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wagionvigil wrote:I would always send an adult during transport with scouts the same as with a pediatric auto accident victim. The scout cannot refuse treatment but since the leaders are their guardians they might be able to but I doubt that they would be that dumb. Leader swill always err or the side of caution
Chief J wrote:Congratulations on passing the EMT test.
As most before have states, and you reaffirmed, use your training and common sense and if in doubt error on the side of caution.
You will never run afoul of a parent or the legal system if you recomend/send a person to the hospital to be checked out and find out it is a monor injury. You could run into trouble if you decide the injury is not severe enough to go to the hospital and it really is more severe.
Best Wishes,
Chief j
riverwalk wrote:Great considerations about refusals. True, many people actually refuse treatment or transportation. But wagion answered it well. The Scout as a minor can't do so. A parent could, but then the attending medical personnel would have to decide if this was a life threatening situation. It gets tough in such cases. I am not dictating any procedure here, just helping your line of thinking. By all means learn what your parameters are by your certifying entity (State), given your Camp role. My experience in Scouting is that the on-site Scout reps (not Scouters but the professionals) will always go for the proper treatment approach. And yes, send an adult with them.
Remember also to log your treatment in the official First Aid Log for that event/Camp. Records can be very important and may not come up for YEARS!
A pound of prevention......and other good sayings, haha.
Ridge Runner wrote:Congrats, as a WEMT let me just say to follow your cert's protocols even in the backcountry,
Again, congrats and welcome to the profession....
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