A few nights ago we had a juvenile on acid, running around on the roof of a local high school. Most of my details are from the medic or firefighters on scene so I have no idea how to police got onto the roof. What I do know is this juvenile fought with police and was ultimately tazed 7 times and was still fighting. The fire department was called and set up their ladder with 1 section deployed at a 20 degree angle. The medic on scene was asked to climb onto the roof to sedate the patient, she refused because of a fear of heights. Everyone understood and they instead shackled and restrained the patient in a stokes basket with multiple straps and sheets.
Our director has since gotten involved and flat out refused to allow us to ever climb a fire department apparatus. While i would agree with him to an extent, I feel that a ladder with one section deployed at 20 degrees and the entire 137' ladder deployed at 60 degrees are two different worlds. (Ive climbed the entire 137' in full gear with an air pack at 60 degrees so i can attest to that)
It is my personal opinion that liberal sedation is the safest way this person could be transported. I also feel that there are several scenarios besides this where a ladder truck may come into play and a blanket no is the wrong approach. I.e. electrecution, crush injuries, fall with fracture etc
Another option would have been to call my department as two of us from my service that are paramedics are also on that department. If were on a call with fire and the medic on scene needs us to perform ALS, we are allowed to clock in. He has gone as far to say we cant climb the ladder as a firefighter and clock in on the roof to sedate the patient.
Im normally very pro fire does fire stuff but as ive said, i can see many scenarios, though rare, that a patient could benefit from ALS care.
Has this ever come up anywhere else and how does your service approach it?
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Our director has since gotten involved and flat out refused to allow us to ever climb a fire department apparatus. While i would agree with him to an extent, I feel that a ladder with one section deployed at 20 degrees and the entire 137' ladder deployed at 60 degrees are two different worlds. (Ive climbed the entire 137' in full gear with an air pack at 60 degrees so i can attest to that)
It is my personal opinion that liberal sedation is the safest way this person could be transported. I also feel that there are several scenarios besides this where a ladder truck may come into play and a blanket no is the wrong approach. I.e. electrecution, crush injuries, fall with fracture etc
Another option would have been to call my department as two of us from my service that are paramedics are also on that department. If were on a call with fire and the medic on scene needs us to perform ALS, we are allowed to clock in. He has gone as far to say we cant climb the ladder as a firefighter and clock in on the roof to sedate the patient.
Im normally very pro fire does fire stuff but as ive said, i can see many scenarios, though rare, that a patient could benefit from ALS care.
Has this ever come up anywhere else and how does your service approach it?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk