Firechic
Forum Lieutenant
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You and your partner are dispatched on a call for a diabetic patient who would like her glucose level checked. You arrive on scene and enter a large building which is opened for you by the security guard. The guard takes you to the patient and states that he will be back in a minute. You cannot leave the area now because you are locked in that wing of the building. Your partner is the lead on this call and asks you to get the glucometer. You notice that there are no test strips in the kit, something that your partner said she had checked out at the beginning of the shift. You tell your partner this information out of earshot of the elderly patient and a bit annoyed with her offered, "I'll go find the guard so I can get the strips in the ambulance." She tells you no, forget it and proceeds to take a BP on the patient and asks if she has her own glucometer. The patient says that she doesn't have it with her right now, but plans on going home after we leave and that her cousin is picking her up in 5 minutes. The patient has no S&S of hypo/hyperglycemia and responds appropriately throughout the contact. She informs the patient that she seems to have no signs of diabetic problems at the moment, that we cannot check her glucose level at this time, and her BP looks good.
After driving back to the station in silence, you turn to your partner and irately state, "Well, I guess I'll have to check out the ambulance now." She responds with, "Yeah, whatever...."
Later, you happen to see her run chart of the call and note that she had changed the patient complaint to ' BP check' rather than 'BGL check'.
What would you do??
After driving back to the station in silence, you turn to your partner and irately state, "Well, I guess I'll have to check out the ambulance now." She responds with, "Yeah, whatever...."
Later, you happen to see her run chart of the call and note that she had changed the patient complaint to ' BP check' rather than 'BGL check'.
What would you do??