Without evidence of benefit, an intervention should not be presumed to be beneficial or safe.

- Rogue Medic

Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates – Part III

Continuing from Part I and from Part II.

Griffiths said CMS would not discuss whether hospital security should carry stun guns or other weapons because that is a “law enforcement” issue that falls outside CMS jurisdiction.[1]

The CMS approach is dial 911 and hope that nothing bad happens before the police handle the violence, or dial 911 and hope that nothing bad happens because the police have been called to handle the violence.

Certainly, if a patient can survive the JCAHO/TJC (Joint Commission for Accrediting Healthcare Organizations/The Joint Commission) social services questionnaire, that patient must meet the definition of stable – even if that patient’s violent behavior does not meet any definition of stable.

A patient with a head injury would be better treated by the police, rather than by hospital staff.

A patient with hypoglycemia would be better treated by the police, rather than by hospital staff.

A patient with a brain tumor would be better treated by the police, rather than by hospital staff.

A patient with a psychiatric condition would be better treated by the police, rather than by hospital staff.

Trust CMS. Just seclude patients and call the police. Do not treat!

CMS spokeswoman Ellen Griffiths is making it clear that the approach of CMS is not to consider the ways their rules may affect the overall care of patients. CMS is just a rules organization that does not have to deal with reality.

Lehigh Valley’s actions ran afoul of patient protection rules meant to limit the ways patients can be restrained, said Holli Senior, deputy press secretary for the Pennsylvania Health Department. Weapons should not be used in the context of restraining a patient. If a physical confrontation goes beyond the point at which usual restraints are in order, then local police should be called, Senior said.[1]

This is the problem.

The people making these rules are attempting to limit the ways patients can be restrained.

Perhaps they never heard the saying that when all you have is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail.

How does the Pennsylvania Health Department come to these conclusions?

How will patients benefit from a rule that makes an arbitrary and binary distinction between patients and criminals?

I’m sorry, at this point you have crossed the line and are no longer a patient. You have been discharged according to Pennsylvania Health Department rules. We are attempting to barricade you away from people we still consider to be patients. We will wait for the police to come and take you away. Maybe the police can mange your blood sugar problems/head injury/psychiatric problems/et cetera better than the doctors and nurses can. All hail the omniscient PHD!

Welcome to the Pennsylvania Health Department. We are here to toggle you.

The health department, which has “deemed status” in Pennsylvania to carry out CMS rules for hospitals governed by Medicare rules, responded to a complaint about a specific incident in which a Lehigh Valley security officer used a stun gun on a patient. The resulting inspection led to a review of patient records, which showed 3 other incidents with stun guns during the previous few years. Lehigh Valley started using stun guns in 2007.[1]

A single incident?

An average of one TASER use per year?

Recklessness!

Abuse!

What if we look at each use of a TASER?

The regulators found fault with Lehigh Valley, according to an October 2010 inspection report, because the stun guns were used without a preceding attempting to restrain or seclude the patients. The incidents involved the following:

•An agitated patient in the ED received multiple doses of Ativan, Haldol, and valium during about 2 hours and was still agitated. Security staff was called and the patient “came at” security, at which point the patient was stunned.

•A patient was asked to sign a transfusion consent and refused, becoming agitated, and began yelling at staff. The patient was using an intravenous pole as a weapon and barricaded himself in the restroom. Security talked to the patient, but he became more agitated and ultimately a stun gun was used. Police were called and took a report.

•An ED patient ran out of an examination room, slamming the door, hitting the wall, and yelling. Medical staff tried to calm the person, and eventually security was called. The patient attempted to punch a security officer, “who intercepted the patient’s punches and took the patient to the ground.” The patient began fighting with both officers, and one used a stun gun to subdue him.

•An upset patient left the ED, and security staff pursued the person for fear he would harm himself or others and called police. The patient pushed a security officer, striking the officer with his fist and grabbing for the officer’s belt containing pepper spray and a stun gun. Another officer warned the patient 3 times and then discharged a stun gun.

In each instance, the health department said, security staff should have followed policy and restrained or secluded the patient or waited for police to arrive.[1]

the stun guns were used without a preceding attempting to restrain or seclude the patients. . . . received multiple doses of Ativan, Haldol, and valium

And we certainly wouldn’t want to consider multiple doses of Ativan, Haldol, and Valium as attempts to restrain (or seclude) the patient, since these are just chemical/medical restraints.

the stun guns were used without a preceding attempting to restrain or seclude the patients. . . . Security talked to the patient, but he became more agitated and ultimately a stun gun was used.

And we certainly wouldn’t want to consider talking with the patient as appropriate, since we only want the patient secluded while we wait for the police to show up to treat the patient..

the stun guns were used without a preceding attempting to restrain or seclude the patients. . . . Medical staff tried to calm the person, and eventually security was called. The patient attempted to punch a security officer, “who intercepted the patient’s punches and took the patient to the ground.”

And we certainly wouldn’t want to consider medical staff trying to calm the patient as attempts to restrain (or seclude) the patient. We also would not want to view security’s attempts to restrain the patient as attempts to restrain the patient.

the stun guns were used without a preceding attempting to restrain or seclude the patients. . . . security staff pursued the person for fear he would harm himself or others and called police. The patient pushed a security officer, striking the officer with his fist and grabbing for the officer’s belt containing pepper spray and a stun gun. Another officer warned the patient 3 times and then discharged a stun gun.

And we certainly wouldn’t want to consider attempts by security to keep the patient away from other patients as attempts to restrain (or seclude) the patient. We also would not want to view security’s attempts to restrain the patient as attempts to restrain the patient.

Better to let the patient harm himself or others. After all, JCAHO/TJC won’t have any problem with that, as long as the appropriate suicidal questionnaire has been filled out by this oh so cooperative patient.

If the patient does not try to kill himself, but tries to kill someone else, the regulatory agency will not be at fault for creating an environment that makes it likely that the violent patient will be able to harm/kill other patients.

There will probably be a rule created along the lines of permitting law enforcement activity in a hospital, even though the goal should be for the hospital to treat the violent patient.

I also wrote about the problems with violent patients in MedicCast – EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar. Jamie Davie discussed this in the podcast EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar.

Footnotes:

[1] Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates
by Jan Greene
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 57, Issue 4 , Pages A20-A23, April 2011

Free Full Text from Annals of Emergency Medicine                 Free PDF from Annals of Emergency Medicine

.

Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates – Part II

Continuing from Part I.

CMS’s actions in Pennsylvania raise a question: Should all hospitals that must comply with CMS regulations stop using stun guns? According to a survey in Campus Safety Magazine, 26% of hospital security officers carry “less-lethal” weapons such as neuromuscular incapacitating devices (stun guns made by Taser International), 7% carry handguns, and 13% carry both.[1]

CMS is the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

CMS spokeswoman Ellen Griffiths was careful not to extend the Lehigh Valley case into a national mandate for all hospitals. CMS, and any state agencies that act on CMS’s behalf, usually respond to complaints rather than actively inspecting hospitals for compliance with rules. But she did observe, as did a Pennsylvania Health Department spokeswoman, that the CMS rules strongly discourage use of weapons with patients. The rules state:

“CMS does not consider the use of weapons in the application of restraint or seclusion as a safe, appropriate health care intervention. For the purposes of this regulation, the term “weapon” includes, but is not limited to, pepper spray, mace, nightsticks, tazers, cattle prods, stun guns, and pistols. Security staff may carry weapons as allowed by hospital policy, and State and Federal law. However, the use of weapons by security staff is considered a law enforcement action, not a health care intervention. CMS does not support the use of weapons by any hospital staff as a means of subduing a patient in order to place that patient in restraint or seclusion. If a weapon is used by security or law enforcement personnel on a person in a hospital (patient, staff, or visitor) to protect people or hospital property from harm, we would expect the situation to be handled as a criminal activity and the perpetrator be placed in the custody of local law enforcement.”1[1]

Therefore, having a bunch of people wrestle with the patient, raising the heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate, intracranial pressure, et cetera even higher than they would be with the use of a TASER, is less harmful to the patient because this more dangerous practice is not classified as using a weapon.

Griffiths said CMS would not discuss whether hospital security should carry stun guns or other weapons because that is a “law enforcement” issue that falls outside CMS jurisdiction.[1]

This is entirely about CMS telling hospitals how to handle violent patients.

Dealing with violent patients is a patient care issue, even when law enforcement are needed to assist with managing the patient.

For the Pennsylvania Health Department to abandon these patients to law enforcement is not fair to those who treat violent patients in Pennsylvania.

For the Pennsylvania Health Department to abandon these patients to law enforcement is not fair to violent patients in Pennsylvania.

This may come as news to CMS spokeswoman Ellen Griffiths but –

Not all violent patients are criminals.

I also wrote about the problems with violent patients in MedicCast – EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar. Jamie Davie discussed this in the podcast EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar.

To be continued in Part III.

Footnotes:

[1] Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates
by Jan Greene
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 57, Issue 4 , Pages A20-A23, April 2011

Free Full Text from Annals of Emergency Medicine                 Free PDF from Annals of Emergency Medicine

.

Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates – Part I

There is an interesting article in Annals of Emergency Medicine about contradictory rules from conflicting agencies that affect patient care.

One emergency department (ED) gets cited by a federal agency for using stun guns to subdue violent patients. Another is fined for failing to provide a safe workplace. It is a federal catch-22, leaving ED administrators caught between seemingly contradictory mandates from federal bureaucratic silos.[1]

Different agencies.

Different rules.

No communication.

Faulty logic.

If those of us taking care of patients were guilty of the same errors, we would expect to be fined, or shut down, although probably not for faulty logic.

Yet, when those who regulate us are guilty of these errors, we are expected to satisfy all of their demands and be grateful for the abuse attention.

Dr. Kane has the sense that violence in hospitals is getting worse. Statistics back up her perception. ED visits resulting in violence increased from 16,277 to 21,406 between 2005 and 2008, nearly a one-third increase, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Visits to the ED for drug- and alcohol-related incidents increased during that time from 1.6 million to 2 million.[1]

Do the federal, or state, regulatory agencies feel the need to do something to protect those taking care of the patients or to help those taking care of the patients to protect their patients?

No. These regulatory agencies just create more responsibilities for others. These regulatory agencies do not have any responsibility for the damage they cause.

The mayhem is having an influence on hospital staff. More than half of ED nurses are victims of physical or verbal abuse at work in a given week, according to a survey by the Emergency Nurses Association released in September 2010.[1]

CMS’s actions in Pennsylvania raise a question: Should all hospitals that must comply with CMS regulations stop using stun guns? According to a survey in Campus Safety Magazine, 26% of hospital security officers carry “less-lethal” weapons such as neuromuscular incapacitating devices (stun guns made by Taser International), 7% carry handguns, and 13% carry both.[1]

CMS is the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

In Pennsylvania, the use of TASERs on patients is not considered to be acceptable, because these weapons act by neuromuscular incapacitation. On the other hand, doctors may use paralytics, which are medicines that cause neuromuscular incapacitation, and that neuromuscular incapacitation is considered a treatment, rather than a weapon.

Anything can be a weapon. All that matters is the way that it is used.

Pretty much the same can be said for treatments.

Botulism is extremely poisonous WMD (Weapon of Mass Destruction), but it can be used as a treatment. Ditto radiation.

Just because something is generally perceived as a weapon does not mean that its use is always harmful.

The TASER can be an effective means of protecting patients, but this is something that the regulators do not seem to be capable of understanding in their overly simplistic view of the way the world works.

I also wrote about the problems with violent patients in MedicCast – EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar. Jamie Davie discussed this in the podcast EMS and Health Care Workplace Violence on Federal Radar.

To be continued in Part II and later in Part III.

Footnotes:

[1] Patient Safety Versus Workplace Safety – Stun Gun Debate Illustrates Dueling Federal Mandates
by Jan Greene
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 57, Issue 4 , Pages A20-A23, April 2011

Free Full Text from Annals of Emergency Medicine                 Free PDF from Annals of Emergency Medicine

.

Zero Tolerance and TSA Wannabes


Picture credit[1]

Does looking at that picture make you just want to surrender and hand the controls of an airliner to a terrorist?

3 inches long.

Plastic.

No moving parts.

Not even a trigger.

But it is a replica gun, so it was banned from a flight, not by the American TSA (Transportation Security Agency), but by the British security people at Gatwick Airport.

It is true that a replica can be used to hijack a plane, but is anyone going to surrender a plane to an attempted terrorist brandishing a miniature replica?

Would it even be possible to brandish a miniature replica gun?

brandish

verb
[with object]

wave or flourish (something, especially a weapon) as a threat or in anger or excitement[2]

Perhaps the attempted terrorist could threaten people with the miniature replica, but would the greater threat be from violence or laughter?

[youtube]4bCyIAsSid8[/youtube]

When we have people mindlessly enforcing rules just because they are too afraid to think, aren’t these mindless rules gnomes more dangerous than the terrorists they are supposed to be protecting us from?

Mrs Lloyd, 59, who regularly visits Britain to see her mother, said: ‘I took it to the airport still in its wrapping, but they discovered the little gun when it was scanned.

‘It is only about three inches long and there are no moving parts. There isn’t even a trigger.

‘But they wouldn’t let me take it with me. I had it in my hand luggage. I just didn’t think it would cause a problem. They said rules were rules. There was no flexibility or common sense.’[1]

We need to insist that this kind of person, who follows rules without thinking, be prohibited from enforcing any rules.

The stupid may be much more dangerous than the malicious.

She had bought the figure on a visit to the Royal Signals Museum, in Blandford, Dorset.

Museum spokesman Adam Forty said: ‘This is a military museum and takes security very seriously, especially around military installations and airports, but this does seem more than a little excessive. The “firearm” is three inches long and cast out of resin.

‘It’s probably just as well we didn’t sell her a toy tank.’[1]

One odd thing is that this happened a while ago, but coverage just started.

The story appears to have been a long-time in the making.

The National Post of Toronto writes “Ms. Lloyd purchased the figuring during an April, 2009, trip, but the story is making news now because the Royal Signals Museum at Blandford Camp …, where she bought the souvenir, went public with the story after learning about it from Ms. Lloyd this past autumn.[3]

They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety. – Benjamin Franklin

What about those who prohibit responsibility and/or prohibit thinking?

What punishment do they deserve?

What punishment do their willing victims deserve?

Just give us the illusion of safety, but don’t make us think!

Footnotes:

[1] Airport bans toy soldier’s three-inch rifle from plane… because it’s a safety threat
Daily Mail
Last updated at 8:54 PM on 27th January 2011
Article

[2] brandish
Oxford Dictionaries
Definition

[3] Three-inch toy gun sparks security flap at London Gatwick
By Ben Mutzabaugh
USA Today
Posted Jan 28 2011 9:56AM

.

TSA – Protecting Us From Pilots

This ignores the obvious.

At least one group of air travelers will get a break from the body scans and pat-downs that have provoked a national outcry.[1]

The agency said pilots would still have to pass through a metal detector at airport checkpoints and present two photo identifications that would be verified against a flight crew database.[1]

Pilots are not the problem.

The pilot does not need to use a weapon to crash a plane into a building.

The job of the pilot is to fly the plane without hitting anything.

What is the pilot going to do with a weapon, recreate the hostage scene from Blazing Saddles?

The TSA (Transportation Security Administration) probably has contingency plans for that kind of threat.

Imagine being a passenger on a plane being flown according to TSA regulations.

Is there any reason to believe that TSA improves our safety?

These searches are not appropriate for the rest of us, either.

“I don’t know why everybody is running to buy these expensive and useless machines. I can overcome the body scanners with enough explosives to bring down a Boeing 747,” Rafi Sela told parliamentarians probing the state of aviation safety in Canada.

“That’s why we haven’t put them in our airport,” Sela said, referring to Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion International Airport, which has some of the toughest security in the world.

Sela, former chief security officer of the Israel Airport Authority and a 30-year veteran in airport security and defence technology, helped design the security at Ben Gurion.[2]

You will be safe, if you use this Voodoo.

If we are scared, we will often trust anyone who promises us safety. No matter how illogical that decision is.

TSA’s new book for kids: “My First Cavity Search”

This has to win for DHS Quote of the Year, from Secretary Janet Napolitano on the issue:

I really want to say, look, let’s be realistic and use our common sense.

[3]

TSA protects the nation’s transportation systems to ensure freedom of movement for people and commerce.[4]

Freedom of movement?

Political language — and with variations this is true of all political parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists — is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind. – George Orwell.

Footnotes:

[1] T.S.A. Grants Airline Pilots an Exception to Screenings
By Ron Nixon
Published: November 20, 2010
NY Times
Article

[2] Full-body scanners are waste of money, Israeli expert says
By Sarah Schmidt
Vancouver Sun
CANWEST News Service
April 23, 2010
Article

[3] TSA Backscatter X-ray Backlash
Schneier on Security
November 19, 2010
Article

[4] Google preview of Transportation Security Administration search
Link

.

The Scapegoats Will Be Punished

Apparently, my last post was just about the time the news was published.

Acting Crew Chief Josie Dimon, a union employee was fired after she was heard on transmissions between paramedics making disparaging, profanity laced comments such as “this ain’t no [expletive] taxi service.”[1]

Is that inappropriate? Absolutely.

Should someone be fired for speaking that way with dispatch? There are going to be many different approaches to that question.

How has the city handled any previous cases of use of obscenity on the radio?

How has the city handled any previous cases of bad attitude expressed on the radio?

If there have been any cases of similar behavior, was the person(s) fired?

Is the use of a public forum (using a press conference to announce the firing) special to this case?

Did the bad attitude and use of obscenity contribute to the death of Curtis Mitchell in any way?

If she is such a bad employee that she needs to be fired, why did I hear that she was working on the street and had to be called back to base just before the press conference?

Why was the discipline kept a secret, even from those being disciplined?

What is the top secret higher standard that Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Public Safety Director Michael Huss are enforcing?

It certainly is not a higher standard of disaster preparedness, because they did not fire themselves.

Or maybe they did, but it is also top secret.

Were EMS crews told that they would not receive any assistance?

Were EMS crews told that they would have to dig themselves through the snow to their patients?

Since the snow was coming down fast and being blown back where people shoveled, that would mean digging their way to the patient and then back to the ambulance with the patient.

How long do we want to have a patient outside, while having medics do the job that should be done by equipment?

If a patient is dropped, is that the fault of the crew carrying a patient on snow and ice covered roads?

Who came up with this plan?

Not the medics.

What about 4 wheel drive vehicles? Supervisors could respond with 4 wheel drive vehicles to safely transport patients, rather than dragging/pushing/dropping the patient through the snow and ice.

That would be a good plan.

That was not the plan in Pittsburgh.

After the storm, the decision was made to send the fire department on calls to help shovel snow and carry patients.

Apparently, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Public Safety Director Michael Huss think that Pittsburgh has a bunch of fire fighters sitting around with nothing to do.

Let’s send fire fighters to do the work that should be done by snow plows and/or 4 wheel drive vehicles.

If there is a fire, maybe Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Public Safety Director Michael Huss will decide that the fire department should just walk to the fire and throw snow on the fire.

Why waste money on the appropriate equipment?

Nobody will mind waiting for fire fighters to walk to the fire. Would they?

We don’t need no stinkin’ snow plows!

An excellent plan!

What else is part of their plan?

Crew Chief Kim Long, also a union employee, and two non-union supervisors, District Chief Norman Aubil and District Chief Ron Curry were suspended for three days.[1]

There is no mention of anything they did that justifies these suspensions.

2 independent investigations cleared the medics. Even the wife of Curtis Mitchell does not blame the medics.

Scapegoats.

What about Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Public Safety Director Michael Huss?

They may not have created all of this mess, but they couldn’t seem to be able to figure out how to call the National guard until days after the death of Curtis Mitchell.

We all had ample time to prepare.

– Cecil County Director of Emergency Services Richard Brooks.[2]

I agree. We did have time to prepare.

Why wasn’t Pittsburgh prepared?

Just get out and walk is not an acceptable disaster plan.

Don’t worry. If anything bad happens, we’ll just blame the people who did not work hard enough to make up for our lack of planning.

I have also written about this here –

City may discipline EMS workers – Public Safety Director Michael Huss – 02/18/10

Where Was Public Safety Director Michael Huss during the Death of Curtis Mitchell? – 02/20/10

Public Safety Director Michael Huss and Others Continue to Blame the Medics for the Snow – 02/22/10

The Need for Evidence Before Assessing Guilt – 02/24/10

Anonymous Comments on the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 03/02/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part I – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part II – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part III – 03/22/10

What kind of punishment do you get for NOT disobeying dispatch? – 03/23/10

The Scapegoats Will Be Punished – 03/23/10

Pittsburgh – Punishment, not Planning – 03/24/10

Josie Dimon was the Scapegoat of Public Safety Director Michael Huss in the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 02/16/11

Michael Huss – Pittsburgh EMS Only Needs Someone Good With a Shovel – 02/16/11

Links updated 02/16/11.

Footnotes:

[1] 4 Receive Disciplinary Action In Hazelwood Death
Mar 23, 2010 2:56 pm US/Eastern
KDKA.com Pittsburgh
Article

[2] From Mitigation Journal

EMS Under the Bus in Pittsburgh – 02/28/10

And in the Mitigation Journal podcast –

MJ156: Winter Storms: Interview with Mr. Richard Brooks, Director Cecil County MD, Emergency Services – 02/23/10

From the MedicCast

Snow Storm 2010 Response and Episode 208 of the MedicCast – 02/28/10

.

What kind of punishment do you get for NOT disobeying dispatch?

There is a video in the article. It cannot be embeded.

Tony Weinmann, president of the Fraternal Association of Professional Paramedics, said Monday that the city notified two paramedics of pending discipline in connection with Curtis Mitchell’s death.[1]

These paramedics have received notice that they will be disciplined, in spite of being cleared of responsibility in 2 separate investigations. They have not been told what kind of discipline, although it has been leaked to the press that at least one will be fired. At the time this story was published, this morning, one of the paramedics was still at work on the street.

She was still not aware of what kind of punitive action will be taken by the city for being cleared by 2 independent investigations. If she is investigated a third time and cleared, maybe Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and Public Safety Director Michael Huss will have to execute her.

Pittsburgh Public Safety Director Mike Huss would not confirm reports of discipline, but he said the city has completed its investigation and is planning a news conference at 1:30 p.m.[1]

It is now 3:00 PM and still there is no new report of the form of punishment.

His longtime partner, Sharon Edge, told WTAE Channel 4 Action News that she didn’t think the two paramedics should lose their jobs.

“I think they used them as a scapegoat. I don’t want them to get fired because that wouldn’t be right, and Curtis wouldn’t have wanted that,” said Edge.[1]

2 independent investigations and the person most affected by the death of her common law husband. The same conclusion. The medics are not at fault in causing the death of Curtis Mitchell.

Scapegoats.

The paramedics’ union criticized city leaders on Saturday, saying, “It is quite obvious prior to this incident that the city was ill-prepared for this snow disaster. The administrators in charge of the public’s safety did not put the employees of the city of Pittsburgh in a position to carry out their responsibilities in an effective manner.”[1]

Now, if I were the skeptical type, I might suspect that this is an attempt by the people responsible for the handling of emergencies in the City of Pittsburgh to deflect blame onto someone else. Secret higher standards for the people actually doing the work, but lower standards for those in charge. Why so many secrets?

Would that be an unreasonable suspicion?

We all had ample time to prepare.

– Cecil County Director of Emergency Services Richard Brooks.[2]

Cecil County does not handle emergencies the same way that Pittsburgh handles emergencies.

I have also written about this here –

City may discipline EMS workers – Public Safety Director Michael Huss – 02/18/10

Where Was Public Safety Director Michael Huss during the Death of Curtis Mitchell? – 02/20/10

Public Safety Director Michael Huss and Others Continue to Blame the Medics for the Snow – 02/22/10

The Need for Evidence Before Assessing Guilt – 02/24/10

Anonymous Comments on the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 03/02/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part I – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part II – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part III – 03/22/10

What kind of punishment do you get for NOT disobeying dispatch? – 03/23/10

The Scapegoats Will Be Punished – 03/23/10

Pittsburgh – Punishment, not Planning – 03/24/10

Josie Dimon was the Scapegoat of Public Safety Director Michael Huss in the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 02/16/11

Michael Huss – Pittsburgh EMS Only Needs Someone Good With a Shovel – 02/16/11

Links updated 02/16/11.

Footnotes:

[1] Paramedics To Be Disciplined For Man’s Death After Snowstorm – Curtis Mitchell Died, Despite Repeated Calls To Pittsburgh 911
ThePittsburghChannel.com
Posted: 3:54 pm EDT March 22, 2010
Updated: 11:02 am EDT March 23, 2010
Article

[2] From Mitigation Journal

EMS Under the Bus in Pittsburgh – 02/28/10

And in the Mitigation Journal podcast –

MJ156: Winter Storms: Interview with Mr. Richard Brooks, Director Cecil County MD, Emergency Services – 02/23/10

From the MedicCast

Snow Storm 2010 Response and Episode 208 of the MedicCast – 02/28/10

.

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part I


I have not been on any of the podcasts covering the Pittsburgh EMS response in the snow and ice, when Curtis Mitchell died. I just listened to the EMS Garage podcast that covered this as a part of the episode.

It seems that the less you know about what happened, the more you blame the medics. The topic seemed to be dominated by comments stating, the news said, or the news didn’t say.

Do we trust the news to get the story right?

Few people seem to be surprised at how little information was released.

Originally, the information released was that a couple of medics responded 3 times, but those medics refused to get out of their truck because they were lazy.

We now know that there were 6 different medics. The medics did not refuse to get out of the truck. The medics were canceled by dispatch. It appears that the crews were then reassigned to other patients, because they were running non-stop all day. Calls were waiting for ambulances to become available.

Running non-stop transporting patients in the snow and ice is somehow lazy?

This is to be expected during disaster conditions. This does not seem to be the experience of the critics, even though they claim to have extensive disaster experience.

These medics transported a lot of other patients.

How did the patients get to the hospital, if the medics did not get out of the truck?

How did the patients get to the hospital if these medics were lazy?

In this case, it appears that the media were fed misleading information by Public Safety Director Michael Huss. The man responsible for public safety essentially pointed his finger at the medics and squealed, They did it! They did it! They did it!

OK, squealed may not technically correct. That doesn’t mean that it is any less fair than anything Public Safety Director Michael Huss said. He is responsible for public safety, but apparently only when the sun is shining, but not too much sun.

Two mistakes, that many people have repeated –

The medics never got out of the truck.

And –

The medics never tried.

Does anyone have any evidence to support either statement?

Does anybody really think that this is true?

Why does anyone believe this?

Insanity?

Immaturity?

Gullibility?

Mass hallucination?

I believe that the reason is a lack of critical judgment.

Did any news report make either statement? If the medics did not get out of the truck, and no help was sent, who dug the ambulances out of the snow?

Public Safety Director Michael Huss did say something about the medics needing to get out of the truck, but is there any reason to believe that the words of Mr. Huss are at all credible?

The comments of Public Safety Director Michael Huss were what originally caught my attention. The comments remind me of a child trying to explain that he does not know what happened to the missing chocolate chip cookies, even though he is covered with melted chocolate.

Maybe the child is not guilty, but am I going to start looking for some mysterious stranger or maybe a cookie monster?

Still, this is the explanation that was repeated on the podcast. There was some dissent on the show, but the uninformed critics of the medics did seem to dominate the discussion. I like the EMS Garage. Chris Montera does a great job of encouraging discussion on important topics. This was a segment that will encourage people to blame the wrong people. This will encourage people to ignore disaster planning, because the medics can just get out of the truck and walk. The only way this is disaster planning, is by turning something that is not a disaster into a true disaster. Then management will blame the lowest people on the totem pole.

In a different podcast, covered on both Mitigation Journal and the MedicCast, there is a different approach to the topic. That is in Part II. Then there is Part III.

Podcasting on the death of Curtis Mitchell:

From Mitigation Journal

EMS Under the Bus in Pittsburgh – 02/28/10

And in the Mitigation Journal podcast –

MJ156: Winter Storms: Interview with Mr. Richard Brooks, Director Cecil County MD, Emergency Services – 02/23/10

From the MedicCast

Snow Storm 2010 Response and Episode 208 of the MedicCast – 02/28/10

From the EMS Garage

Up to My Pips: EMS Garage Episode 75 – 03/02/10

Writing on the death of Curtis Mitchell:

From Too Old To Work, Too Young To Retire

Trouble Right Here In Three River City – 02/19/10

Comment From Someone In Pittsburgh – 02/20/10

More From Pittsburgh – 02/23/10

Update On The Pittsburgh Story – 02/28/10

And Then I Realized… – 03/01/10

Fertilizer – 03/22/10

Human Sacrifice – 3/24/10

The Tapes Don’t Lie, But People Do – 3/29/10

The Drama Continues In Pittsburgh – 5/12/10

Let The Scapegoating Begin – 01/06/11

Common Sense Prevails – 02/15/11

From David Konig

EMS Blog Rounds Edition 32 – 03/09/10

Why You Need A Social Media Presence: The Case Of Pittsburgh EMS – 02/22/10

Yes Mary, It Is A Transportation System – 02/19/10

From 9-ECHO-1

Pittsburgh…my take on it – 02/23/10

Still Don’t Make It Right… – 03/20/10

From A Day In The Life Of An Ambulance Driver

As usual the truth is somewhere between the extremes – 02/20/10

From Pittsburgh Legal Back Talk

The Power of Saying “I’m Sorry”. – 02/21/10

Medic’s Perspective on Mitchell Case. – 02/22/10

The Need for Evidence Before Assessing Guilt. – 02/23/10

The View from Foggy Goggle. – 02/25/10

I have also written about this here –

City may discipline EMS workers – Public Safety Director Michael Huss – 02/18/10

Where Was Public Safety Director Michael Huss during the Death of Curtis Mitchell? – 02/20/10

Public Safety Director Michael Huss and Others Continue to Blame the Medics for the Snow – 02/22/10

The Need for Evidence Before Assessing Guilt – 02/24/10

Anonymous Comments on the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 03/02/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part I – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part II – 03/22/10

Podcasting, Critical Judgment, and the Death of Curtis Mitchell Part III – 03/22/10

What kind of punishment do you get for NOT disobeying dispatch? – 03/23/10

The Scapegoats Will Be Punished – 03/23/10

Pittsburgh – Punishment, not Planning – 03/24/10

Josie Dimon was the Scapegoat of Public Safety Director Michael Huss in the Death of Curtis Mitchell – 02/16/11

Michael Huss – Pittsburgh EMS Only Needs Someone Good With a Shovel – 02/16/11

Links updated 02/16/11.

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