Two lifeboat members are involved in the initial mid-Solent assessment of the man.

The emergency occurred in the Solent, about one and half miles off Osborne Bay. The yachtsman, one of a number aboard 40-foot-yacht on charter from Port Solent, Portsmouth, had collapsed after suffering a fit, and was in a very weakened state in the cockpit.

The lifeboat helm, Mark Harker transferred Dr Will King and another crew member, Anne Simkin, to the yacht to assess the man’s condition. They were then joined by a paramedic who had been lowered from the helicopter, together with full medical kit.

Eventually it was decided the man, still in a collapsed state but conscious, should be taken by the yacht to Gunwharf Quay, Portsmouth, where he was transferred on a stretcher to an ambulance.

After escorting the yacht to Portsmouth, the now fully crewed lifeboat stopped briefly off Lee-on Solent for the paramedic to be winched back up into the helicopter.

The lifeboat, which had launched at 3.40 pm, had been off station for just over two hours. It was the first for-real shout for one of the four crew, Mark Crook, who had been undergoing training on the lifeboat earlier in that day.


Preparations are made aboard the yacht at Gunwharf Quay for the transfer to the ambulance.

Yacht at Gunwharf Quay.

RNLI/George Chastney

Preparations are made aboard the yacht at Gunwharf Quay for the transfer to the ambulance.

Key facts about the RNLI

The RNLI charity saves lives at sea. Its volunteers provide a 24-hour search and rescue service around the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland coasts. The RNLI operates 238 lifeboat stations in the UK and Ireland and more than 240 lifeguard units on beaches around the UK and Channel Islands. The RNLI is independent of Coastguard and government and depends on voluntary donations and legacies to maintain its rescue service. Since the RNLI was founded in 1824, its lifeboat crews and lifeguards have saved over 146,000 lives.

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Contacting the RNLI - public enquiries

Members of the public may contact the RNLI on 0300 300 9990 (UK) or 1800 991802 (Ireland) or by email.

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