So EMS is only for patients who have normal health at a normal weight? It must be nice to pick and choose who calls 911 in your area.
Where is their commonsense to know they couldn't lift 420 pounds safely?
I'm sorry, but where did I say EMS gets to pick and chose their calls? in fact, did I ever say that the person shouldn't be treated? so STFU, and don't ever insinuate that I said something that I clearly didn't.
Did you even read the article? the normal ambulance service was too busy to send a bariatric unit, so the private ambulance got sent. I don't know any details besides what is mentioned in the article. Everyone says call for help, sure, why not? except there were no other ambulances available, which is why this private unit was sent. and I have no idea where the FD was, maybe not available? maybe these two had to make the best out of a bad situation?
"as two paramedics struggled to carry Kenny from the house he slipped from the stretcher and fell onto the concrete drive. Seconds later he died" is what the article says. maybe the patient leaned the wrong way and tipped the stretched with his weight? you know, throwing it off balance? or maybe they hit a hole in the walk way, and is caused everything thing to shift, causing the fall. I wasn't there, and I don't know. But the article seems to places all the blame solely on the paramedics.
The blurb makes it sound like the fall killed the guy. did it? maybe the fact that he was morbidly obese resulted in secondary health problems with caused the death? maybe he was having a massive MI already, and his resp drive just gave out at just the wrong time. or maybe the fall killed him, the autopsy will have to find that out.
I think the comments to the article, and some of the comments on this thread, are a bit repulsive. We treat people who have made bad decisions all the time - heart disease, drug overdose, ETOH, car crashes - but because this patient was heavy, well, that's one of the few prejudices that are still politically correct.
first of all, you really don't want to hear my opinion on ETOH emergencies (no sympathy at all for chronic users who do it to themselves). Will I get them to the hospital? absolutely. Will I treat them according to local protocols? absolutely. Will they get any sympathy at all? absolutely not. That doesn't mean they don't get treated.
As for prejudices? being fat is not a prejudice. You don't know how much I weigh. I might weight 100 lbs. or I might weigh 450. or, I might have used to weigh 450, and through eating right and exercising, now only weigh 225. For the record, I know several people in the 3rd example, who lost weight though proper diet and exercise, and others who used gastric bypass. Either way, they realized they had a problem, and took the steps to correct it.
Think of how much intake you must consume to maintain a weight of 420. It isn't a 2000 calorie diet. People should be held responsible for their own actions. Personal accountability, it's gone the way of the dinosaur. It's never a person's fault for their own actions.
Oh, and for the record, I used to be heavier than I am now. portion control, regular exercise, and eating right was what I did to lose the weight. I took the steps needed to make the change to my lifestyle. It all comes back to personal accountability.