Aidey
Community Leader Emeritus
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I just want a little more in my report then some objective and subjective info.
The entirety of any medical report is made up of objective and subjective info.
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I just want a little more in my report then some objective and subjective info.
...because this is the first thread ever, in the history of EMS on the intertubes, to discuss patients who have had varying amounts of alcohol?Not sure if you read my original post. but you might wanna give it a once over so we can stay on track here.
I never stated my school had taught me that any presence of an intoxicant indicated impairment to make sound medical decisions.
EMS med mal lawsuits don't happen as much as everyone thinks they do. You're much more likely to get into a lawsuit for a traffic accident than a properly documented refusal.In-fact I have not mention my schooling once? I mentioned my Local protocols in which i operate under. Am I green Paramedic? sure. I am just trying to figure out how to draw a better line so I can protect myself and my fellow colleagues from lawsuits (not that having a definitive line would do that).
...and this is the problem! BAC% does not necessarily mean a patient is or is not intoxicated. You can get a DUI at 0.01% if you're driving like you're intoxicated.My school did teach us what most people here are saying. I just want a little more in my report then some objective and subjective info.
In the case of the patient i mentioned Earlier, I did not take her against her will to the ER.... to take a hospital bed from some other patient who could have had better use for it. She signed our AMA, I explained to the MICN that the patient had consumed ETOH but was not impaired by it. Patient Passed the Road test and went with security to her room where i assume she slept it off since no-one was called back out. Now can i get sued for my actions that night? i wouldn't doubt it. Can I lose that lawsuit? i wouldn't doubt it. If I had a BAC% or a uniform scale to follow could i still be in hot water? i wouldn't doubt it.
The entirety of any medical report is made up of objective and subjective info.
I'm going with the technicality that isn't part of the report, it is part of the chart.
Yes, I did give it that much thought before I posted. ^_^
Is there a difference between a patient care report and a medical chart?
/knows that this is getting ridiculous.
Bah Humbug!!!!! If we allow this now, then we will have to allow it in the early morning. then any time before noon or after 5, and all weekend. then the whole world will become one giant ball of ridiculous. :wacko:And it is the middle of the night, we are allowed to be a little ridiculous.
Yes, experience can't be taught, but experience and the ability to exercise judgement are not the same. The schools that are teaching their students that the presence of any intoxicant means implied consent are doing their students, and their subsequent patients, no good. Your school should have gone over how to determine capacity as the ability to interact with patients is not just based on post education experience.
EMS med mal lawsuits don't happen as much as everyone thinks they do.
BAC% does not necessarily mean a patient is or is not intoxicated. You can get a DUI at 0.01% if you're driving like you're intoxicated.
.....especially when you figure that those three people and fifteen sheep were in one of these: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mercedes_V-Klasse_20090815_front.JPGIn South Africa a man driving a Mercedes-Benz Vito and was arrested on December 22, 2010, near Queenstown in Eastern Cape. His blood had an alcohol content of 1,6g/100ml. Five boys as well as a woman who were also in the vehicle with 15 sheep, allegedly stolen from nearby farms, were also arrested
.and this is the problem! BAC% does not necessarily mean a patient is or is not intoxicated. You can get a DUI at 0.01% if you're driving like you're intoxicated.
oh hell no.The trouble comes when LE insists you transport someone, especially when they will not ride along in the vehicle with you. If the officer threatens to arrest you for not complying, give him/her the keys and tell them respectfully to do it themselves. Then file a report, including name and badge number.
Would citing California Vehicle Code work?Of course you have supporting links to validate this? Not meaning to be a smart arse, but there must be some quantitative methods for police to determine mental impairment, otherwise it is just subjective which leaves reasonable doubt, and no DA would support this. And let's exclude those professions that any trace ETOH is a violation.
btw, our medical director will not let drunks refuse AMA. if you call the doc and tell him the patient has been drinking, he will not let the paramedic have the patient RMA. not only that, dispatch is not supposed to even mention anything about alcohol during the dispatch, because it can skew the field provider's perception of the call (at least that was what my supervisor just told me last week).
Ok, your patient has had 2 drinks and wants to sign AMA. Your online medical director says no. How do you compel transport?
I can't cite case law or a statute but I can attest that in at least one state there is a difference between DUI and DWI.
How do you compel transport?
Ok, your patient has had 2 drinks and wants to sign AMA. Your online medical director says no. How do you compel transport?
...and if the police refuse to detain the individual?