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yossarian - MemberDrinking culture of this country is so pathetic and sad.
It's a northern European thing. Been going on for millennia and wont stop because the prudish know better.
Posted 4 minutes ago # Report-Post
Elfinsafety - Member
I've seen pissed up youngsters in just about every country I've bin to, bar Bangladesh. Might be a reason why they don't have a problem with binge-drinking there though...It is part of growing up. Just that some people never grow up in that respect, which is a bit pathetic really.
It's interesting that since I've moved to Spain, I've noticed far more of a "going out at night" culture but it's for tapas and drinks and they take the kids too and I've never seen anyone rolling around drunk, nor seen the slightest hint of trouble.
There's a supermarket near my house and I've often seen the teenagers near there drinking wine (as teenagers do) but they don't give any cheek when I walk by and I've never felt intimidated in the slightest. There seems to be much more respect here.
It reflects back to a lot of what was said on the tottenham riots thread earlier in the year. There seems to be more of a culture of respect and family values in other parts of Europe that we've largely lost in the UK.
Elfinsafety - MemberAh it's a laugh though innit? Go out, get pissed up, have a fight, throw up over a copper or paramedic.
Was a phase when it weren't a good night out unless there was Babylonian Intervention. Always seemed to kick off just as I was about to pull though, which was annoying.
Posted 1 hour ago
Elfinsafety - MemberI'm not condoning my previous behaviour, but equally I won't beat myself up over it. I was young, stuff happened. Not proud of it, but equally not ashamed of it either.
Posted 58 minutes ago
[b]Babycham made you do all that ?[/b] 😯
Elfinsafety - MemberAh, I have fond memories of vomiting copiously after a few too many Babychams at teenage parties...
Happy days.
Posted 3 months ago
😆
Ooh, I tell you; the mornings after were not pleasant. You know those ones where you're 'never drinking alcohol again'?
That was me early/mid teens, Ernie. The stuff I've mentioned above din't come 'til later, late teens into me twenties. Beer, mostly, sometimes spirits never drunk wine in pubs and that though.
Uni was an exciting time. 😀
Ooh coon't be doing all that now though. Not healthy. 😳
now some muppet has nicked an ambulance.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-16130305
His name to the top of the list for delayed responce or never respond then.
But thats not going to happen....
All too common there's some footage somewhere of the one stolen from our service, then there's this.
http://www.cleveland.police.uk/news/appeals/appeal11378.aspx
and this
Only found the article and we've had more stolen since then.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tees/6346791.stm
The amount it costs the NHS and drain on resources for self inflicted harm is ludicrous really, it would seem reasonable to invoice people for this.
I know it's at odds with the principles of the NHS...
Essentially though collected by an ambulance for drunkeness could be made a public order issue with a fee of £250 per call out?
Anything to make binge drinking it may even work as a deterrent who knows.
It's grim that NHS staff have to deal with this, it's grim that the majority of the populous have to pick up the tab.
Es and Cannabis and that are far better though tbh. Used to go out on an E buzz, never ended up wrecked doing that.
+1. in fact, plus many. there are well over half a million people out on a weekend popping pills. how many of them (as a percentage) end up in A+E compared to those that drink....?
i think that those drinkers that end up so paralysed that the emergency services need to spend/waste time on them should be billed for their lack of self-control.
Drunk and incapable is an offence with fixed penalty notice. All that is required is that it is proved the person was so drunk they unable to stand or walk or unaware of what they were doing or unable to understand what was said to them.
Just enforce it and perhaps increase the fine. Simple enough I would have thought.
Raouligan - Member
The amount it costs the NHS and drain on resources for self inflicted harm is ludicrous really, it would seem reasonable to invoice people for this....
I think if someone is drunk enough to be incapable of looking after themselves and is doing that regularly, then they have a problem.
How about if someone is picked up they are placed in a secure location, treated, and not released until the hangover period is over, say at least 24 hours.
If they were picked up again within the year, then keep them another day for educational purposes as well as treatment.
If the drinker was a frequent pickup, then the period of retention should be longer each time.
BTW I don't remember the same amount of excessive drinking when I was young. We did get blootered from time to time, but the sheer cost of alcohol in those days meant we couldn't afford to do it often.
project - Member
now some muppet has nicked an ambulance.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-16130305
His name to the top of the list for delayed responce or never respond then.
But thats not going to happen....
He stole an ambulance from Hackney and drove it all the way back to Chelmsford - where he lives about a mile from an A&E. What the shit?
Oh dear - someone will be in deep poo for leaving the keys in the motor.
It's happened a few times but you can't always keep the vehicle secure when you need to get the patient into the ambulance quickly. [url= http://www.journallive.co.uk/north-east-news/todays-news/2011/09/13/pelton-man-jailed-for-stealing-from-an-ambulance-61634-29410422/ ]Here's a muppet on my patch[/url]
Raouligan has the right idea. A fine based on being drunk and disorderly is entirely appropriate as the Police are now unable to lock most of them up for fear of vomitting/choking or other possible medical condition. Once it's proved that they were simply drunk, slap the fine on.
Essentially though collected by an ambulance for drunkeness could be made a public order issue with a fee of £250 per call out?
Yeah, great idea. As long as it is also applied to other 'self-inflicted' injury, such as MTBing injuries etc....
Ah, not such a great idea now, is it, eh?
No.
Shooduv thought it through really, eh?
I was out last night with work, met in a pub at 3pm, drank a few, went for a meal, drank a few more. Cut out drinking at 8, started drinking pints of water (much to the dismay of the bar staff) by 9:30 i just wanted to go home, felt badly dehydrated, like i'd cycled 40 miles in 90 degree heat with no water. I probably drank more than i would usually but certainly not a skinful.
What did surprise me though was when i said i was going home people just kept trying to pur drink down my neck or complain as i was a party pooper. Sometimes the UK's attitude to drink is the reason we get looked at like the louts of europe.
Strangest comment i heard was "i cant guage when its time to go home by what time it is, i go by how drnk i am"
You seem to be confusing 'self inflicted' with 'accidental'.Yeah, great idea. As long as it is also applied to other 'self-inflicted' injury, such as MTBing injuries etc....
two pages of mleh and i'm still struggling to understand how a drunk bird bent over with no knickers on makes you depressed ❓
You seem to be confusing 'self inflicted' with 'accidental'.
Or how about 'avoidable'?
Most people don't intend getting so drunk they fall over and need medical assistance. Same as most people don't intend falling off their bikes.
Anyway, in order to fine them you'd need to introduce a new law, as well as having to take a blood sample to produce admissible evidence of their drunkenness. Which opens up a whole new ethical can of worms.
And AKAIK, a paramedic isn't legally qualified to [i]diagnose[/i] any medical/physical condition, so you'd need a doctor to sign the paperwork. Add to that the possibility that the patient may well in fact be suffering from a medical condition that makes them appear to be 'drunk' (such as diabetes), have inadvertently taken other medication that reacts adversely with alcohol, have mental health issues, etc etc etc.
I can see the argument for such a 'deterrent', but then carrying a knife is illegal yet still people get stabbed. Drink-driving is illegal, yet still loads of people do it. Yadda yadda.
It would add a whole load of extra problems to an already overworked system, and would it actually affect things?
Then, what about concerned friends not ringing for ambulances, cos they don't want their drunken mate to get into trouble? So, potential for people not getting medical attention that they need (what if they've injured themselves and need stitching up?).
No, it's a bad idea. I've thought it through and I'm right.
And AKAIK, a paramedic isn't legally qualified to diagnose any medical/physical condition,
how about a STEMI ? amongst others
Of course this is a modern problem...
[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_Street_and_Gin_Lane ]1751[/url]
STEMI ?
What does that mean?
two pages of mleh and i'm still struggling to understand how a drunk bird bent over with no knickers on makes you depressed
It's the fact those who are trying to help these people, are being abused for their troubles.
See my comment above re 'drunk and disorderly' or you could add 'drunk and incapable' but that might only apply in Scotland.Anyway, in order to fine them you'd need to introduce a new law
BTW elf - you are talking bollox about something you quite evidently know little about and trying to obfuscate the argument by introducing irrelevancies such as 'knives' and 'drink driving'.
I can diagnose all sorts of conditions and treat appropriatly, STEMI's included. I'm also pretty good at telling the difference between pissed and hypoglycaemic. Fortunately where I live its not the 1970's so we have blood glucose monitoring equipment.
See my comment above re 'drunk and disorderly'
Irrelevant. In order to charge someone for medical attention received as a result of being drunk and incapable you'd probbly have to introduce new laws and that. All very compulcated you see. And how can you charge someone for something they've not asked you for? A 'charge' would require stuff like contracts between both parties etc, and a 'fine' would require addition, change or amendment to the Law.
BTW elf - you are talking bollox about something you quite evidently know little about
Am I? So, a paramedic is legally qualified to pass medical diagnosis are they? Are they allowed to pronounce soemone dead? Stuff like that? Please, enlighten me.
Or is the limit of their powers, in a legal sense, to 'treat symptoms'?
I'm talking about [b]legal[/b] definitions here, not medical ones. A paramedic sez 'that's just a swollen ankle, rest it up', and it turns out in fact to be a fracture, paramedic is in trouble. Hence, why only a doctor can make such a judgment, legally. See? Which is why paramedics don't diagnose; they treat symptoms.
Apology accepted, btw. 🙂
Are they allowed to pronounce soemone dead?
What, like ROLE?
Can a paramedic/nurse issue a dearth certificate?
Hello elf, normally I agree with you (but keep it quiet) However,
Yes I can "Diagnose death" without the need of a doctor. Given that I can produce an ECG showing that there is no electrical activity in the heart (asystole) or that I have recognised life is extinct (e.g hemicorperectomy, decay, PM staining, etc).
I can also diagnose and treat a varied range of illness and injury, remember a diagnosis isn't a fixed answer, and can be wrong, a diagnosis is simply a statement of "here is what i think is going on". From that, any treatment requires a diagnosis, and as such by that logic even the most basic first aider can diagnose legally. e.g "I diagnose that this man has no head".
As the NHS pushes further towards "see and treat" pre hospital care, the diagnostic role of the ambulance service becomes even more relevent, and further training and development reflects that (just google ECP/Paramedic practicioner etc).
for further reading please feel free to enjoy the JRCALC guidelines 2006 [url= http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/med/research/hsri/emergencycare/prehospitalcare/jrcalcstakeholderwebsite/guidelines/ ]here[/url]
Also, re: the ankle injury, I diagnose all the time, have a google for "Ottawa ankle guidelines".
Have a nice weekend!
jim
Can a paramedic/nurse issue a dearth certificate?
No. Why would they. It's not relevant to their role. They have the "legal" power to ROLE a patient, miss out the doctor and take direct to the coroner at his mortuary if the situation dictates.
please clarify to which you are refering: student paramedic, state registered paramedic, emergency care paramedic, critical care paramedic?paramedic
This is just the old 'dole scum' argument in a different guise.
Make your choice:
a. A system that tries to look after everyone.
b. A system that only looks after the deserving.
The trouble with a is that people get pissed off with the perceived waste of resources.
The trouble with b is who decides who is deserving?
I'd rather live with b and shoulder a little extra tax than live in a country where people can fall through the cracks.
No apology required elf and meehaja has covered the main points.
You could, as you probably will, argue that 'legally' a Paramedic cannot diagnose death as it needs GP or Coroner to sign but in reality a Paramedic confirmation is good enough for the Police. It certainly was on the two I did this week.
Bearing that in mind (and getting back on topic) if a Paramedic or the Police have sufficient reason to believe that a patient is drunk, and in the absence of other medical conditions, it would be relatively simple to gain a conviction and impose a fine.
elfin
"If you have been involved in a road accident, then under the Road Traffic Act, the ambulance service can make a charge, not a lot of people know that..... *might be Scotland only, not clear from http://www.national-ambulance.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=60
I do actually coz I was charged after getting knocked off a motorbike by a car driver.
Ok so it's a misunderstanding of terminology; what I'm getting at is stuff what would be admissible in a legal setting. Where there is doubt.
So, if I go to hospital with a knacked ankle, a nurse/paramedic would make an initial medical diagnosis based on obvious signs. But just say I was to make a claim against someone for injury caused, then a doctor would be the only person legally qualified to write down 'this patient has a sprained/broken ankle' etc. Am I correct? IE, nothing a paramedic or nurse sez would have any [i]legal[/i] weight. No?
Because every time I've bin to hospital to get patched up, I've bin told I can't be 'signed off' until I've seen a doctor, 'for legal reasons'. Hence why when I had a finger bitten half off, and the paramedic looked at it and said 'that will probably just need a few stitches', I'm pretty bloody glad a proper doctor referred me for emergency surgery. Had that paramedic just stiched the wound up, I would probbly have lost my finger, possibly my haynd or may even have died.
I was glad of the lack of faff when I had an Avocado Incident, however, when the Triae Nurse just bunged a few stitches in, as it meant I was in and out within 40 minutes and din't have to trouble an overworked doctor.
Anyway; point is in order to start charging/fining folk for their treatment if they're pissed, a whole load of beauraucracy and faff would have to be introduced.
Can't just have a paramedic's word, in a court of law, just saying 'the bloke [i]appeared[/i] to be drunk', you'd need blood samples and that. Some proper physical evidence. Like with drink-driving. No conviction could take place without such evidence.
Are paramedics legally qualified to take blood samples which can then be used as admissible evidence in a court of law?
if a Paramedic or the Police have sufficient reason to believe that a patient is drunk, and in the absence of other medical conditions, it would be relatively simple to gain a conviction and impose a fine.
Really? Without physical evidence?
Elfin probably best you stop spouting rubbish on something you clearly know nothing about.
We actually have a legal obligation to diagnose and treat, we're state registered now and because so we're expected to act professional, correctly diagnose and treat patients.
Am I correct? IE, nothing a paramedic or nurse sez would have any legal weight. No?
No you're wrong a Dr may never even be involved.
Are paramedics legally qualified to take blood samples which can then be used as admissible evidence in a court of law?
Changing direction quicker than a cornered rabbit. And for that reason, i'm out!
Elfin probably best you stop spouting rubbish on something you clearly know nothing about.
...and change a habit of a lifetime? Good luck with nailing that particular brand of fog to the wall.
Elfin probably best you stop spouting rubbish on something you clearly know nothing about.
Wind yer neck in.
Q: Can a paramedic/nurse issue a death certificate?
A: No.
I knew this, but thought I'd ask anyway, see if others were on the ball... 😉
So; the legal authority of a nurse or paramedic is restricted, in certain contexts. Are we agreed?
Right.
This is why I said, and rightly so, that it would involve a load of faff to impose a system of charges/fines based on a patient's condition.
See, if I fall over get ambulanced then fined cos I was 'drunk', then in order to be able to legally impose that fine, you'd have to prove, legally, that I was drunk. Which would require physical evidence. Cos without it, it's the paramedic's word against mine. I could quite easily claim I was just tired/pretending/suffering from another medical conditon the paramedic was unaware of. Just because I 'appeared' to be drunk, does not in any way mean I [i]was[/i].
Are we getting somewhere now?
Good.
I'm not in any way denigrating the amazing work done by paramedics, just highlighting possible problems with 'fining' drunks.
That's all. Ok?
Right. Carry on. 😀
Maybe this will help you out elf.
You are the only one trying to say that someone would be fined solely on the say so of a Paramedic. It's a Police job. Paramedics are not the Police. Got it?
Criminal Justice and Police Act 2001
[i]Section 12 of the Licensing Act 1872 (c.94) = Being drunk in a highway, other public place or licensed premises[/i]
[i](1) A constable who has reason to believe that a person aged 18 or over has committed a penalty offence may give him a penalty notice in respect of the offence.[/i]
Not that difficult to administer, is it!
So; the legal authority of a nurse or paramedic is restricted, in certain contexts. Are we agreed?
So your talking about forensic medicine. Well yes they can if they've done the relevant training. I know 2 ex-colleagues who switched trusts who have done the training for this. So not really a great faff no.
But referring to drunks, yes we can say when someone is drunk but we have to show that we considered other options for the behaviour too. Just like a Dr then.
What's that got to do with a person getting medical treatment?
The argument was for fining/charging people who have to be treated BECAUSE they are drunk. I've highlighted possible problems with implementing such a scheme.
Paramedics are not the Police. Got it?
It never left me...
Paramedics have no legal authority, unlike police officers, who in turn have no medical authority.
Hence why such a scheme would be extremely difficult to implement.
But referring to drunks, yes we can say when someone is drunk but we have to show that we considered other options for the behaviour too. Just like a Dr then.
Are you qualified, as a doctor is, to give medical evidence in a court of law?
Not just your observations from whatever incident, proper medical evidence.
Is this the right room for an argument?
5 minute or full half hour? 😆
Yes, they will be.Are you qualified, as a doctor is, to give medical evidence in a court of law?
Shut your festering gob you tit...
Are you qualified, as a doctor is, to give medical evidence in a court of law?
I have.
I'd wish you'd pick what your argument is, you tell us that we can't legal diagnose a fractured ankle your proven wrong so you say no I mean take bloods which we can. And now you on about court of law which err guess what we can.
I'm not sure where anyone claimed we're the Police.
Elf - its all limited by circumstances - for doctors as well. Drunkadn incapable / drunk and disorderly is done by cops not doctors. I can and have pronounced death, diagnose under the influence of alcohol and / or drugs. Its the sort of role that can be delegated in particular circumstances and there would be no issue at al with having nurses deciding someone was drunk. Its not rocket science. And yes - I could be called into a court to give evidence on this - I was actually called once but they accused did not show.