Cavities do require ventilation. Your friend's DPC is a single thickness of brick (100mm) and it runs across the outer skin only. There will be another DPC also 100mm wide, tied into the DPM that covers the whole of the solid floor, at the same height on the inner skin.
If water drips down the cavity, there has to be a way of it getting out. These ventilation bricks allow it out.
Air bricks under water, and water over the DPC level means both inner and outer bricks skins will take up water. In a severe case, the dampness may have shown itself through to the inside as a damp patch on the plaster surface.
Otherwise, if the water has now subsided, nothing else should happen. It is summer, the air is 20 degrees C or so and there is plenty of time for it to dry back out again before winter.