SomeManagement808 t1_iuvesbm wrote
Reply to comment by HappyFishDota in Denver firefighters suspended for getting woman pronounced dead even though she was alive by xraygun2014
Speak on things you actually know my guy. This is not even close to accurate. 99.9999% chance you made this shit up
KrippledElephan t1_iuvk2ed wrote
Literally šš. I currently work as an EMT in Colorado we are literally told to never bring in a dead pt and to work them on scene and once reasonable measures of life saving measures have been taken we are allowed to call it and end life saving measures. We are not legally pronouncing them dead but we are stopping life saving efforts. This dude has literally 0 idea wtf he was talking about
sterfri99 t1_iuw5jbn wrote
Bro, you can both be right depending on where you work. Iām a medic, and we bring in dead pts if the doc is in the mood. Pulseless vtachs and vfibs usually end up getting transported. Asystole almost never. Sometimes PEA. Stop and remember for a second that America is a massive and diverse place and your experience isnāt the same as everyone elseās. Donāt talk down to him when youāre just as wrong
SomeManagement808 t1_iv0qti5 wrote
The 99.99% dude talking out his ass isn't in the medical field. He's a cop. And spreading misinformation is his second day job.
sterfri99 t1_iv1o7t4 wrote
I responded directly to the EMT above me. Heās wrong too but he was more confident about it. We transport dead bodies sometimes
SomeManagement808 t1_iv2hwcq wrote
how can he be wrong when he is only speaking to what he's told at his place of work in Colorado? he's not speaking for everybody everywhere like officer dumbass is.
sterfri99 t1_iv2pyzh wrote
āThis dude has literally 0 idea wtf heās talking aboutā is incorrect because heās applying his singular experience in Colorado to someone working elsewhere under different protocols. We transport dead bodies in my state. The guy I responded to said thatās not what happens. Heās objectively wrong and I called him out on it as a higher level of care provider. In my area, doctors pronounce the patient 99.99% of the time. If someone works in a different system where things are done differently I wouldnāt tell him heās wrong
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