Hello to all visitors, feel free to drop a line, for any of those around the quad state area where i am from, i am trying to make a forum for this area, fire and ems wise, inspired by emtlife, standy by for further details coming soon...
currently licensed in KY and IL, live on the border and work full time in KY and do Fire/ems volunteer in IL, there are fees and a process but it opens up more doors for you as far as employment also.
Paducah KY, town of about 30,000 and 10,000 in the county have a private service here i work for we are the only service in county and do all IFT, emergency, standyby...etc.. on our way to hit over 14,000+ runs this year.
Seems like you said a chemical reaction almost similar to smoke being inhaled by someone with asthma or other respiratory pathology, just triggers a firestorm.
Here is one on a busy day.
Dispatch: Standy Medic 83
tones
Dispatch: Medic 83, Emergency, (nursing home) for a ** y/o female pt. having severe leg pain, pt. has no legs
i guess its a good thing that they were using dry chemical extinguishers...becuase i would hate for them to have grabbed an APW or something and tried that without any PPE...most people in the general public dont know about magnesium in cars being water sensitive...that stuff will spark and...
i know these people ment well, but like someone previously posted...shaking the car and moving them without proper immobilization could have further injuried or paralyzed them...but if they dont know that then they cant be blamed...of course you know there is always some goob that is the least...
the third police car in this video is the perfect example of what the rumbler sounds like from a pedestrian perspective...very effective
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKnL6NPyD40
funny that this article comes up, just yesterday in Metro we had a 2 year old that had fallen into a swimming pool and was pulse less and apneic, basically the hospital is a 5 min drive from that residence, so they had the FD run in and grab the child and then got in the back of the rig and they...
dont know if it would be considered an ambulance regulation, but i know one local service around here that has in the medical code that they allow the use of I/O drills on the ambulance, but they do not stock the ambulances as such, when one medic put them on, the systems coord. told them to be...
Actually, to me, and anyone that thinks otherwise constructively criticize this, but with the way i imagine she is laying down he would simply have to just put the back side of the collar behind her head and pull that front piece up and do all the adjusting and securing, to me seems a lot easier...