Nighttime is always good for a few fights and you've caught a decent one.
A couple of guys from out of town got mugged and attacked with a knife. Nothing major, but the report in your mind already has the phrase "copious ETOH odor" so both are getting full c-spine precautions with various bruises forming on their faces and some superficial lacerations to their faces, necks and torsos.
Nothing worth screaming towards the trauma center for, but certainly taking your time for a full secondary assessment.
As you're completing C-spine precautions on the man on the bench seat and indicate your driver to go, a police officer jumps in the back and begins asking the men questions. Completely understandable, so you get a head start on your charting in the few moments he takes to finish up getting different descriptions from your patients, who are clearly intoxicated beyond remembering.
You exchange your professional courtesies and the officer climbs out and closes the door. As you begin to pull away from the curb, he opens the door and asks you to divert over 4 blocks for a lineup, they think they have the suspect in custody.
Both men are in full C-spine precautions.
Divert oven and have your patients ID the suspect or not?
You make the call.
A couple of guys from out of town got mugged and attacked with a knife. Nothing major, but the report in your mind already has the phrase "copious ETOH odor" so both are getting full c-spine precautions with various bruises forming on their faces and some superficial lacerations to their faces, necks and torsos.
Nothing worth screaming towards the trauma center for, but certainly taking your time for a full secondary assessment.
As you're completing C-spine precautions on the man on the bench seat and indicate your driver to go, a police officer jumps in the back and begins asking the men questions. Completely understandable, so you get a head start on your charting in the few moments he takes to finish up getting different descriptions from your patients, who are clearly intoxicated beyond remembering.
You exchange your professional courtesies and the officer climbs out and closes the door. As you begin to pull away from the curb, he opens the door and asks you to divert over 4 blocks for a lineup, they think they have the suspect in custody.
Both men are in full C-spine precautions.
Divert oven and have your patients ID the suspect or not?
You make the call.
Comments
If the cop got mad about it, I'd expect more than a written warning next time they saw you in your POV... but no way would I do this.
A polite refusal is in order.
Maybe if the patient wasnt fully immobilised, and explicitly stated he was either going to identify the assailant or would refuse to go to hospital (and I was worried about said patient) would I CONSIDER allowing the ID process.
In this case however, absolutely not, no way, nada!
Sorry, officer, wish we could help ya.
A polite but firm "No." to this request.
Sure, it's obvious to the majority of us what different levels of intoxication there are, but your job is to provide patient care, not be a trial lawyer.
Of course, I can't imagine any Cop worth his salt would bother pursuing the issue if the "victims" are already on a board and ready for transport. That's why there are photo lineups for a later time.
You guys.....You gotta learn to think outside the "box".
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