I will absolutely tell them that, I've done it on the past.
You agreed with me with the quite below. Not once did I say become confrontational with the officer. Request he or she leaves, if they don't comply request they leave again, explain your reasoning as to why you need them to leave and get a second officer involved to hopefully talk some sense into the first one. If they still don't comply, request a supervisor and inform him/her that if they do not leave action will be taken against them and that a supervisor is on the way to handle the issue and continue with your patient care.
Patient privacy laws still apply to LEOs. If the patient doesn't want them there and there's no reason for them to be present during the assessment (only reason I can see is crew safety) then they have no right to be there and must leave when asked. Being a cop doesn't make them above the law.
But I'm sure I'll end up in handcuffs at some point since I'm a patient advocate and don't let police abuse their power on
MY scene.
Wow...that's exactly what I said! Still not sure how it came down to me ending up in handcuffs. Y'all must really have interdepartmental drama if PD or FD is trying to run the scene on a medical call. Our LEOs never give us problems unless you approach them in a confrontational matter.
They know if their *** gets injured we're the ones taking care of them so they treat us like kings and queens. Unless there's a safety issue EMS comes before LE stuff here.