crypto wrote:People who do this professionally never seem to understand the delineation there...
Ahem. -Some- of us are aware that "lay rescuer" does not equal "hopeless child", and stand up for y'all accordingly.
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crypto wrote:People who do this professionally never seem to understand the delineation there...

wild_weasel wrote:The point is, without proper training and or direction the gear in question can do more harm than Basic Life Support (BLS) alone.
claren wrote:crypto wrote:People who do this professionally never seem to understand the delineation there...
Ahem. -Some- of us are aware that "lay rescuer" does not equal "hopeless child", and stand up for y'all accordingly.

Drakon wrote:/slight thread hijack
i have a question guys and i'm wondering if some of you here could shed some light on it. what level of training do you think is good for John Q. "Concerned Citizen" Public? i ask because right now i consider myself to have no real formal training. i took an ARC basic first aid/CPR course, that was all most 3 years ago and i'm sure the some of the techniques are outdated now.
how far up the ladder can one go w/o getting into the medical profession? i really have no desire to play doctor or change careers, but i have a major hole in my preps in the FA department and it keeps nagging at me?
Kutter_0311 wrote:wild_weasel wrote:The point is, without proper training and or direction the gear in question can do more harm than Basic Life Support (BLS) alone.
I understand. I also have a basic level of training on both my prospective additions, and a Corpsman...
My oldest almost died of dehydration as a baby, and that made Mama pretty paranoid about it. Babies have a low tolerance for shit. I have no interest in sticking a baby, my training was on myself and other Marines.
Sucking chest wounds are a messy bitch. I have a few Ashermans in each trauma bag, but sometimes you gotta vent tension pneumothorax via needle decomp before you can evac. Not really excited to do this, either, as my experience in poking people is limited to that IV class. All my training in this area has been no-poke.
dogbane wrote:It's not your post count, it's making posts count.
fluid replacement-
dehydration: why cant fluids be taken orally?
burn managment: i dont remember the formulas at the top of my head, but lets say a 170lb adult with a BSA of 36% that comes out to about 340cc of fluid an hour? that's 2700cc in the first 8 hours alone, i dont know about you but that looks like a lot of ringers lactate (or normal saline for that matter) to be carrying around in an aid bag.
hemorrhage: i assume the patient's bleeding for a reason, isn't that a surgical problem that you probably cant fix in the field? you can pump as much fluid in him as you want, but if he's still leakig like a seize it isn't doing much good.
Kutter_0311 wrote:crypto wrote:Medic77 wrote:Some of the stuff I've seen posted quite literally scares me cause I know there is no education or training to back it up. I understand wanting to be self sufficient and prepared in case of a major, major incident where normal day-day help systems are not able to come through but some of the stuff people are carrying can really mess someone up and make them worse off.
People who carry fancy shit like tubes arent going around treating random people. they're in the kit in case someones loved ones are dying and theres no EMT's around.
People who do this professionally never seem to understand the delineation there, and I resent it. I also resent the whacker label being used on these forums.
QFT! IF I add IV/needle decomp gear, it'd be for me, my wife, or my kids. PERIOD.
Not willing to lose a loved one when I could possibly save them.
As Danus mentioned, "You can't really fuck up a GSW, it's already pretty fucked up."
If you have time to wait for EMS/evac, awesome. Sometimes shit can't wait...






skyreep wrote:Agreed, those both good reasons to support ALS use. Still though, trained ALS use. A layperson doing their first intubation on their wife or kid isn't going to end well. Hell, a well trained paramedic with hundreds of intubations under his belt putting in an ET tube may not end well. I at least trust a paramedic to have the training to at least give me a chance of survival with intubation. I'd rather lay down and die then lay down and die while a layperson attempts to tube me. Just as clarification, if you have no training and you come across me not breathing on the side of the road, let me die before you try to tube me. Much less painful

claren wrote:ACLS
PHTLS
PALS
Wilderness-EMT from NOLS
and as of today...
NREMT-P, son ! w00t and whatnot.
98pointsix wrote:claren wrote:ACLS
PHTLS
PALS
Wilderness-EMT from NOLS
and as of today...
NREMT-P, son ! w00t and whatnot.
Congratulations Bro
May your yelllow caps fly high and far
And Johnny and Roy always smile upon you.
dogbane wrote:It's not your post count, it's making posts count.
claren wrote:crypto wrote:People who do this professionally never seem to understand the delineation there...
Ahem. -Some- of us are aware that "lay rescuer" does not equal "hopeless child", and stand up for y'all accordingly.

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