Sasha
Forum Chief
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This is a scenario posed in class. We all FAILED.
You are responding to a 22 y/o female complaining of difficulty breathing. You arrive on scene, patient is sitting in a chair in the middle of the room, with a black box under the chair, holding her throat and staring at you.
We all held up our hands in the BSI seemingly universal sign (you know, you hold up gloved hands, pronate them.). We all say scene safe, insturctor says Go ahead, we walk up to the patient, get down on her level, ask her what the problem is, and then she spreads her legs so you can get a better look at the black box. The black box has a note on it that simply says BOOM
We all got exploded!
It really drove home the fact that saying scene safe does not make the scene safe and we have to use our eyes!
You are responding to a 22 y/o female complaining of difficulty breathing. You arrive on scene, patient is sitting in a chair in the middle of the room, with a black box under the chair, holding her throat and staring at you.
We all held up our hands in the BSI seemingly universal sign (you know, you hold up gloved hands, pronate them.). We all say scene safe, insturctor says Go ahead, we walk up to the patient, get down on her level, ask her what the problem is, and then she spreads her legs so you can get a better look at the black box. The black box has a note on it that simply says BOOM
We all got exploded!

It really drove home the fact that saying scene safe does not make the scene safe and we have to use our eyes!