This shows no experience with psych Pt's. You don't always know that a pt plans on flipping out on you, prior to the event. They can be the sweetest person in the world, till it happens. We cannot request that every psych pt be sedated, just in case.
The medic did everything they could in this case, including trying to stop it from happening. They were over powered. Nothing that could be done. If the Dr knew that the pt had violent tendencies, then that is where it needed to start.
Oh, and just so you don't continue to have a perception that I have no experience with psych patients, the agency I worked with in detroit did a LARGE number of psych transfers... to the point where they would run a dedicated BLS car who would spend all night (12 hours) doing nothing but psych transfers. Even though I was a paramedic, I LOVED picking up overtime on this unit and did it frequently.. so I have extensive experience with psych patients, and in the year and a half I worked there, never had a patient successfully bail out of my ambulance on me... and ive had more than a few give it a shot...so it kind of mystifies me how people can have it happen to them.
I also was required as part of my paramedic program to do 48 hours of psychiatric rotations on a locked down psychiatric inpatient facility, where we were expected to learn the basic principles of dealing with psychiatric patients, including appropriate pharmacological restraint techniques and appropriate medication of those patients in the emergency setting.
I would make the ground rules very clear in the beginning of my transfer to the patient...
1. you WILL stay on the stretcher at all times even if you are able to walk
2. Seatbelts remained fastened at all times.. all 5 of them (shoulder harness)
and if they attempt to remove or unbuckle any of them without my help,
they go into restraints no questions asked.
3. Let me know if you need anything to make you more comfortable, air
conditioning, heat, etc.
Most importantly I treated them with respect and treated them humane while sticking to the rules. Had problems with very few of them. As I said in another post.. i remained seated NEXT to them at all times and engaged them in conversation if they were capable of it ( not sedated or completely out of it)