Having some refusal issues in my dept. and was hoping for some opinions.
1.Do you write refusals for everything you don't transport? Like a lift assist or where they hit their button on accident. What are the "rules" for what gets a report and what don't?
2. What about auto accidents? You get on scene and there is you, your driver, and firefighters (some are EMT's). You have 2 possible patients, one needs to be transported now, the other is refusing. There isn't time to do an assessment, call the Dr. and do refusal paperwork. SO we let one of the EMT/Fire guys handle the refusal. He turns in a blank refusal signed by the patient. Is this how you would handle the scenario (allowing a EMT/fire to do refusal)? The lack of report seems like a big deal to me, your opinion?
3. ONE more scenario, underage pt. Hit in the face with a ball, no loss of consciousness. Pt. gets loaded for transport when your informed Mom will be there shortly and will take pt. herself. You leave the scene with pt. to meet Mom cause she can't find the scene. She signs the refusal. Report is wrote, but the Dr. wasn't called for a refusal. What do you think? Shouldn't the Dr. be called when you do a patient assessment that results in refusal?
Thanks for all your opinions. I don't want to nit pick my crew to death, but refusals seem so important to me.
1.Do you write refusals for everything you don't transport? Like a lift assist or where they hit their button on accident. What are the "rules" for what gets a report and what don't?
2. What about auto accidents? You get on scene and there is you, your driver, and firefighters (some are EMT's). You have 2 possible patients, one needs to be transported now, the other is refusing. There isn't time to do an assessment, call the Dr. and do refusal paperwork. SO we let one of the EMT/Fire guys handle the refusal. He turns in a blank refusal signed by the patient. Is this how you would handle the scenario (allowing a EMT/fire to do refusal)? The lack of report seems like a big deal to me, your opinion?
3. ONE more scenario, underage pt. Hit in the face with a ball, no loss of consciousness. Pt. gets loaded for transport when your informed Mom will be there shortly and will take pt. herself. You leave the scene with pt. to meet Mom cause she can't find the scene. She signs the refusal. Report is wrote, but the Dr. wasn't called for a refusal. What do you think? Shouldn't the Dr. be called when you do a patient assessment that results in refusal?
Thanks for all your opinions. I don't want to nit pick my crew to death, but refusals seem so important to me.