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It's the EMT moral code. If you don't wish to abide by it then you ought to stop being an EMT. BTW, it's the AAOS that wrote it. Shall I provide a page number for you?
That is patently ridiculous. Where in that code, that was not written for EMS providers to begin with, mention putting the patient's life above your own life? Furthermore, if I am not on duty, how am I at all obligated to be held to some sort of BS "code" of standards? What I do off duty is no one's business but my own, and it has no bearing what so ever in the performance of my job as an EMT. Your morals and thoughts on ethics may differ from mine. That's life.
Taking a class that gives you the knowledge to render care at a level above (albeit slightly) of the layperson does not obligate one to care for everyone's injuries, in any capacity, while not acting in the capacity of an EMS provider.
That said, I'll stop at some accidents. If someone is waving at traffic for help or there is a vehicle with serious damage with no occupants readily visible, I will stop. I don't carry a jump kit or anything, I just want to make sure that 911 has been called and any immediate life threats have been controlled if possible. If I know that the area is served by BLS services and I can tell ALS may be needed, I'll let the local dispatch know when I call it in.
That all gets thrown out the window of course, if I don't think that I am reasonably safe from passing traffic.