trevor1189
Forum Captain
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Sorry, but your drivers apparently suck at driving then...
And you make that assumption based on what exactly? :unsure:
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Sorry, but your drivers apparently suck at driving then...
Based on the lack of ability to drive smoothly to the hospital and, basically, do anything else at the same time. I guess the AM/FM radio is off at all times as well. Is the conversation between you and your partner limited to directions and clearing intersections? If any, and I mean any, idle chit chat is involved, then I don't see how a passenger could be any more or less distracting. Of course driving around and not talking when ever the ambulance is in gear is going to get boring real quickly.
Also, to be fair, if I'm driving, the status of the radio (I generally don't care about the station, but I hold sole veto power over the volume) and whether any passengers are up front are solely at my discretion.
Empty my trash, Jake :O
Im glad to know that you and your partner arent in my town driving hot towards me and my family while listening to music and chit chatting with the stranger in the front with you.I've seen what ambulance accidents look like, however accidents also occur (including a bunch of really nasty ones. Kinda of like this one which cost the attendant her arm...) regardless of if a patient is on board or not or if the ambulance is going anywhere specific. If simple talking or listening to the radio is so distracting while driving the ambulance, then why won't they cause an accident when a patient isn't on board? What I'm trying to figure out is if this is a "No talking period," or "no talking when a patinet is on board." The first means that the driver sucks at driving, the second means that there's a lack of understanding that ambulances crash just as easily without a patient on board as they do with a patient on board.
Yes, the driver's job isn't to know what is going on with the patient. Of course that's also what the sentence, "Unfortunately, I don't know what's going on back there since I'm up here" is for.
Im glad to know that you and your partner arent in my town driving hot towards me and my family while listening to music and chit chatting with the stranger in the front with you.
There is no reason for anybody to ride in front besides communication. This is an ambulance, not a taxi cab.
I guess thats what seperates a paramedic being the boss of the ambulance and not a basic.
Q. Can I ride up front on the way to hospital?
My partners always know the answer to that is no. The only time that family/friends/etc get to ride in the ambulance is if they are hurt also or I need them in the back for communication purposes (deaf, children, etc). Up front is useless and it just adds possible patients if the ambulance would be in an accident and they tend to distract my driver. Not cool.
Im glad to know that you and your partner arent in my town driving hot towards me and my family while listening to music and chit chatting with the stranger in the front with you.
There is no reason for anybody to ride in front besides communication. This is an ambulance, not a taxi cab.
I guess thats what seperates a paramedic being the boss of the ambulance and not a basic.
I guess thats what seperates a paramedic being the boss of the ambulance and not a basic.
when I worked on a truck I let family ride wherever they were comfortable as long as it was in a seat with a belt on. Never had any issues. I even have discovered family riding in the back, particularly with terminally ill people to be theraputic for the family.
And I AM a medic. And JP has more education then probably half the medics on this forum, including myself, and I'd pick him to run a call ON me over 90% of the forum.
Im glad to know that you and your partner arent in my town driving hot towards me and my family while listening to music and chit chatting with the stranger in the front with you.
There is no reason for anybody to ride in front besides communication. This is an ambulance, not a taxi cab.
I guess thats what seperates a paramedic being the boss of the ambulance and not a basic.
Did I mention anything about lights and sirens? No. I was referring to playing music while on calls and letting family or friends ride in the ambulance.I'm so happy I'm not in your town where, apparently, if the ambulance is moving (regardless of if there is a patient, the patient's condition, or even if you're on a call) the lights and sirens are on.
Edit:
Oh, and nice personal attack. I guess the ability to differentiate between using the woo woos (including driving down to the local McDonalds) and not using the woo woos is what separates those of us with degrees and those who went to a medic mill (look, I can play this game too!).
It's sad when people discredit another simply on their status as basic or medic.
Bad move there partner... You don't want to play revisionist post history with me. Does your area have some sort of magical definition of "driving hot" that differs from, I don't know, the rest of the entire country? Here's your post in case you forgot it...Did I mention anything about lights and sirens? No. I was referring to playing music while on calls and letting family or friends ride in the ambulance.
Im glad to know that you and your partner arent in my town driving hot towards me and my family while listening to music and chit chatting with the stranger in the front with you.
There is no reason for anybody to ride in front besides communication. This is an ambulance, not a taxi cab.
I guess thats what seperates a paramedic being the boss of the ambulance and not a basic.
I'm so happy that your company apparently treats its employees as idiots. It must be fun driving through town at 2 am with the siren on making sure that the imaginary cars are out of the way.It is our companies rule that if the lights are on, the sirens are on. So thats what I follow. I dont go blazing through town with lights and sirens to a call unless we are called code three for something. I worked too hard for my medic license to mess it up by hitting someone when im not supposed to be running hot anyways.
Sure, right after you apologize to me for treating me like a blithering idiot because my highest EMS level is EMT-B.And actually I have a degree too, so get off of your high horse with your medic mill speech.
I'll restate what I said earlier. If you can't drive with the radio on, you suck at driving.
I'm so happy that your company apparently treats its employees as idiots. It must be fun driving through town at 2 am with the siren on making sure that the imaginary cars are out of the way.
I'm so happy that your company apparently treats its employees as idiots. It must be fun driving through town at 2 am with the siren on making sure that the imaginary cars are out of the way. .
Gee, that's nice. Since we like to keep playing these games, in 6-7 years when I'm done with school and residency, I'll be treating patients based on my own judgment, not following some cook book protocols requiring no thought past, "Hmm, which protocol do I follow here." (Hey, this is fun, can we keep this BS up?).I am a medic so I hardly ever drive. I concentrate on treating pts who require more than monitoring their vitals on the way to the hospital....
That's nice... I live in a city of 162,000 in a county of almost 10 million (our cities are rather small in terms of land area. The city I grew up in was 60,000 in 9 sq. miles). You know what? Even in the middle of the night there is not that much traffic. It comes down to driving ability, specifically the ability to not drive like an a-hole.And I work in a town of 200,000+....the roads are never clear. We run a minimum of 12 calls a day.
And actually that is a state rule- a police officer just got charged with murder for hitting and killing someone while responding to a call with only lights on.
I think that driving is a little more nuanced than that. Regardless of siren status, you should be stopping at red lights anyways until it's safe to go through. If you pull up and there's no cars within blocks, then a toot on the siren doesn't do anything as there is no one to warn. I definitely agree, if cars are present in a manner that requires the use of the legal exemptions provided by the ambulance's emergency warning systems, that they should all be engaged. However, this isn't always the case, even in larger cities.There is no law against using your emergency flashers alone if you are following all normal traffic laws. So at 2 am, if you stop at your red lights until they turn green, if you drive the speed limit or lower, etc, you are well within the law.