medic417
The Truth Provider
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My issue with the article was not about the lack of equipment or extra five minutes on scene. It was the described lack of action of the paramedics. Fifteen minutes on scene, fine. But fifteen minutes on scene with no vitals? Have family carry him to the truck?
And as one medic was being described as saying "It's not that serious" and calling him drunk when family is telling them there are no drugs or alcohol. When in your right mind do you ever tell the family that? When did YOU go to Medical school where you can determine the definite severity of a person's head injury? Did they have a lab to do a BAL in their truck? Even basics are taught that head injuries and hypoglycemia often mimics being drunk and to never make a butt of yourself and put you in the position to be sued by calling a patient intoxicated.
But is that actuall the way it happened or the way the family imagined it?