I understand triaging for the most treatable. But, I agree with firetender, if there is still a heart beat and breathing, don't just walk away and leave the scene.
I live in an area where head-on collisions are common. We just mobilize the resources. Unless we can confirm obvious death or follow our protocols to call a death at scene, we will find a way to get that patient and every patient to a hospital. It should not be too unreasonable for a metropolitan area to have back up either from you own resources or mutual aid.
What happens in this area if they have an industrial or a school bus accident that may involve more than 3 patients?
I have also seen people who sustained major injuries, including many TBIs, pull through with little deficit. Many of these patients were so badly injured that it was difficult to continue to work on them in the ED. But, something kept us at their side for that shift and many more difficult shifts. The brain and body are amazing.
And yes, there have been quite a few that involved multiple systems that we did cease to work. However, especially in TBIs, if at all possible in our trauma center, the ED physician will make the decision based on the neuro team physician's assessment for viability. Life support may then be continued until the family arrives unless nature takes its own course sooner.
On another view, a TBI patient is an excellent organ procurement candidate. The patient should then be treated with the utmost respect with appropriate resuscitation efforts to sustain life. The family would then have had "their" time, and not the media's, to spend with their loved one while knowing her death could bring hope for others.
This remark from one article really came across as callous in my opinion. I see where Hood has offered apologies for some of his remarks in more recent news articles.
I don't foresee any discipline for (the paramedics)," Hood said, adding, "There's nothing to apologize for. We weren't driving the vehicle that hit the car."
http://www.emsresponder.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=6738