JPINFV
Gadfly
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So can steel toed boots. Do you force everyone wearing boots to take their boots off before stepping into the ambulance?
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No offense, but JP isn't the one coming off as ignorant. Technically, neither are you but I can't elaborate further on that without the mods swinging the ban stick at me again.but I forgot, you are ok with allowing your patients to carry weapons on them in the ambulance, so I will stop wasting my time with you and no longer respond to your nonsense. hopefully others can learn from your mistakes and ignorance.
leave that Panzerfaust here
probably not,but I am guessing the knife was taken away from the intoxicated individual so it wouldn't be pulled on the EMT
if the pt decided to get combative.what are you basing this on?which is your right, should you do that.and you will be laughed out of the court room. not only that, but if i sustain any injuries while you are resisting my attempting to keep myself safe, I will make sure you are charged with assault & battery of a public safety professional, interference with a public safety professional in the course of his duties, reckless endangerment of my crew and the public in general, and hopefully after LEOs arrival, and I tell them what happen,
You'll be taking my necklace? My hands? My watch? My pen?or, I will let you keep the weapon, call LEOs leave the scene, where your condition will deteriorate, and if you pass out, you will again be stripped of every weapon you have on you,
and just because you are always armed, doesn't mean you are going to be transported to the hospital with your weapons still on you
I see we have another guy who just doesn't get it. You absolutely have the right to carry. Fine. I have the right to not treat or transport you anywhere as long as you have that weapon on you.
oh hell no. If I am disarming you, then you are not getting the gun back. absolutely not. it's being turned over to law enforcement. you are more than welcome to get it back from them.
I'm talking about the hoplophobia that's present in America today. The irrational fear of inanimate objects. "Mommy make bad thing disappear" mentality.I know, anything you can't understand, you call dumbification. It's called using your faulty logic to prove how incorrect your point is. nice try though.
why not? it's the inalienable right do do it. why the backstepping?
a pocket knife? are we talking about a 2 inch swiss army knife? of a 6 inch hunting knife? I might let a patient keep a small pocket knife. key word is might, it would depend on the call.
but the safest place for the knife, in regards to the EMT who is treating the injured, which is me, is in the hands of law enforcement, or in a worst case, MY POCKET.
not with the patient. I am not stealing it, I am making sure said weapon does not get used against me. and it gets turned over to hospital security when we arrive at the hospital, where it gets returned to the patient when he and the hospital part ways.
Depends state to state.Ok, so legally what does an EMT do when they come on the scene and the patient is packing?
I'm probably showing my noobishness here, but I'm not feeling comfortable having a patient carrying a loaded gun in the back of my rig when they are deemed critical enough to go for a ride in my bus.
But I'm learning legally I can not remove said item? I have to let them carry it with them? I can understand certain situations are a judgement call. Maybe even guns are a judgement call. I don't know, but given we weren't ever presented with such a scenario in class I really don't know what to do in the above described situation.
depends on how much you value your own safety. Most would consider an armed patient who wants to keep his loaded fire arm to be an unsafe scene, and as such, EMS shouldn't be entering said unsafe scene. Some think it's ok to let the patient keep it. I guess it comes down to what you think, and how much you value your life and safety.Ok, so legally what does an EMT do when they come on the scene and the patient is packing?
you aren't showing your noobishness, you are showing that you have a brain. An intelligent EMS provider who values his safety and his life would think the same as you. remember, what's the first thing you check? scene safety.I'm probably showing my noobishness here, but I'm not feeling comfortable having a patient carrying a loaded gun in the back of my rig when they are deemed critical enough to go for a ride in my bus.
I am pretty sure there is no law that says you can't remove a gun from a patient, despite what some might be saying. otherwise, hospitals would allow people to carry their guns as well. and contrary what some think, YOU DO NOT NEED TO LET A PATIENT CARRY A LOADED FIREARM INTO YOUR AMBULANCE. If they insist on keeping it, then they don't need the ambulance, and it becomes an unsafe scene, and leave until the cops arrive.But I'm learning legally I can not remove said item? I have to let them carry it with them?
instead of asking for ideas on how you should from people in different states, why not ask your fellow squad members? or even better, ask your local law enforcement agency what you think they would do.I can understand certain situations are a judgement call. Maybe even guns are a judgement call. I don't know, but given we weren't ever presented with such a scenario in class I really don't know what to do in the above described situation.
hmm, what will an unconcious OD person with a gun in his belt do when you push narcan, wake him form his high, and see several people he doesn't know standing over him?Why not? What's an unconscious patient going to do with a weapon? How does a degree of illness, per se, mandate that the individual is unsafe with the weapon?
That's why you restrain him before giving him the Narcan. It's a stupid move to reverse medications like narcotics or benzos without making sure the patient is properly restrained.hmm, what will an unconcious OD person with a gun in his belt do when you push narcan, wake him form his high, and see several people he doesn't know standing over him?
Did you seriously just quote a skills sheet? No, seriously? Do you tell the fire fighters to pull the engine around the corner because the axes on board make the scene unsafe?remember, what's the first thing you check? scene safety.
This is the only advice of yours worth following. The rest sounds like the paranoid bull crud that spews forth from the Brady Bunch Campaign for Gun Grabbing. A scene with a gun is not necessarily safe nor unsafe. A gun is an inanimate object that isn't going to magically jump up and shoot anyone. However the presence of a gun alone shouldn't cause anyone to cover there eyes, scream, shout, and panic.even better, ask your local law enforcement agency what you think they would do.
The only thing more dangerous than a patient with a gun is an EMT with no fire arms experience trying to handle and disarm a gun. A holstered fire arm is much more safe than an EMT bumbling around trying to figure out how to unload it.Some people here are apparently supermen, and are not afraid of being shot. Me, I don't want any more holes in my body than when I started my shift. That means the patient doesn't get to bring his weapons with him. And if he insists, than he obviously doesn't need an ambulance that badly.
hmm, what will an unconcious OD person with a gun in his belt do when you push narcan, wake him form his high, and see several people he doesn't know standing over him?
Sasha can come pat me down any day before I go into her castle ....
This "DOCTOR" jumpsuit is awful thick and padded and you can hide all sorts in the pockets and gosh knows where else
... and now back to your regularly scheduled thread
"Hello HEMS, yes, I see, OK, thanks mate, ta"
"Oi bloody hell Oz get up, its a go!"
Brown away! h34r:
Prior to entrance into Sasha's Castle all guests are strip searched. It negates the need for a pat down.
Sasha, are you mixing business and pleasure again?
Prior to entrance into Sasha's Castle all guests are strip searched. It negates the need for a pat down.