T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV0 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.im not a paramedic. but i do know ambulances will travel slowly if the patient is at risk of more pain or injury from being thrown around in the back !
some years ago my son had a double break in his lower leg. he was taken to hospital by ambulance (25 miles away) at a very slow pace.
the break was so bad that the drugs the ambulance crew were able to give, gave him very little relief from pain.
so to answer your question, i think its more about the living than the departed.
Ambulances often travel at around 4 m.p.h. when carrying a patient with a back injury, when smoothness is essential. Often a police escort will travel in front, spotting potholes etc. so that the ambulance driver can avoid them. Once, as a traffic police officer I needed to urinate when I was asked to escort an ambulance. I thought the job would be over in minutes, but it turned out to be one of those cases which had to be escorted for about 35 miles at walking pace. Quite an uncomfortable journey.
There is nothing in law to say that danny, but it is generally accepted that a doctor is the only person with the necessary skill and knowledge. I am not a doctor but I pronounced someone dead, and it was accepted, when his body was spread over 150 yards of railway track, and some of it had been to the nearest town and back on the front of the train.
Sorry Grunty, paramedics and nurses can only make an assessment, a doctor is needed to pronounce it in the same way as a doctor is the only person who can sign a death certififcate. This from the British Medical Journal
"The scene is familiar. Ambulance staff respond to an emergency telephone call: "I think my husband has died." They find a pulseless, apnoeic corpse, in their view clearly beyond help. His distressed widow requires professional support and care. But there are no definitive signs of death. Thus, because ambulance personnel cannot pronounce "life extinct" (they are not, after all, doctors), the charade must be acted out of instituting full resuscitation measures while removing the victim "from public gaze."
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