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Originally posted by Discotech
Originally posted by Yummy Freelunch
They killed over 40 people that day. For no reason.
Hmmm and how many would have died had the Doctors not been there at all to assist some of the people ?
I'm sick of society and its self imposed judges who think they know better about a situation they were never involved. Too many people these days think they know better even without experience or knowledge of a situation and enjoy far too much finger pointing at others just to play the "blame game"
Just out of curiosity, where were you ? Did you not come to the aid of these poor innocents who were murdered ? Why didn't YOU do something to help them ?
Originally posted by Yummy Freelunch
As I stated before, you obviously didnt read the whole story. And it wasn't just the doctors getting these people out, it was guards and flight attendants from the helicopters.
The doctors even tried to stop a man from getting his mother out, and told him "you cant leave", and he stated, "LIKE HELL WE CANT!" and got her out, thankfully..
So side with whoever you want...it will be your own karma, not mine.
Today triage is used in accidents and disasters when the number of injured exceeds available resources. Surprisingly, perhaps, there is no consensus on how best to do this. Typically, medical workers try to divvy up care to achieve the greatest good for the greatest number of people. There is an ongoing debate about how to do this and what the “greatest good” means. Is it the number of lives saved? Years of life saved? Best “quality” years of life saved? Or something else?
At least nine well-recognized triage systems exist. Most call for people with relatively minor injuries to wait while patients in the worst shape are evacuated or treated. Several call for medical workers to sort the injured into another category: patients who are seen as having little chance of survival given the resources on hand.
Wynn described turning to an elderly woman who was unconscious with labored breathing. She then prepared a syringe with morphine and midazolam, pushed it slowly into the woman’s IV line and watched her breathing ease. The woman died a short time later, which didn’t disturb Wynn because she had appeared to be close to death. Wynn told me that at that point all the staff could offer was “comfort, peace and dignity.” She said: “We did the best we could do. It was the right thing to do under the circumstances.”
She added: “But even if it had been euthanasia, it’s not something we don’t really do every day — it just goes under a different name.”
Thiele has a different memory of what happened. “We covered his face with a towel” until he stopped breathing, Thiele told me.
He says that it took less than a minute for the man to die and that he didn’t suffer. “This was totally against every fiber in my body,” Thiele told me, but he also said he knew what he did was right. “We were abandoned by the government, we were abandoned by Tenet, and clearly nobody was going to take care of these people in their dying moments.” He added, “I did what I would have wanted done to me if the roles were reversed.”