reply to post by Kingfanpaul
As a paramedic I risked my life every day, I have been exposed to all sorts of nasty things, I have almost been hit on the road many of times. I have
been shot at, stabbed, and attacked more than once. I have worked 100 plus hours straight with little to no sleep, I have payed many prices, but I
will not attempt something that I and my patient are not going to survive. Again it does'nt help the victim if you die trying to save them. That
doesn't mean that you shy away from danger, I have gone into situations that were pretty sticky because that was my job and I was properly trained to
give both my patient and I the best chance of survival possible. But as an example I would not attempt a cliff rescue or a swiftwater rescue unless I
had the basic safety equipment and training, unless my assesment of the situation said I could pull it off, then at that point I choose to take the
risk of dying. Every situation calls for a risk vs reward assesment of the situation that involves many aspects not just safety of yourself.
If you think working in the rescue field means that you have to give your life in a stupid attempt that if fails will not only kill you but your
patient and possibly more bystanders, then you are watchin to much TV.
Take 9/11 for instance, that is a situation were any rescue worker would have done the same thing. 343 fire service members died trying to save
thousands of people. Look at the group working in the nuclear reactors in Japan, there is a handfull of people who will probably die a horrible death
working to save countless number of lives.
The life of the victim is no more valuble than the life of the rescue worker, life is life and personally I do this line of work because I enjoy
helping people, not because I want to throw my life away at some flawed half thought out rescue attempt.
My initial response was only pointing out that there is no law stating that a rescue worker has to put his safety and well being above the victim,
just safety rules that promote the use of common sense in order to ensure the people tasked with saving the citizens of the community don't die
needlessly in a stupid senseless manor.
Now back to the subject
The situation here is less likely to be about the medical staff and more about the safety of the other patients in the hospital. If you have 200
people in that hospital and you bring one patient who has had major radiation exposure into that faciltiy you have now exposed 200 people and made the
problem worse and completly taken that facilty out of commision. Every system I have worked in has a protocol for toxic exposure in place, most
counties in california have 1 or more facilities with the ability to set up temp facility outside able to handle toxic off gassing and exposure. The
fire departments are trained to decontaminate patients before bringing them into a facility. You need to look at the bigger picture here,
Fire, police and EMS workers die in the line of duty all the time, its a risk we take and accept, but throwing your life away in a stupid manor isn't
one of them